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RookieX412
11-19-2004, 10:28 AM
By Richard Byrne Reilly
TRIBUNE-REVIEW
Thursday, November 18, 2004

City Council President Gene Ricciardi stood fuming Wednesday in front of a brick building in the South Side that a private contractor had spent thousands of dollars to refurbish and turn into a commercial space.

It's covered in colorful graffiti. The owner, it appears, has thrown in the towel.

"It's a damn disgrace," Ricciardi said. "It looks like the developer gave up."

Alarmed by the persistence of so-called taggers and the perception that Pittsburgh has been soft on their spraypainted handiwork, Ricciardi plans to introduce a resolution at Tuesday's City Council meeting to create an anti-graffiti task force and a five-point plan to deal with what many describe as urban blight.


A story in Sunday's Pittsburgh Tribune-Review detailed graffiti being spread through the city by a growing group of taggers who move here to take advantage of what some contend is lax enforcement.

"The Trib did a great service to this city by running that piece," Ricciardi said. "It was a wake-up call that we're not being aggressive enough to the problem and that an anti-graffiti task force is a good way to come down hard on these vandals."

Ricciardi proposes a tough approach that many cities have long used successfully to deal with taggers. It includes computerized tracking, increased surveillance by police of graffiti hotspots and harsh penalties for taggers, including jail and community service.

He will also propose a fund to be bankrolled by the mayor's office that would financially reward informants who tip police to taggers and a graffiti-cleaning detail to be staffed by those caught painting.

"I see these kids as criminals," Ricciardi said. His own South Side house has been tagged, he said.

Reminded that the city is teetering on bankruptcy, Ricciardi was adamant that a "thoughtful and creative" approach could overcome the question of where the money would come from.

"We need partnerships to solve this," Ricciardi said.

Allegheny County District Attorney Stephen A. Zappala Jr. has pledged his support.

"Steve has made a commitment to Gene Ricciardi to aggressively prosecute graffiti cases and has agreed to sit on the anti-graffiti task force," Zappala spokesman Mike Manko said.

Mayor Tom Murphy's office yesterday expressed surprise at Ricciardi's proposal.

"We don't know anything about it," Murphy spokesman Craig Kwiecinski said.

As it now stands, city police lack a graffiti abatement squad and rely instead on detectives operating out of the department's five zone stations to track the crimes. Graffiti falls under the criminal mischief law, a misdemeanor that does not differentiate between somebody breaking windows or painting them.

Ricciardi has focused his attention on graffiti before, with little success. He pushed for and won passage of a city law in 2003 to prohibit the sale of spray paint containers, indelible markers and etching products to minors. In June, City Council approved a second law sponsored by Ricciardi to outline for merchants their responsibilities in curbing graffiti.

This time, though, he says enough is enough.

"Graffiti is giving Pittsburgh this blighted image," he said.

South Side resident Ray Thompson, who has seen his work truck repeatedly painted by taggers operating in his neighborhood, stopped by the defaced brick building at Crosman and South 18th streets for a quick hello to Ricciardi yesterday and to offer his suggestions to take back Pittsburgh from taggers.

"We need to have the kids caught doing it clean it up," he said. "The city just can't continue focusing on Mook."

Thompson was referring to local graffiti legend M."Mook" M., who bedeviled city authorities during a four-year spray paint campaign that ended in 2001. The police and intense media scrutiny eventually put Mook out of business.

Another resident, Dan Bevan, stood looking at the colorful graffiti tags adorning the front, back and sides of the brick building and shook his head in disgust.

"The city should show no (leniency to) these kids, " he said. "This stuff is costing thousands of dollars to clean up."

PANIC!FUP_MORE...
11-19-2004, 11:17 AM
same thing happened in philly...they were building this new coffee/book place around me, and as it was getting built, drama, caem, and others totally fucked it up, so they just gave up on building it and knocked it down lmao...i love when shit like that happens....props to caem for bombing the fuck out of philly =-D

RookieX412
11-19-2004, 11:21 AM
This is the artcile that started it...


