Friday, February 29, 2008

Graffiti Taggers Rile Truckers



Graffiti 'artists' rile truckers
David Menzies, National Post Published: Friday, February 29, 2008
David MenziesGrafitti was once confined to downtown back alleys and the odd railroad car, but vandals are increasingly turning their attention to trucks
David Contant is a proponent of free speech and freedom of expression. And, like so many others, he appreciates fine art. But the Burlington, Ont.-based trucker was far from amused recently when he discovered that a budding artist/social activist/vandal decided his truck would be an ideal canvas for a cryptic message delivered via a can of spray paint.
Contant is the latest trucker to be victimized by graffiti "artists" who have decided that trucks, cube vans and other large vehicles make for good targets when it comes to displaying their horrendous handiwork. Indeed, whereas graffiti was once confined to downtown back alleys and the odd railroad car, a growing trend has emerged wherein vandals are turning their attention to the world of wheels.
Contant says he wouldn't have minded if his truck had been tagged by someone painting, say, a replica of the Mona Lisa on his rig. But, like the vast majority of urban graffiti blight, the supposed artwork is merely a mishmash of gibberish that could've been administered by a chimpanzee wearing a blindfold.
"It's a real eyesore," says Contant. "And I have no idea what it's supposed to be."
While the graffiti on his truck likely represented a few minutes of mindless fun for the vandals, it is Contant who must live with the end result. Understandably, he's far from pleased.
"It's a little embarrassing for me to make deliveries now," he says, noting that he ships high-end fine furniture to the homes of customers. "When I roll up on somebody's driveway with a truck looking the way it does now, it doesn't look good for me or for the company."
David Bradley, president of the Ontario Trucking Association, notes that graffiti artists targeting trucks was something of a rarity just a decade ago. But, in recent years, he says, "truck tagging" has become increasingly commonplace-- even if the reason behind the onslaught is unknown.
"I'm seeing it [graffiti on trucks] all the time-- there are trucks on the road that look like New York subway cars," says Bradley. "I think there are people out there who have absolutely no respect for the property of others. It's just the way society is going these days."
Bradley says the attention by vandals is completely unwanted. Many truckers take pride in how their rigs look, and to see their vehicles "desecrated" in such a fashion is "very frustrating for them ... especially if there's something obscene painted on the truck."
Meanwhile, as the trucker goes about his business, his rig becomes a source of visual pollution to everyone else. More than an annoyance and an eyesore, unwanted graffiti can be damaging to the bottom line.
Mike Haydeman, who heads up Canadian Restorations GTA Inc., a Toronto-based graffiti-removal company, says eradicating graffiti isn't cheap. "When I tell [truckers] how much it's going to be, I then tell them to go to a paint shop and get the graffiti painted over," he says, noting that graffiti removal ranges from $200 for "a small job" to more than $1,000 "depending on the amount that has to be treated."
A basic paint job to cover up graffiti, Haydeman says, can be had for as little as $400. Another problem, he says, is that, when graffiti is removed from a vehicle, the clearcoat surface is sometimes also removed. This could result in the paint eventually fading and chipping.
Still, Haydeman says there is another way to fight back against unwanted graffiti. His company markets a "pre-emptive solution" for graffiti pests: namely, a "graffiti barrier" comprised of a polymer-based coating solution. Such a coating is a graffiti artist's worst nightmare.
"Spray paint will adhere to the coating, but the paint comes off with a citrus spray that you apply later on -- it [spray paint] literally melts in front of your eyes," he says.
The coating costs $1,500 for a cube van and $4,000 to $5,000 for a rig's trailer.
As for the reason behind targeting big vehicles with graffiti, Haydeman theorizes that trucks and cube vans tend to be parked in alleys or in lots far from prying eyes. "I think they are an irresistible target for vandals -- a truck is a very big canvas for them," he says.
And because trucks are mobile, the graffiti artist's handiwork is exposed to a huge audience as the trucker does his rounds.
"You and I may not understand all that gibberish," says Haydeman, "but the vandals' peers understand it."








Hate Graffiti at York University


Feb 28, 2008 08:52 PM Jeffrey Todd Staff reporter
Police are investigating a hate crime incident at York University after anti-Jewish graffiti was found scrawled on a library desk.
Campus security was alerted to hateful messages, which were discovered sometime on Thursday in the Scott Library, near Keele St. and Steeles Ave. W.
Alex Bilyk, head of security at York, said it is unknown whether it was the work of a student or an outsider.
"We don't know if it was a community member or not," he said. "It could be the work of one person or several people. Police were notified and it is under police investigation. We take these things seriously at all times. This is hurtful stuff."
Bilyk insisted York University is on the whole a diverse and tolerant place to study, but that messages like these are not out of ordinary.
"We have many different work stations and I guess someone found an outlet for something that's not accepted," Bilyk said.
The racist graffiti has ignited outrage among groups on campus.



