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Clica Loma Roja 14 I. Introduction “Desde la Loma miramos todo.” From the Hill we see everything. There’s a new tension stirring in the northern slopes of East Los — quiet, deliberate, and rooted in something older than the city itself. Up in the ragged edge of Las Colinas, where the concrete starts giving way to dry brush and broken pavement, a small crew has taken shape. They don’t move like a regular neighborhood set. There’s no deep graffiti war, no show of numbers on street corners, no booming block party — just small signals, whispers of movement, and the sense that someone is watching from the shadows. The Loma Roja boys are not locals. They’re outsiders by design — Norteños from the Red County region, where the dirt roads run long and the gang business is low-key and often more dangerous for it. Viriz, an ex-con at the center of the clique, has put in years with two different northern sets from the Red County circuit. With the backing of northern ties and a hardened county work ethic, his presence in East Los is intentional and surgical. II. Turf & Outposts "Pocos, pero puestos." Few, but here. 1. La Loma Baja (Lower Colinas) This is home. Rusted tin, half-dead pickups, barking dogs chained to fence posts, and dust in your throat. Situated just under the slope of the Colinas, it gives natural cover and relative isolation, while still being one road away from East Los. Graffiti stays low here, but the presence is strong — residents know what door not to knock on. It’s from here that the clique first launched its move into the city, with Viriz and a few others forming a base of operations small enough to avoid heat, but solid enough to survive first contact. This is where young soldados clean guns and older ones drink cheap beer and tell stories of Redberry, or worse. 2. La Loma Alta (Upper Colinas) Climb the dirt road north of Ambrose and you’ll hit La Loma Alta — a mess of shacks, old cabins, tents, and half-finished construction. It's not officially claimed, but a natural buffer zone. Even deeper north, past the treeline, the terrain creeps into rural brushland — a direct link to Red County. In the right weather, even cops won’t follow too far. The group uses it as a natural corridor, linking their hillside activities to the broader countryside. 3. El Slot (Las Flores Alley) You wouldn't look twice — just a crumbling alley behind a weathered row of homes east of Colinas. But parked in its shadow sits El Slot: a beat-up RV with covered windows, and a busted cooler outside. It has a view over part of the city, which makes it good for deals and ambushes. 4. La Gasera (Gas Station in East Los Santos) On the very edge of enemy territory lies a gas station — roof cracked, a faded “OPEN” sign still dangling. La Gasera stands as a symbol of intrusion — the first sign that something from up north is creeping in. Every appearance there is a statement — we’re here, and we’re not afraid. 5. La Doca (Palomino Pier) Back where it all started: Palomino Creek. Quiet, grey waters and the smell of salt and gasoline. This is deep Norteño country. It’s used for more than nostalgia — La Doca connects to boat routes and smuggling lines that run the back arteries of San Andreas. Through the docks, Red County’s criminal undercurrent meets with Flint and Bone counties, and even creeps west toward San Fierro or up toward Tierra Robada. 6. Red County Line (Other stories) Locals know these trailer parks, rural highways, dead-end towns, and biker dens scattered across Red County. It’s where we first crawled from — the backseat of a stolen truck, a motel where someone got patched up, a dirt bike left behind after a chase... OOC Clica Loma Roja 14 (CLR14) is a freshly rooted Norteño set operating out of La Loma Baja, the lower slopes of Las Colinas. It operates in a decentralized fashion, using scattered outposts to move product, host meetings, or disappear off-grid. The concept builds off the idea of rural Norteño gang members slowly making their way into Los Santos, working quietly and intelligently to survive in Sureño-dominated territory by using satellite outposts and smart connections.