Spray paint in hand, they come to make names for themselves in Pittsburgh -- a city they describe as one of the last blank canvases in the nation.
Painting the town red -- and blue and green and black -- they are the taggers, the bombers. They call themselves artists; the law calls them vandals. Their art is graffiti.

Over the past two years, taggers have descended on the city because of cheap rents, plenty of blank walls to paint and what they characterize as a police department lacking resources to deal with the sheer volume of "artists" operating in the city.

"We heard through the grapevine that Pittsburgh was getting big, and it is," said Du-Rag, 22, who arrived here two months ago from St. Louis.

"In the graffiti world," Du-Rag added between puffs of a Parliament Light in his ramshackle Bloomfield apartment, "Pittsburgh is blowing up!"

A 'good' reputation

Du-Rag and dozens like him represent the face of graffiti artists working in Pittsburgh. Predominantly young, white and middle-class, they say the bridges, tunnels, buildings and roadways here are among the last in America spared by a graffiti epidemic so prevalent in cities like New York, Chicago and Los Angeles.

"There's tons of people from Cali, Philly, New York City and other cities stopping through and painting here," said Swayze, a graffiti artist who moved here two years ago from Southern California to attend art school. He estimates that 100 taggers operate in Pittsburgh.

With reputations spread through graffiti Internet sites and word of mouth, Swayze and Du-Rag have found a ready pool of aspiring local painters eager to join their "crews," under the cover of darkness, to tag railroad trestles, highway signs and tunnels.

During interviews over one month, seven taggers from different parts of the country described Pittsburgh as attractive to artists because their tags stay up longer, there are more places to paint and the police lack a graffiti-abatement squad that focuses full time on the problem.

"The cops are totally clueless," says Swayze, who has been arrested for tagging in other states. "They're totally broke, yo."

All seven taggers interviewed for this article did so on the condition that their real names not be used. Their claims are difficult to verify, but their handiwork can be found on numerous graffiti Web sites and chat boards.

The taggers paint for ego gratification and for artistic expression. They love telling of hair-raising foot chases by police across overpasses and railroad trestles. Of paying vagrants $5 and a bottle of malt liquor to distract drivers on roadways so they can paint billboards up above. They do it for the camaraderie -- and out of disdain for authority, Swayze says.

Vatoe, a tagger from Philadelphia who arrived during the summer, said he found the painting opportunities so favorable in Pittsburgh that he took a job in a restaurant to help support his spray-paint habit.

Tracking the taggers

The city's dire finances have benefited the taggers. The Department of Public Works recently disbanded its Graffiti-Busters detail because of budget cuts. The police department relies on detectives working out of the city's five zone stations to track the crimes.

Things are slowly changing. Detective Amy Mattia, of the police department's Special Investigations, Crime Analysis and Intelligence Unit, says her squad is putting together a computer database to track taggers and their handiwork. The database will be up within six months.

"There is an increase in awareness" in the department and city to graffiti problems, Mattia said.

Zone 3 Cmdr. Bill Joyce said that "20 to 30 percent" of his officers' time during community meetings is spent fielding graffiti-related questions from concerned residents.

"It comes up a lot," Joyce said.

Joyce recalled the case of an elderly woman whose property had fallen prey to taggers so many times that her sons informed the commander that "if they catch the vandals, the police won't be needed after they get done with them."

This type of awareness has landed Aaron Roland Gaglia, 22, of Bloomfield, on the police department's radar screen. He was arrested Oct. 17 after he was spotted at 2:25 a.m. painting the Armstrong Tunnel, according to police reports. In May, police arrested him after they saw him painting the Seventh Street Bridge, Downtown.

Gaglia did not return messages from the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review.

It's difficult to say how many people have been arrested for tagging, because the misdemeanor falls under the criminal mischief law that includes vandalism and other minor crime. But with the planned database, police will be able to break down the crimes into subcategories such as tagging.

A dangerous game

Swayze and Du-Rag say they have few limits on what they cover in graffiti: railroad cars, bridges, highway overpass signs and city vehicles are all fair game. Du-Rag, though, draws the line at churches.