Thursday, February 28, 2008

KRink, Graffiti Artist Marketing Brand


KRink: Turning graffiti ink into a marketing brand
By Rob Walker
Published: February 28, 2008
In his 1999 book "The Art of Getting Over," Stephen Powers (also known as Espo) profiled and catalogued the work of several dozen fellow graffiti artists. Among them was KR, known for drippy silver tags around San Francisco and also for the unusual material he made them with. "Krink," Powers explained, "is a homemade silver ink" that was "developed in the KR kitchen." Back then, KR, who says he stopped writing graffiti years ago and is thus more comfortable being known as Craig Costello, never figured his "Krink" would be known beyond that circle — let alone that it would become a brand name on his custom-designed ink and markers, sold in boutiques and specialty shops in the U.S., Europe and Japan.
"There was never, ever, ever the idea that I would make any money off it," says Costello, who is 36 and lives in New York. "There wasn't a brand, or a business plan, or a concept of anything like that." Costello does a bit of freelance design work as well as various art projects. (The New York arts organization Eyebeam invited him last year to spruce up the facade of its Chelsea headquarters with copious amounts of Krink, as well as paint applied via fire extinguisher.) But today the Krink product line is his most steady source of income.
The evolution of KR's ink from something a guy made to illegally tag city streets into a brand available in slick retail settings mirrors the way graffiti — or the graffiti aesthetic — has been absorbed into pop culture over a period of decades. Growing up in New York in the 1980s, Costello was exposed to an earlier iteration of graffiti. This was back when a lot more people called it rank vandalism, and "street art" had yet to become a tactic used to market cars and electronics — or a look mimicked by tony fashion designers. Some at the time used home-brew ink markers; Costello recalls a recipe involving mimeograph paper soaked in alcohol overnight and mixed with a bit of nail-polish remover. A felt chalkboard eraser — stolen school supplies were a common base material — completed a tool for making a "mop tag" (the makeshift marker being the "mop").
The formula he developed — he's cagey about specifics — resulted in a metallic look and an expressionist drip effect. He sometimes scrawled the word "Krink" on the side of soda bottles that he filled with the stuff for friends, but that was more of a joke than a branding strategy. It wasn't until around 2000, after he returned to New York, that the owners of Alife, a street-culture store on the Lower East Side, suggested it could sell. It did: 20 bottles, then 40, then 80. Over time, Costello started working with a manufacturer to make $10 "squeeze markers" (a bit like a shoe-polish bottle) and more penlike markers with wide tips ($8) that fill with ink through a pump-action mechanism. There are now nine Krink colors. There are also Krink T-shirts and sweatshirts made in collaboration with Alife and sold in various boutiques like the trendsetting shop Colette in Paris. (Colette's Web site was recently decorated with a photo of Costello's dripping Krink streaks.)
Krink's packaging has a crisp, minimalist look that doesn't scream graffiti, precisely to leave the door open to a wider audience than taggers. "This is an artists' tool, a tool for creativity," Costello maintains. His own gallery shows have included Krink on wood, on latex and on at least one trash can. Still, visit www.Krink.com
and you'll see plenty of Krink on public walls and mailboxes. (Krink "changed the look of vandalism" in New York, an expert on such matters, known as Earsnot, told Juxtapoz magazine not long ago.) "O.K., it has a history," Costello allows. "But our future is about broadening out the audience."
In fact, the next Krink product is a fine-point marker. And the brand does present a different image than much of what is in online stores openly selling "graffiti supplies." (On the Run markers, for example, feature a logo of a shadowy guy running with a spray-paint can.) Plenty of young artists have told Costello they love the Krink look — but they're not graffiti writers and don't intend to start. So when he talks about expanding into a product line that will make sense in a Pearl Paint store, or even a Michael's, it's a sentiment with more pragmatic origins than avoiding demonization as a vandal supplier: the market for the street-art aesthetic and influence is far bigger than the market of actual street artists.






More Officers to Patrol


More officers to patrol around Hyde Park school after NIU graffiti found
Kenwood Academy school day not interrupted
Tribune staff report
February 28, 2008

Police patrols around Kenwood Academy in Hyde Park have been beefed up after graffiti referring to the Northern Illinois University shootings was found Monday in a men's washroom, police said."NIU wasn't a joke" was scrawled in a second-floor washroom alongside gang signs, Capt. Lucio Martinez said. The graffiti was cleaned up immediately and did not interrupt the school day, he said.
"It just wasn't funny," Martinez said. "We're taking this seriously to the point where we're doing our best to assure that nothing develops from it. We don't think it will, but we're still there with increased police presence."Two Chicago Police Department officers are assigned regular duty at the school, and two additional officers will patrol the neighborhood around the school, 5015 S. Blackstone Ave., Martinez said.Chicago Public Schools spokesman Mike Vaughn said the school sent home a note to parents Tuesday and held an assembly Wednesday morning to remind students of the school's security rules.Students are required to pass through metal detectors and display their school IDs at all times, Vaughn added.By Mary Owen, Tribune reporter



