Hoover’s home to more markings
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Gary Moskowitz
Glendale Police say the amount of graffiti on some local high school
campuses has steadily increased in recent years, but some students
disagree, saying that taggers prefer leaving their painted marks off
campus.
A week ago, vandals hit Hoover High School several times with
graffiti in and around stairwells and hallways.
Several students have since been accused of painting the graffiti
during school hours, and were cited by police for vandalism.
The students have been suspended and will have to appear in court.
School administrators are asking their parents to reimburse the
school for damages.
Many of the tags featured the same three letters, which
investigators believe is the vandals’ signature and may also refer to
smoking strong marijuana.
Police believe the letters, “JCK,” stand for “Just Causing Kaos,”
and also think the tag might be referring to the act of smoking
chronic, a highly potent type of marijuana.
In April, vandals tagged the school frequently, Co-principal Kevin
Welsh said.
“It’s been a good year and a half since we’ve had this come up as
a real issue,” Welsh said Thursday. “Aside from activity back in
April and most recently last week, there is no large-scale graffiti
problem here. It’s just sporadic, isolated incidents. With the most
recent problem, our [School Resource Officers] were able to find
several of the kids who did it, and it has not happened again.”
Hoover senior Miguel Lauchengco doesn’t consider tagging on campus
to be a problem at all.
“It’s not that big of a deal anymore,” said Miguel, 17. “The
school cleans it up right away anyway. There’s not that many
[taggers] here. Tagging is like a fad. But there’s other places to go
to paint graffiti that are better than school, like trucks and
trains, under bridges or on gang territory. I know people that do
it.”
Tagging is a “recurring problem” at Hoover, and also happens
frequently at Glendale High School, according to police reports.
Glendale High Co-principal LeRoy Sherman was not available for
comment.
But tagging crews -- groups of people who paint graffiti -- on the
east side of town are more active, said Stewart Brackin, a Glendale
Police Department gang detail investigator.
Police issued a 20-location search warrant at the end of March and
beginning of April that resulted in about 10 arrests of alleged
taggers, Brackin said. Complaints from community residents and more
reported tagging incidents -- primarily on the east side of town --
prompted police to issue the warrants.
“There has been a steady increase in tagging activity for the past
year or two,” Brackin said. “But the problem is that even when you
crack down on tagging, sometimes the attention you give them actually
bolsters their efforts.
“These kids want attention. ... They are not getting that at home
or from other viable sources, so they turn to these crews.”