Posted: 6/14/2007 8:48:55 PM EDT
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Continued from page 2 “Yeah, I pleaded guilty to that,” says Johnson. “I’m not a PENI gang member. . . . It [talking about PENI] is against my laws. It would get me dead.” Baytieh pounds away for another half an hour, describing evidence that Johnson is trying to rescue Rump and Lamb in hopes of getting himself out of trouble for disobeying the prison-based Aryan Brotherhood gang and playing a martyr to strengthen his status in prison-gang hierarchy. He notes that after Johnson, who already was going to prison for at least the next four decades, confessed to the Miller murder, he told a detective working for the defense, “That should clear the books.” “I’m not going to go there,” replies a red-faced Johnson. Baytieh continues, accusing him of asking Lieutenant Clay Epperson, a Costa Mesa cop who grew up with Johnson, for help against the Aryan Brotherhood, a.k.a. “The Brand.” “Hell, no,” he says. “I didn’t talk to no goddamn cop. You are crazy as fuck.” “Because you hate cops, correct?” “Yeah.” “With a passion?” “Yeah, they are cheats. They’re just a big, old gang, man. All of them are gangsters. I mean, they got different colored uniforms. They run different areas. The only thing that’s different between me and a cop is that they don’t use drugs. That’s the only difference.” Stapleton glances at the jury. Baytieh glances at the jury. Panel members look terrified. “After you got in trouble with the Aryan Brotherhood, you became part of a group called Fuck the Brand, FTB, isn’t that correct?” asks Baytieh. “You’re crazy, dude,” says Johnson. “Are you fucking out of your mind, or what?” “As a result of that, you needed to get into PENI to get yourself out of trouble with the Aryan Brotherhood, correct?” Johnson stares at the prosecutor. He’s finally deflated. He simply says, “No.” Next, Baytieh gets Johnson to say he had owned the Miller murder weapon for at least six months. The exchange, which traps Johnson, demonstrates why Baytieh is considered one of the best prosecutors in California. “How many bullets can you put into that weapon?” asks the DA. “Eleven.” “How many safeties does it have on it?” “One.” “On the right side, right?” “Yeah.” Rump and Lamb could be cooked. Johnson got both answers wrong. This 9 mm holds 13 bullets and has safety switches on both sides. Baytieh changes subjects, and five minutes later, he jumps back to the gun issue. “Can you describe the bullets for us?” he asks. “No, I never took the clip out of it.” Johnson is not expecting Baytieh’s next question: “Did you ever fire that weapon?” “No, I never have,” replies Johnson. “You’ve never fired that weapon?” Johnson realizes his mistake: “Uh, I fired it one time.” A juror in the front row frowns and shakes his head. * * * PENI formed in the late 1980s from the Long Beach punk-rock scene, according to gang experts. At the time, the Nazi Low Riders and the Aryan Brotherhood ruled all white-supremacist gangs in California. But after prison officials managed to isolate the leadership of both feuding groups, PENI filled the void. By the early 1990s, the gang became heavily concentrated in Orange County, particularly the cities of Huntington Beach, Costa Mesa and Anaheim—though they are also living in LA, Riverside, San Bernardino and San Diego. The gang reveres Nazi Germany and became a lethal, criminal operation after many of its leaders—including top dog Donald Mazza—landed in prison. In 2005, police arrested 19 white supremacists with ties to PENI after an investigation into a Riverside County high school football coach who recruited for the gang. According to Kevin O’Grady at the Orange County branch of the Anti-Defamation League, this police probe located 75 illegal weapons, 15,000 rounds of ammunition, stolen vehicles, drugs and Nazi propaganda. Today, corrections officials describe PENI as the most active white prison gang in the state. Unlike criminal Latino gangs, it is not turf-oriented. Money is its motivation more than racist ideology, according to police. PENI’s criminal operations include forgery, identity theft, counterfeiting, witness intimidation, assault, burglary, fraud, illicit narcotic sales, racketeering and, of course, murder. Last year, 67 PENI members and associates were arrested in raids that recovered a hit list naming a local judge, prosecutors and police officers. “Violence is what allows PENI to exist,” according to Huntington Beach Sergeant John Van Holt, a gang expert. “It elevates the status of the gang and makes their criminal enterprises easier to do because of the reputation that comes from that.” DA spokeswoman Susan Kang Schroeder estimates there are more than 300 PENI members—many of whom call themselves “Needle Nazis”—in prison or roaming Southern California. Recently, law-enforcement agencies have tracked the gang’s activities to the Pacific Northwest and to Arizona. They cherish heroin and methamphetamine—and these 14 words: “We must secure the existence of our people and a future for white children.” But the Miller and Lamon cases give these gangsters black eyes. It’s a world steeped in arrogant ignorance. Directly in front of jurors, Rump and Lamb routinely joke, giggle and make funny faces when the lawyers have sidebar meetings with Froeberg. These are gangsters who talk about “love and loyalty.” Yet, they’ll kill their own without remorse. What did it feel like to murder a longtime friend? Baytieh asks Johnson. “I felt nothing,” he says. “See, you live in a different world than I do.” The prosecutor replies, “I agree with you, Mr. Johnson.” There’s silence, and then, perhaps sensing he’s lost the exchange, Johnson huffs, “That’s right, man.” * * * It’s one of the most fascinating court appearances in county history. Rump and Lamb had smiled and traded pleasantries with Johnson when he entered the courtroom. As deputies escort him out, there is silence. Both look down at the defense table. |
| Interesting insite. Unfortunately these gang is about what/ 10-15% of the state's problem? It would seem that the law only applies to the lawful here. Another dead body was found Thursday morning not more than a mile from my house on the "wrong-side" of the freeway. Previous to that it was May 5th and about 1.5 miles away. The tax payers are losing in the war between the law and the lawless. |
The 6 years I was stationed down there I didnt see too many white gang members but I did see a latino gangmember everytime I walked outside the airstation.![]() We would get briefs from the local PDs about how to avoid trouble from the gang members and they seemed to be concerned about the white gangmembers more than the others and I think they were telling the officers to look out for this type of clothes, tattoos, etc. The gang task force guys seemed to deal with the gang members from long beach but were out right combating the white gangs and seemed to have a game plan to stopping the spread unlike the gangs in Santa Ana. Good story though, I cant figure out why a grown man needs tto be in a gang...dirtbags. |