Saturday, February 23, 2008

Police Arrest 38 in Graffiti Raid



Nicole Cox
February 23, 2008 06:00pm
POLICE have rounded up 38 alleged serial vandals and laid almost 100 charges in one of Perth's biggest graffiti raids.
Rail police staged the unprecedented two-week operation as part of their efforts to eradicate urban scrawl from the public transport network. Senior officers allowed The Sunday Times inside their investigation, codenamed Operation Coleman, while teams of officers raided the suburban homes of graffiti crew members and petty criminals. Police conducted simultaneous dawn searches on 46 properties across the metropolitan area over four days between February 14 and Friday. More than 450 items, including computer hard drives, laptops, spray cans, marker pens, drugs and weapons, were confiscated by police. Nineteen adults and 19 juveniles will face a total of 93 charges in court. Officers expect more charges to be laid, but say it could be up to six months before they have examined the massive stash of seized items. Sgt Brian Beck said intelligence revealed that vandals were becoming increasingly brazen, keeping photos of their handiwork on their mobile phones, flaunting it on Myspace sites and loading it to USB and portable computer drives. And while spray paint cans and permanent marker pens are still favoured by vandals, many also used small rocks and tiny squares of sandpaper, to etch their ``tags'' into windows of train carriages. "They are not shy when it comes to advertising the fact that they are doing this,'' Sgt Beck said."They like bragging about it and in a lot of cases, that's their downfall. "We conducted extensive investigations and we are going to continue. It doesn't stop here. Graffiti is a significant issue.'' The extent of our city's graffiti problem has been acknowledged by train drivers who have apologised on public address systems to passengers who cannot see out of windows because of graffiti. And vandals are going to greater lengths to get their tags displayed in as many public areas as possible. It's a pastime of one-upmanship as vandals try to out-do each other, risking death and serious injury to daub their tags on taller buildings and more dangerous spots. Some have even clung to the back of high-speed moving trains. The Public Transport Authority spent $2.25 million cleaning graffiti from train and bus stations, as well as infrastructure and rolling stock, last financial year. That amount is expected to rise this year with the opening of the Mandurah line. But police believe the problem will continue unless tougher and more effective legislation or council bylaws are put in place. One officer told The Sunday Times of a recent case where a juvenile vandal was forced to apologise to the victim whose property he defaced. The tagger then presented the property owner with a canvas of his ``work''. "Isn't that just a slap in the face?'' the officer asked. Sen-Sgt Barry Stevens, from the police rail unit, said tougher laws would send a strong message to vandals that their actions would not be tolerated.
He said the magnitude of Operation Coleman was reflective of a massive social problem, but more needed to be done to rein in retailers who sold graffiti paraphernalia. "This was a pre-emptive strike,'' he said of the operation. ``Graffiti is a big problem and it's underlying the behaviour of society. People have just had enough of it. "The legislation and the council bylaws need to become more contemporary in line with the community's expectations. They need to be bolstered and to have more of a deterrent effect to stop repeat offenders. "Legislatively, we are charging these people with graffiti, but the people who are selling it are just walking away scot-free.'' Police praised tough new anti-graffiti laws in Victoria that will be proclaimed in March. Under the laws, vandals could spend up to two years in jail or be fined up to $26,000. The laws will also ban people carrying spray cans near public transport without a legitimate reason and introduce fines for people who sell spray cans to anyone under 18, unless for work purposes. In WA, there is a voluntary code of practice for retailers selling potential graffiti implements, such as spray paint and wide-tip markers, but no laws banning the sale to juveniles. The Office of Crime Prevention set up the voluntary code as an alternative to legislation, given many big retail chains, such as Bunnings and Officeworks, already restricted the sale and supply of such materials. Under WA laws, the maximum penalty for damaging property is a year in jail and a $12,000 fine, while people found in possession of items believed to be intended for a graffiti offence are liable to a $6000 fine. Courts can also order convicted graffiti offenders to pay clean-up costs. In January, Joshua Eric Goodlet, 22, of Parmelia, was jailed for six months and ordered to pay $17,500 in cleaning costs after pleading guilty to 28 charges of criminal damage. His co-accused, Richard Darryl Partridge, 21, of Calista, received an 18-month intensive supervision order and was ordered to complete 175 hours of unpaid community work for nine charges of criminal damage. He also had to pay restitution of $6600. The men were apprehended by police after they were caught on a train with 21 cans of spray paint. A police search of their homes uncovered more spray paint and computer images of their graffiti in Kwinana, Kenwick and Rockingham. The Office of Crime Prevention has set up a hotline _ 1800442255 _ for the public to report graffiti crimes. Rewards of up to $1000 are available if information from the hotline results in a successful conviction.



Problems with Graffiti Discussed


Graffiti in college area is the focus of meeting
Neighborhoods are bearing cost of increased incidents
By Michele Willer-AllredCorrespondentSaturday, February 23, 2008
Residents living in several neighborhoods near Moorpark College met Thursday night to discuss ways to curb a growing graffiti problem in the area surrounding their homes, as well as the entire city.
Cynthia Chambers, chairwoman of the Varsity Park Homeowners Association Security Committee, organized the meeting attended by residents and members of three homeowners' association boards representing neighborhoods around the college.
Chambers said she organized the meeting because of the increased graffiti in her neighborhood and the rising costs homeowners' associations must pay to fix the problem.
"Many people in our area are alarmed because we don't normally see this type of crime at this high level of occurrence," she said. "Both sides of Moorpark are being hit.
"I feel like I've been victimized. I know graffiti leads to other crimes, and I want something done. I don't want our property values to go down any further," she said.
Chambers offered several suggestions during the meeting to discourage taggers, including adding motion-detecting lights, putting in thorny plants and using graffiti-proof paint on walls frequently targeted. She also suggested after-school Neighborhood Watch programs to supplement city patrols, which, she said, have been infrequent around her neighborhood.
Chambers circulated a petition during the meeting that she hopes to submit to the Moorpark City Council, asking for a graffiti abatement hotline, similar to one already operating in Simi Valley. The Simi program offers the removal of graffiti from public and private property by a private contractor within 24 hours of its being reported.
David Lasher, senior management analyst for Moorpark's Community Development Department, attended the meeting to answer questions.
"Moorpark, like every city in Ventura County, is addressing the increase in graffiti through a number of methods and means. The scourge of graffiti costs the city dearly, and the funds that are obligated to remove this vandalism could be much better utilized for our residents," Lasher said.
While he supports many of the ideas suggested, Lasher said taggers have become more sophisticated and have found ways to beat measures aimed at deterring them.
Lasher said the city staff might propose a revision to existing graffiti laws to include a $1,000 per incident penalty, based on a recommendation from the Ventura Council of Governments.
Lasher said he wasn't familiar with the graffiti hotline available in Simi Valley, but said Moorpark residents can call 517-6232 to report graffiti.



