Jump to content

United Blood Nation

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 173.2.170.233 (talk) at 19:57, 29 June 2011. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

The One and Only United Blood Nation Eastcoast Bloods
Founded byOmar Portee A.K.A. OG Mack[1]
Founding locationRikers Island, NY
Years active1993 - present
TerritoryNew York City, Upstate New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, Baltimore, Maryland, Delaware, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, and some South-eastern states Philadelphia Montreal
EthnicityMostly African-American
Membership7,000[1]
Criminal activitiesMurder, Drug Trafficking[1], Extortion[1], Robbery[1], Credit card fraud[1], Weapon trafficking[1], Auto theft[1], Prostitution[1]
AlliesSex Money Murda, Zoe Pound, Black Guerrilla Family[2], Some People Nation gangs ( specifically the Vice Lords)
RivalsCrips, Nazis, Ñetas, Trinitarios, Aryan Brotherhood, Dominicans Don't Play, Ku Klux Klan, Folk Nation[1], Latin Kings[1], Mara Salvatrucha

The United Blood Nation, simply called the Eastcoast Bloods (not to be confused with the West Coast L.A. Street Gang) is primarily a street gang, formed in 1993 within the New York City jail system on Rikers Island's George Mochen Detention Center. GMDC was used to segregate problem inmates from the rest of the detention center. Prior to this time period, the Latin Kings were the most prevalent and organized gang in the NYC jail system. The Latin Kings, a Hispanic Latino street gang, were targeting African-American inmates with violence. These African-American inmates, organized by some of the more violent and charismatic inmates, formed a protection group which they called the United Blood Nation, in imitation of the West Coast gang. Though they closely resemble the Bloods found on the West Coast, the United Blood Nation or Eastcoast Bloods is unaffiliated with them, and therefore didn’t originally share any of their rivalries or their allies. Several of the leaders of this recently created prison gang formed nine New Blood sets (Nine Trey Gangsters,One Eight Trey,Mad Stone Villains,Valentine Bloods,Gangster Killer Bloods,Hit Squad Brims,Blood Stone Villains,Sex Money Murder) to recruit in their neighborhoods across New York and New Jersey.http://cryptome.sabotage.org/gangs/united.pdf

By 1996, thousands of members of the Blood street gang were establishing themselves as a formidable force among gangs and continued a steady drive for recruitment. At this time, the Bloods were more violent than other gangs but much less organized. Numerous slashings (razor blade or knife attacks) were reported during robberies and discovered to be initiations into the Bloods. This ritual became the trademark for the Bloods. Bloods recruited throughout the East Coast and began spreading their drug networks rapidly. Blood gangs can now be found in the New York City area, Upstate New York, New Jersey (especially South Jersey), Baltimore, Hagerstown, South Carolina, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, Montreal, Texas, and Virginia

Bloods will burn an upside down triangular shape that resembles a dog paw on their upper arm. The three circular burns, usually from a cigarette, can be found on a member of the Bloods. This is not practiced by the original West Coast Bloods. Some Bloods will have a tattoo of a dog, usually a bulldog, like the Mack Trucks logo. Bloods will also use the acronym M.O.B. (Member of Blood) to identify themselves. This can be seen as a burn scar or sometimes a tattoo. These too are distinctive only for the United Blood Nation Eastcoast Bloods gang, and not their West Coast version. However, one similarity both coasts share the use of the color red, Atlanta Braves, Atlanta Falcons, Chicago Bulls, Cincinnati Reds, Philadelphia Phillies, Boston Red Sox caps and jerseys (they would wear), also both keep their bandanas or red flags to the right, and they would also wear Chuck Taylor All-Stars.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k [1]
  2. ^ [2][dead link]