The painting can be deadly. Evan "Angre" Walters, 24, of the North Side, was killed early Sept. 17, 2003, by a CSX freight train while he painted under the Birmingham Bridge, on the South Side.

Police made an example of local legend Mike Monack, also known as "Mook," arresting him so many times they put him out of business. He now works as a tattoo artist, and police keep close tabs on him and the company he keeps.

Swayze and Du-Rag's neighborhoods of choice: the East End, the Strip District, the South Side and Bloomfield. They avoid predominantly black neighborhoods such as Homewood and the Hill District. The taggers described those areas as dangerous for "white boys."

Many taggers support their expensive habits through retail theft. Taggers tell stories of traveling to the suburbs and packing up to 200 cans of paint in a cart and walking straight out the front doors of Wal-Mart, Lowe's, Kmart and -- the artists' favorite -- Home Depot.

Some taggers say they can foresee the day when their reign comes to an end in Pittsburgh, as the police and the city devote more resources to tackling what many refer to as urban blight.

"In St. Louis, L.A. or New York, cops have come down real hard on graffiti artists, but so far not here," Du-Rag says. "But things go in cycles, and we know that our run here won't last forever."

:( :( :(

Alchohlics_Anonymous
11-19-2004, 02:30 PM
Woah, Du-Rag is the coolest name..."There totally clueless, yo"
Damn these guys are cool... <_< And whats up with the whole "South Side" and "North Side" thing, they make it sound so prominent. Those guys kinda gave away alot of info, like walking out of those stores with 200 cans of paint...that wont be happening again anythime soon in that area, kinda ruined the whole scheme. but interesting read.

Rik JamEs
11-19-2004, 04:12 PM
can u tell what happned in about 2 sentences that is too long

shyone
11-19-2004, 04:28 PM
nice

ASEN
11-19-2004, 04:42 PM
harsh... canada suddenly doesnt suck so much :rolleyes:

we got a graffitti hotline here in longueuil.. i usually write it besides my shit.

/*BlItZ*\
11-19-2004, 04:50 PM
thats funny, "taggers" own pittsburg...props to the artists who own the city

CaSoNe
11-19-2004, 05:06 PM
if the damn guy is complaining about the cities bankrupcy then why spend so much money on all that shit to stop us? its not like its gonna work anyway

PANIC!FUP_MORE...
11-19-2004, 05:08 PM
http://www.pittsburghlive.com/photos/2004-11-13/1114tagger-a.jpg
du-rag is on the far left, and swayze is on the right

Asshat
11-19-2004, 05:13 PM
Jeez.

glue
11-19-2004, 05:18 PM
yea its virtually impossible to stop anything, so they should quit now.

oblong
11-19-2004, 05:24 PM
Originally posted by Rik JamEs@Nov 19 2004, 04:12 PM
can u tell what happned in about 2 sentences that is too long
i had the same thought

cuttingxedge
11-19-2004, 06:22 PM
i love when the police force beleave in themselves and thinks they can obliterate graffiti. AHA whata joke

fame
11-19-2004, 06:41 PM
why.....is ginard fuck face try to stop the 412 jd nwo

Dyser
11-19-2004, 09:04 PM
I used to get alot of flack for burnin stores like that.... Michaels is just to fuckin easy though.......

twistedsol831
11-19-2004, 11:16 PM
fuck the police and city councils! keep rockin shit!

Skore_One
11-19-2004, 11:30 PM
Originally posted by PANIC!FUP_MORE...@Nov 19 2004, 05:08 PM
http://www.pittsburghlive.com/photos/2004-11-13/1114tagger-a.jpg
du-rag is on the far left, and swayze is on the right
hahaha shut AA the fuck up

MitNGEK
03-28-2005, 08:04 PM
fuck him

Klaz
11-19-2005, 06:43 PM
Originally posted by PANIC!FUP_MORE...@Nov 19 2004, 05:08 PM
http://www.pittsburghlive.com/photos/2004-11-13/1114tagger-a.jpg
du-rag is on the far left, and swayze is on the right
that's a great picture

Hask420
03-30-2007, 04:34 PM
^^^^ thats so sick