Friday, February 22, 2008

New Graffiti Cam System


Law Enforcement Associates Receives Initial Orders for New Graffiti Cam System
Company Reports Widespread Interest in Graffiti Surveillance and Notification Platform
February 21, 2008: 09:28 AM EST
Law Enforcement Associates Corporation (LEA) (AMEX: AID), the largest U.S. developer and manufacturer of undercover surveillance equipment, today announced it has received orders for more than 40 of its recently introduced Graffiti Cam systems. The Graffiti Cam is a covert video recording device that notifies law enforcement of graffiti and related forms of property crime while they are occurring. The orders have come from an array of law enforcement organizations located throughout the United States.
Paul Feldman, president of LEA, said, "We believe there is enormous demand for tools that enable law enforcement to proactively apprehend and convict offenders of graffiti-related crimes. These initial orders are a very encouraging sign that LEA has begun to penetrate this large, untapped market opportunity.
"We have seen widespread interest in our Graffiti Cam ever since we introduced the product and concurrently announced a beta testing program in Denver last November. Although severe winter weather has delayed a full rollout of the testing program, we have been aggressive in our efforts to educate other domestic markets about the product and its cutting-edge surveillance features. We believe the Graffiti Cam and its real-time notification system will be key in catching, prosecuting and penalizing individuals engaged in this most common form of vandalism."
Feldman said LEA's nearly 40-year track record of providing advanced audio and video surveillance devices to law enforcement has been a key factor in landing the initial orders for the Graffiti Cam. "We look forward to continuing our work with the Denver Police Department, and are optimistic that the results of this beta testing program will help us accelerate our sales and marketing efforts."
About Law Enforcement Associates Corporation
LEA is a leading security and surveillance technology company that manufactures and markets a diverse product line to the worldwide law enforcement, military, security and corrections markets. The company's Audio Intelligence Devices (AID) division has been serving the law enforcement sector for more than 30 years and is one of the most respected names in the surveillance equipment industry. LEA's products are used by a wide variety of government and non-governmental agencies, as well as public and private companies. These include military bases, nuclear facilities, embassies, government installations, oil refineries, United Nations and NATO locations. The company enjoys close working relationships with other prominent players in the security and surveillance industry, such as Smith & Wesson (NASDAQ: SWHC), one of the world's largest manufacturers of quality firearms and firearm safety/security products; and FLIR Systems, Inc., a world leader in the design, manufacture and marketing of thermal imaging and stabilized camera systems. LEA's products have been used at high-profile events such as the Summer & Winter Olympics, Super Bowl, U.S. Golf Championship, and the Democratic and Republican National Conventions. Its products include the Under Vehicle Inspection System (UVIS), Smith & Wesson-branded UVIS Swift, EDK123 (Explosive Detection Kit), Bloodhound and Birddog GPS Tracking Systems, Graffiti Cam, Letter-bomb Visualizer Spray, and a wide variety of Audio & Video Surveillance Equipment. Headquartered in Youngsville, N.C., the company has been featured in many industry publications and websites. For more information, please visit http://www.leacorp.com/.



Cops Arrest Seven in graffiti Bust


Cops arrest seven in graffiti bust
BY JOHN VALENTI john.valenti@newsday.com
7:45 AM EST, February 21, 2008

Their individual graffiti tags included "WDS" and "DTB," police said. As in "We Destroy Streets" and "Down to Bomb."But Suffolk County police said they have busted seven members of what they called "an organized graffiti group" that had defaced businesses and residences in at least 50 incidents during the past month in Bay Shore, Brentwood, East Islip and Deer Park.Police said that among the vandalized locations were the American Legion hall in Brentwood, overpasses on Sunrise Highway and the Southern State Parkway, the American Veterans Association in Bay Shore, Brentwood Memorial Cemetery and the El Salvardorian Consulate in Brentwood. Other homes and businesses were also vandalized.
Following investigations involving officers from the First Precinct Crime Section and the Third Precinct Crime Section, police arrested six men -- and one juvenile. Those arrested include: Enio Solares, 25, of 1146 Connetquot Ave., Central Islip, charged with one count of making graffiti; Jhoel Mercado, 18, of 16 Duke St., Deer Park, charged with four counts of making graffiti; Stephen Commisso, 17, of 125 Rigney St., Brentwood, charged with four counts of making graffiti; Luis Alamo, 18, of 11 Santam Ct., Bay Shore, charged with 14 counts of making graffiti; Brandon Guzman, 17, of 120 Evergreen St., Brentwood, charged with 17 counts of making graffiti; and, Roger M. Vargas, 18, of 188 Louise Dr., Bay Shore, charged with 15 counts of making graffiti.Each of the charges is a Class A misdemeanor. All have been released on bail, police said.The six charged as adults will be arraigned at a later date in First District Court, Central Islip. The seventh person will appear in juvenile court.Police said they are "actively investigating" other incidents of graffiti, calling it "a quality-of-life issue" and saying that makes it a priority -- because of the "negative impact it has on the local communities."Police are urging anyone with information regarding graffiti to contact Crime Stoppers at 1-800-220-TIPS. All calls will remain confidential.



Wednesday, February 20, 2008

Graffiti Tagger Charged with trying to Kill a Cop


A fugitive is behind bars tonight, charged with trying to kill a cop. It's a story you first saw on 69 News last night. Allentown Police Officer Christopher Hendricks was injured when investigators say he tried to arrest a group of graffiti vandals. Tonight, Officer Hendricks is recovering and neighbors are speaking out about a growing problem in Allentown. Scott Self Jr. from Jersey City and several others are accused of attacking two Allentown Police Officers during a scuffle in this alleyway just off of 11th and Tilghman Streets last night. And neighbors say graffiti is to blame. >> KELLY: When kids aren't taken care of that's how kids act. >> REPORTER: Neighbors on North 12th Street in Allentown are still getting over last night's incident, and they say the graffiti needs to stop. >> KELLY: When they run rambunctious and don't have no discipline that's what happens. >> REPORTER: Robert Romig is a retired police officer from the Allentown Police Department. He's lived around the corner for more than 60 years. Romig says even though the area is safe, he says there is one nagging problem. >> ROMIG: Graffiti more than anything. >> REPORTER: And that's what investigators say sparked last night's scuffle with Officer Christopher Hendricks and 20-year-old Jason Self of Jersey City, New Jersey. Police say Self bashed Officer Hendricks over the head with a blunt object. Hendricks is currently recovering in Lehigh Valley Hospital. He's expected to be okay. Assistant Police Chief Joseph Hanna spoke with him earlier today. >> HANNA: He's doing well in spite of this traumatic event. >> HANNA: He's recovering, it's going to take some time, but he's in good spirits. >> HANNA: Whenever one of your men is injured, and when we become victims in a case like this, it hits home and hits hard. >>Police say the other officer, Joseph Ianetta, suffered a broken hand. He was treated and released last night. Scott Self will be charged with criminal attempted homicide, aggravated assault, and other charges. Police arrested two other people, and they are still searching for at least two more in connection with this incident.



