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Showing content with the highest reputation on 02/05/2025 in all areas

  1. Big man finally looks like a real mobster
    3 points
  2. GANG AND NARCOTICS DIVISION LOS SANTOS POLICE DEPARTMENT "We intimidate those who intimidate others." "The mission of the Gang and Narcotics Division is to disrupt violent street gangs and the means by which they support their lifestyle, including the manufacture, transportation, sale and use of illicit drugs, and sales of firearms in the greater Los Santos area. Gang and Narcotics Division's enforcement efforts also focus on street-level enforcement strategies to effect a reduction in Part I crimes, thereby resolving community problems and facilitating uniformed officer's involvement." The Gang and Narcotics Division (GND) is dedicated to disrupting violent street gangs and dismantling infrastructure that supports their criminal enterprises. GND targets the manufacture, transportation, sale, and use of illicit drugs, as well as illegal firearms sales throughout the greater Los Santos Area. The Gang Support Section (GSS), a key component of GND, is overseen by a Lieutenant II and provides criticical support to Area GITs in gang-related investigations. This detective-based unit specializes in street gangs, prison gangs, and outlaw motorcycle gangs, personnel typically operating in civilian clothing. Beyond investigative support, GSS also provides essential officer safety guidance, conducts training for department personnel and outside agencies, and engages directly with communities on gang-related issues. Their work in locating fugitives and analyzing gang activity patters forms a crucial foundation for GND's overall strategy. A cornerstone of GND's effectiveness is its collaborative relationship with Area Gang Impact Teams across the department's geographic bureaus. Through coordinated intelligence sharing and joint operations, GND enhances the department's ability to identify emerging threats and implement targeted interventions in affected neighborhoods. The Area Gang Impact Teams (GIT) are comprised of specialized officers from the Gang Enforcement Detail (GED). These teams work directly in affected communities, gathering intelligence and conducting operations to disrupt gang activities at the street level. Topic credit: Vilbar, Desmond
    1 point
  3. Some good stuff brewing here.
    1 point
  4. ballin with cops
    1 point
  5. the hardest shit now brings back elitism
    1 point
  6. Congratulations, Trentino, Angiolini and DeNoia. Con Ri$petto
    1 point
  7. classic benny lets go
    1 point
  8. The Caccia-Licata Crew, once tightly connected to the Chicago Outfit's Cicero Crew, had a strong foothold in Las Venturas. Frank Caccia, known as "Frankie C," laid the groundwork for the operation, with Richard Licata taking things to the next level. Licata was more than just muscle; his business sense turned the crew into a dominant force, especially in loansharking and low-level gambling. Under their leadership, the crew thrived, bringing in tough recruits from the streets of Las Venturas, enforcing a hierarchy where status and loyalty determined advancement. Caccia and Licata were the driving forces, but the true enforcers were guys like Anthony Galigano, who ran extortion and illegal gambling rings with ruthless efficiency. Edward Petorino handled the drug side, distributing narcotics through home invasions and street-level deals. But by 2019, the crew started to crumble. A long-running investigation known as Operation Capricorn started tightening its grip, and the crew was hit with RICO charges for drug trafficking, extortion, fraud, and a laundry list of violent crimes. Caccia, Licata, Galigano, and Petorino were all taken down, dealing a devastating blow to the crew’s power. Once they were arrested, the crew that had once were a dominant force in Las Venturas was left fractured, with key players behind bars and the operation shattered, and even one victim, Edward Petorino gunned down in a drug-deal gone wrong and low level drug dealer Thomas Gaucini turning informant. The posse' once-vast network is a shadow of its former self. Caccia and Licata are still active, but they're operating on a much smaller scale—focused on bookmaking, loansharking, and fraud in Las Venturas and even Los Santos. The glory days are long gone. However, remnants of the crew still linger, propped up by associates of the Chicago Outfit. Steven Delaney, an old Outfit associate that avoided the indictments, is now running a payday loan business in Las Venturas, using it as a front for high-interest loans and money laundering. On the other side of the state, Savino Moone, aka "G-Money," has moved to East Los Santos, where he runs a drug trafficking operation, using his connections with the Philadelphia Black Mob to distribute cocaine and heroin. The Caccia-Licata Crew may have fallen, but their influence hasn’t disappeared entirely. While they’re nowhere near the powerhouse they once were, remnants of their network are still alive, with some of the same players continuing to operate within the criminal underworld. The remnants of the crew have adapted, shifting to smaller-scale operations, but their presence remains in the streets of Las Venturas and Los Santos. New figures are emerging, and the landscape of organized crime in the region continues to evolve as old connections resurface and fresh opportunities arise.
    1 point
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