Tougher Penalties for Graffiti Taggers


Omaha councilman proposes tougher penalties for graffitiBY KAREN SLOANWORLD-HERALD STAFF WRITER
A graffiti rap could mean extra jail time or community service under a new ordinance proposed by Omaha City Councilman Jim Vokal.The ordinance would stiffen penalties for minors and adults who are caught for graffiti violations. It also would increase the fines for businesses that violate laws intended to keep spray paint out of the hands of taggers."This (graffiti) problem continues to grow, mostly in the eastern part of the city — in midtown, north Omaha and south Omaha," Vokal said. "It affects the quality of life in our neighborhoods, and it won't be tolerated."Vokal said he worked with City Prosecutor Marty Conboy, the Omaha Police Department and several neighborhood groups to develop the ordinance.The minimum punishment for minors who spray graffiti is now 80 hours of community service. That would increase to 120 hours under the proposed ordinance.Adults now face a minimum of 48 hours in jail or 80 hours of community service, or both. That would increase to a minimum of 72 hours in jail or 120 hours of community service, or both.Businesses are prohibited from selling spray paint to those younger than 18 without the consent of a parent or guardian, and must display spray paint in a way that makes it difficult to shoplift. A violation of that law now means a minimum $75 fine, which would double to $150 under the proposed ordinance.Conboy said that some perpetrators may see graffiti as a victimless crime, but prevalent graffiti can create the perception that the impacted areas are unsafe. That can lead to more crime and gang activity, he said."The idea is to raise the stakes and cause people to think twice about the damage that graffiti does," he said. "You will go to jail."The graffiti issue has come to the forefront in recent weeks, as several teenagers have been caught by police for spray painting across the city.Vokal said that he will introduce his ordinance at the City Council meeting Tuesday and that a public hearing will held March 4."I don't know how my colleagues on the council could not support this," Vokal said. "I'm confident it will pass."




Tuesday, February 19, 2008

South Lake Union Streetcar TAGGED!


Graffiti removed from South Lake Union streetcar
By Seattle Times staff
Taggers spray-painted the orange South Lake Union streetcar early Monday, after cutting a chain-link fence at the maintenance base on Fairview Avenue North.
Police said a security guard reported seeing two men inside the base, and another outside, just before 3 a.m. Monday. No arrests have been made.
It took five hours today for a pair of workers from Goodbye Graffiti to remove the stains, while the red and purple trains covered the 1.3-mile route.
Police have graffiti suspect
NEAL GOSWAMI

BENNINGTON - Bennington Police say they have identified two people, including a teenager, for defacing the Bennington Battle Monument last weekend but have declined to release their names until they are formally charged.
Bennington Police Chief Richard Gauthier said police have identified two males responsible for putting graffiti at the base of the 306-foot monument that was first reported to police on Feb. 14 around 5:45 p.m.
The word "Heroes?" was written on one side of the structure while another side has the phrase "F--- Bush" and an anarchy symbol - a capital A inside of a circle.
According to Gauthier, the case is still under investigation, and he declined to comment on how police identified the two males or what evidence implicated them.



4 Teens Accused of Graffiti Vandalism


4 teens accused of graffiti vandalism at Long Island park
MASTIC BEACH, N.Y. - Police say four teenagers who sprayed graffiti on a building at a Long Island park have been arrested. Suffolk County police say officers were on anti-crime patrol Saturday night when they saw the teens trespassing at Osprey Park in Mastic Beach. The officers say they approached the teens and noticed gang-related graffiti painted on a nearby pavement and the doors of a building.
The teens range in age from 13 to 16. They face misdemeanor charges including trespassing, making graffiti, possessing a weapon and possessing graffiti instruments. One of the teens has been released on bail. The other three have been turned over to their parents.



Saturday, February 16, 2008

RailCar Graffiti



A box car is their canvas
By BOB KEYES, Portland Press Herald Writer


SOUTH PARIS — A lumbering freight car lurched past the railroad crossing, and Murad Sayen's eyes locked on a flash of color. Then another. And another. As Sayen narrowed his focus from behind the steering wheel of his pickup truck, he realized he was seeing fleeting images of graffiti, splashed in magnificent colors on the sides of rusted freight cars that rumbled before him.
These weren't a vandal's quick signature tag, but elaborate designs, executed with a deft touch by a graffiti writer.
It was, as he saw it that spring morning, a traveling art show.
Since that chance encounter last year, Sayen has made chronicling railroad graffiti a personal quest. The South Paris photographer, known for his panoramic digital images, now is focused on rail cars tagged by graffiti.
He still shoots landscape art, but documenting railroad-car graffiti inspires him in new ways.
Sayen appreciates the sincerity of the work. It's whimsical, spontaneous and full of intent. The graffiti writers pass visual notes to one another, creating a conversation in color that spans the continent.
Nearly every day, Sayen goes to a siding near his home to look over the cars and see what he can find. Respecting the danger of the rails, Sayen does most of his work from private land adjacent to the siding.
He's received the blessing of the landowner to roam the area along the tracks.
Recognizing that vandals are responsible for the artwork, Sayen is careful not to glorify their deeds. He is more interested in the social statement the graffiti conveys than the art itself.
"It would be hard to find an object more quintessentially heavy metal than a freight car," he said. "It's all steel, all beat up, scarred, rusted out and patched.
"It just rolls down the line, and along comes this gang of kids in the middle of the night that transforms this rusty piece of metal into a rolling piece of artwork."
Because of the illegal nature of the work - the graffiti writers are guilty of trespassing and responsible for damages to property, while putting the railroad companies at risk of liability - Sayen said he does not condone their work.
"It's vandalism, yes. No doubt about that. But it's also art, and I want to document it," he said.
A spokesman for Guilford Transportation Systems, which operates on the tracks where Sayen does most of his work, did not return phone calls to discuss graffiti and the railroad's response to it.
But in his research, Sayen has traced some of the graffiti he photographs near his home in South Paris to a railroad yard in Los Angeles.
During a recent visit to his local siding, Sayen came across a piece that stretched the entire length of the rail car, a genre of art known as "end 2 end."
In big, bold colors, a trio of writers from the "Seventh Letter" crew in California painted a huge rose, with thorns and leaves, along with the words, "Destroy Prisons."
It wasn't a quick hit, but a fully conceived painting that took hours to complete.
"This is their idea of a social statement," Sayen said, as he aimed his camera lens, focused and clicked.
"They are saying, no doubt, that in their social circles they know a lot of people who are locked up."
'PIRATE' ART
In the year-plus he has been tracking the cars that pass through South Paris, Sayen has amassed hundreds of photos of so-called pirate art.
He reproduces the images as small squares, tightly focused on the colors and texture of the graffiti as it adorns the metal surfaces.
As he photographs, he is both artist and sociologist.
"I think what this graffiti is about is a manifestation of the fringe of our society. It's the outside looking in, and I think it's true outsider art. It's folk art.
"It's done not out of a desire to please, but it's straight from the shoulder. It's done under conditions that guarantee its purity. No one is doing it for recognition. It's all about making a statement."
Sayen's photography caught the attention of Anne Zill, director of the art gallery at the University of New England in Portland.
Zill acquired one of Sayen's images for the gallery's permanent collection, and she intends to give the photographer an exhibition next year.
She appreciates Sayen's willingness to probe such a layered subject.
"He is looking at a phenomenon that is worth paying attention to. It's guerrilla art at large. It's street art of the 21st century, on trains that travel all over the country, that shows a collective artistic will at work. The subject matters are big issues - civil rights, war and peace," she said.
Further, Zill believes Sayen's art attempts to interpret, or at least capture for the sake of posterity, an important moment in the life of urban America and Canada.
She likened today's graffiti gangs to the beat generation of the 1950s and '60s.
"Let's pay attention to this. They are off the radar of regular middle-class folks going through their days, but they are presaging something. We are not sure exactly what, but we know it's not easy. It's not about whether we like Bush or not. It's about something else, something much deeper than politics," she said.
FINDING THE MEANING
Sayen worked as a youth counselor in upstate New York for several years, and his understanding of graffiti has evolved. Early on, he assumed the markings were the work of disenfranchised kids whose resentment of society caused them to lash out in acts of vandalism.
His thinking has changed.
In an essay he prepared to accompany the display of his work, he writes, " ... I am now convinced that this is not only art in the highest sense, but a more highly evolved form of it than most people are either aware of or willing to accept. I would even contend that railroad graffiti is one of the purest art forms that presently exists."
In the year-plus since he began his project, Sayen has had limited e-mail contact with some of the people whose work interests him. Eager to learn more, he began a thread on a Web site forum.
His outsider status was quickly revealed, and Sayen was asked to leave the forum.
But he persisted and eventually began a conversation with several graffiti writers.
In his essay, he describes the exchange:
"Many of them used the word 'addiction' to explain their inability to resist doing it. The possibility of getting caught, operating in a dangerous environment and the challenges of doing art under stressful conditions, all help to create the level of excitement that becomes so titillating that it is hard to find satisfactory substitutes.
"One youngster told me that the only time in his life that he truly feels alive is when he is on the prowl with some paint cans in his sack."



Graffiti on the rise in Ahwatukee


Graffiti on the rise in Ahwatukee
Colleen SparksThe Arizona RepublicFeb. 15, 2008 08:38 AM
Incidents of graffiti are on the rise in Ahwatukee, and Phoenix officials are putting storeowners on notice: Selling spray paint, fat markers, etching solutions and other tools that can create graffiti to anyone under 18 in the city is illegal. Some Ahwatukee retailers say they are doing their part to ensure minors aren't buying the prohibited supplies, but some are doubtful it'll stop graffiti. Graffiti Busters, a city program, cleaned up 176 graffiti sites in Ahwatukee between July 1, 2007 and Jan. 31 of this year, Neighborhood Services Deputy Director Tim Boling said. That's a 38 percent increase from the same time period a year prior, and that doesn't include graffiti that individual property owners or other groups might have cleaned.
The program costs Phoenix taxpayers about $2.3 million a year, according to the city.The city sent letters to businesses throughout Phoenix last month reminding them of the law restricting sales to juveniles. Businesses also must store those items in a way that requires an employee's assistance to access them. Foothills ACE Hardware & Rental storeowner Kevin Cash said his store on Chandler Boulevard near Desert Foothills Parkway keeps spray paint locked up and requires cashiers to check customers' ID. But Cash said he is not sure "that we've ever stopped anyone from graffiti with our actions.""They're going to get it," he said. "It's like booze. They're going to steal it out of someone's garage. If they can't use spray paint, they'll use regular liquid paint. Police enforcement is the best bet."The city sends the reminder letter to stores annually and city staff inspects businesses monthly to make sure they are complying, Boling said. Most retailers are good about complying and if they don't they are fined."They need to be responsible retailers," he said. "It's not just a petty, victimless crime. It . . . leads to drug dealing, theft, auto theft. If there's graffiti in your neighborhood it decreases the property values by 15 percent."Checker Auto Parts at Chandler Boulevard near 44th Street also keeps spray paint locked up, and a prompt on the computer tells employees to check customers' ID, manager on duty Chris Murray said.But Murray said he believes youths could ask their parents to buy it for them and then spray graffiti. AutoZone store manager Charles Laursen said the Chandler Boulevard store near 46th Street is in "a pretty low theft area." The store checks customers' ID if they buy spray paint or etching solutions. "As long as people actually check the ID . . . I think it does help," Laursen said. "As soon as they turn 18, it's whatever they're going to do."In the Foothills, graffiti was spotted on walls in a park west of Desert Foothills Parkway and north of Pecos Road in November and again in December, Foothills HOA board Vice President Chad Blostone said. An SRP station near the park also was spray-painted a few months ago, and a drainage pipe south of Kyrene Altadeña Middle School on Desert Foothills Parkway was hit recently, Blostone said.Usually the HOA's handyman paints over small graffiti spots to match the HOA's colors, he said. Blostone said reminding the businesses not to sell the products to minors is "a good balance between trying to reduce that cost to the community and making it a little more difficult for individuals under 18 to buy the products."It usually costs the Foothills HOA about $65 to clean up a graffiti site, he said.

comments posted

Posted Feb-1510:08 AM
Oh not in the East Valley! I thought thugs and low life's were only in the West Valley. Oh wait, crime happens everwhere, crazy.
NaranjeroDos

Posted Feb-1510:30 AM
"But Murray said he believes youths could ask their parents to buy it for them and then spray graffiti." Then the parents should be held responsible.
d1010k
Posted Feb-1510:38 AM
Where is the parental guidance? Of course, here in Ahwatukee, a lot of parents way of spending time with their kids is handing them $20.00 and dropping them off at the movie theaters on Ray Road--don't belive me? Stop in and take a peek tonite..
dgr
Posted Feb-1510:53 AM
graffiti is on the rise everywhere. under the cover of darkness these cowards (cowards because they sneak around destroying property that is not theirs) mark things up. And like cowards, or cockroaches, they scatter as soon as any light is shown on them. The folks in Goodyear have the same growing problem.... Is it imported from the west?
dkmacs06
Posted Feb-1511:06 AM
I hate to say it, but the kids are getting it from the media. Watch prime time shows as well as commercials and see how many advocate graffiti throughout the city. If you watch closely at the commercials for M & M’s, McDonalds’ as well as the Disney channel, they almost condone this type of behavior. Just watch MTV and watch how many music videos use graffiti in their songs. Unless the city leaders want to shell out millions of dollars to clean up the sites, I suggest they instill this into the kids that this is not acceptable. I think the only to handle it is to have proactive graffiti patrols that clean up the sites as soon as it is tagged, that the kids are wasting their time and money. Basically, they would need 24 hour patrol coverage of paint trucks going around different areas. Of course this would cost the taxpayers lots of money, but it might work.

Posted Feb-1512:31 PM
Nasty degenerate hip hop non-culture has finally made it to Ahwatukee. The first drive by shooting is not far away.

Posted Feb-152:02 PM
How about we enact penalties that actually deter graffiti rather than send kids to some "diversion" class where they can hang around with other flunkies and laugh about their exploits. Why don't we do what Linda Gray wants to do with DUI law. She proposes to toughen the law until there is not one traffic death resulting from DUI. But seriously, let's make the punishment harsh enough that these "tagger"m (inappropriate term) tell their friends that it's not a good idea.
Posted Feb-155:42 PM
CWAZ said it best.. What would you rather have some simple Graffiti on some walls, or kids cruising around popping off their dad's gun? You tell me? cause if it were my decision I will take the Graffiti any day..



Thursday, February 14, 2008

Police Charge 6 Youths for Graffiti Vandalism


Police charge 6 youths in series of graffiti acts Vandalism prompts council to consider security cameras BY MICHAEL ACKER Staff Writer

"As we get toward the warmer weather, all you're going to hear are complaints. We need to take action." - Kathy Makowski SAYREVILLE - Property owners along Main Street may be able to breathe a sigh of relief now that police have arrested six juveniles suspected of spraying graffiti at several locations.
The Juvenile Aid Bureau of the Sayreville Police Department signed 27 complaints against the six juveniles, alleged to have spray-painted properties throughout the borough's downtown corridor. Because the suspects are all between the ages of 10 and 17, they face charges of juvenile delinquency, since criminal mischief is an adult crime.
Sayreville Police Detective Douglas Gumprecht conducted the investigation that led to the arrests of the six youths, who police say caused between $200 and $1,500 worth of damage in each incident.
Vacant and active business properties alongMain Street have been marked with graffiti numerous times in recent years, costing thousands of dollars in damage for those who operate stores, restaurants and other commercial operations in the quiet downtown community.
Jim Turner, a Sayreville resident who manages his fiancée's business, North Carolina Furnitureland, at 95 Main St., said vandals have been tagging the property with graffiti since it opened inAugust 2006.
"We've been getting tags sporadically almost since we started, well over a year ago," Turner said. "The [former] owner of the property had a tractor-trailer in the back and [vandals] defaced the entire trailer."
While Turner was not surprised about how young the suspects are, he said the lengths that they allegedly went to were extreme. He noted that graffiti writers frequently struck the post office across the street from the business.
"We've had an idea of who it was, and we knew they were young, but they really got out of hand," Turner said. "When you see the postal trucks all inked up, it's a little ridiculous."
Turner said he received a zoning violation after neighbors complained about the condition of the trailer that the prior owner left behind.
"I had to go out there and paint someone else's trailer; otherwise, they were going to hit me with a quality of life violation," he said.
The process of estimating the damage is complicated, since the extent of the damage is significant, Turner said. He added that vandals marked all four sides of the building, and a tractor-trailer in the back is covered in graffiti.
"It looks like a New York City subway car," Turner said. "It's just painted all over. One of my guys took a can of white touch-up paint and painted over one side, because he was embarrassed to drive around in it. It doesn't look professional and you are more likely to get pulled over in it."
Vandalism in the park
Meanwhile, the borough is looking into installing cameras in "hotspots" at borough parks where acts of vandalism frequently occur.
The borough's skate park in Kennedy Park, for example, is often spray-painted. Most recently, police responded to Kennedy Park for a report of criminal mischief at 7:29 a.m. Feb. 3, when park employees found a 25-foot-long metal fence on the front western side of the skate park pulled out and damaged. Law enforcement last saw the fence undamaged the prior evening.
Police characterized such incidents as being an ongoing problem in the area. Recreation Director Gerald Ust said that while the decorative fence is not expensive, it is only one of several properties that the borough has had to repair due to vandalism.
"They ripped a sign out that said 'Skate at your own risk,' " Ust said, noting that this is the type of "nonsense that goes on there all the time."
Ust would like to see the borough implement a Web-cam security camera system similar to the one that Woodbridge Township installed at its facility, which Ust said has resulted in an 85-percent reduction in incidents of vandalism. He added that theWeb-cams would also allow parents to view the area 24 hours per day on the Internet.
The $25,000 system would require the implementation of a T1 carrier system, as well as a digital video recorder at the police station that can record for up to 30 days, Ust said.
The cost of having borough employees clean up the parks, he added, could make the investment worth it if it can prevent these incidents from occurring and help police make arrests.
"We will try to look for the money," Ust said. "Things are tight."
The borough, in response to the spread of graffiti in town, recently purchased a $46,000 graffiti removal device known as the Farrow System, with help from a Clean Communities grant.
At a meeting of the Borough Council last week, Councilwoman Kathy Makowski described the acts of vandalism in Kennedy Park as "disturbing."
"This is very common through many of the parks," she said, noting that the borough's efforts against graffiti should be matched with an effort to stop all forms of property crime at borough parks.
"We should also continue to look at our parks and the type of vandalism that does occur," Makowski said. "As we get toward the warmer weather, all you're going to hear are complaints. We need to take action."
She said the governing body should look into security camera systems that would give police greater ease in identifying perpetrators and making arrests, so that the municipality can seek compensation.
Councilman Stanley Drwal said cameras that operate in lowlight situations would help police to identify suspects who tend to commit these crimes at night.
"I think it's a good idea in the long run," Drwal said.
Sayreville Police Chief Edward Szkodny told Greater Media Newspapers that security cameras would help police enforce the law and recoup the damages incurred by the borough. He added that the department would be in favor of the program if the borough can afford the expense.
"The police department would support any type of measure that could be taken that would curtail any kind of vandalism in public places," Szkodny said.
Vandals have plenty of places to run and hide in the borough's various parks, Szkodny noted.
"You can't remove all of the trees and shrubbery or it wouldn't be a park," he said. "Acts of criminal mischief can be completed so quickly without anybody observing it."
Vandalism is a periodic occurrence at Kennedy Park, the chief said.
"Over the years, we tried to control it, but as you're aware, it's a rather large park," Szkodny said. "Our officers are in there very frequently patrolling through."
Szkodny noted that acts of vandalism and graffiti are not unique to Sayreville. Vandals struck Fitzgerald's Field and the local skate facility in Varga Park in nearby South River Borough on Jan. 31. In another incident, South River police arrested graffiti writers in the area of Old Bridge Turnpike on Jan. 21 and again on Jan. 31.






Frustrated by Graffiti



By FRANK LANDRY, CITY HALL BUREAU
Frustrated with the amount of graffiti in Edmonton, a city councillor is calling for a crackdown on those doing the tagging.
Coun. Tony Caterina yesterday suggested the city send teams of bylaw enforcement officers or police out at night to track down spray-can vandals.
He suggested the sting could be done over a month.
"We need to send a message out to the people doing this that it's not acceptable," Caterina said.
Caterina's idea is based on a similar crackdown in Strathcona County, where a task force of up to 10 Mounties, dubbed Operation Wipeout, was set up last year.
Strathcona RCMP Const. Darren Anderson said the program ran for two months, resulting in about 100 charges, mostly related to graffiti.
"We had great success in a very short period of time," said Anderson.
In Edmonton, the city plans to launch an aggressive campaign in April to create "graffiti-free zones" in six neighbourhoods - using a much different approach.
It would be part of the ongoing Capital City Clean-up campaign.
Don Belanger, who's running the program, said the city will remove graffiti from the walls of buildings in the six areas once at no charge.
In return, the owners of the buildings will be asked to keep them free of graffiti for a year. The same model is expected to be expanded to other parts of the city the following year, Belanger said.
Also yesterday, city council approved a bylaw that will allow officials to ticket anyone who refuses to remove graffiti. The fine will be $250.
Belanger stressed that would be a last resort.
"It's to the point where really you need to be more forceful on it," said Mayor Stephen Mandel of the new fine.
"It's a growing problem and one we need to deal with."
But Caterina said he doesn't agree with building owners being charged for something they didn't cause.
"The onus is on us to come up with something where we prosecute, arrest or fine the people actually doing it," he said, suggesting that may call for a new bylaw.
However, spraying graffiti is a mischief offence under the Criminal Code, said David Aitken, director of complaints and investigations. Such charges cannot be laid by the city's enforcement officers, he said.
The city's six graffiti-free zones are Stony Plain Road, Alberta Avenue, downtown, Inglewood, Old Strathcona, and part of Mill Woods yet to be decided, said Belanger.
Meanwhile, council yesterday passed bylaw changes - effective April 1 - that puts the onus on property owners to keep adjacent boulevards free of litter. The fine for failing to do that is $250.