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harassment and police brutality in this area. Medina asks for more programs, job opportunities, <br />educational opportunities, things that will better lives. He does not believe the gang injunction is <br />the answer. <br />Tony Ortuno: here on behalf of Boys and Men of Color. California detains 43% of youth subject <br />to ICE holds, high level of mistrust in Orange County with the police and law enforcement in <br />general, continuing this type of enforcement with the gang injunction only increases the distance <br />between what could be between communities and law enforcement. Continue to criminalize <br />communities through policies like this, and families will continue to be broken up because they <br />are incarcerated or because of their immigration status. <br />Pablo Avila: here on behalf of Boys and Men of Color. City has been trying to be transparent as <br />to its decision on creating policies here. However, he not seen the transparency to implement the <br />gang injunction and one of the requirements of the gang injunction is to have community input. <br />Many of the people in the area were not aware of the SAPD and the OCDA's intentions. Avila <br />would like to see the crime data in the Townsend area. <br />Maria Esquivel: paralegal for the ACLU Foundation in southern California. Esquivel offers the <br />ACLU office and its attorneys as a resource to members of the community. <br />Beatriz Negrete: social worker with LA County and also a resident in the city of Orange where a <br />gang injunction was initiated. Negrete speaks about the impact on families including her <br />personal experience. Her brother was listed on the injunction and her whole family was <br />stigmatized although he had no active participation. She said preventative programs are more <br />effective when dealing with gangs than punitive as is evident by the overcrowded jail system. <br />Madeleine Spencer: resident of the city of Santa Ana; came in support of SACRED. Specifically <br />referred to the Townsend injunction and the issue of transparency, she said there is no dialog <br />with the community. Spencer said that after the LA riots, when communities felt like they were <br />under a double threat, both from the police and gangs, it created a huge problem. She <br />recommends that instead of an adversarial process, look at a dynamic and educated process, <br />instead of looking at people as individual cases, start looking at the pattern analysis of whole <br />communities, including having liquor licenses in the downtown and the crime rate going up. <br />Ignacio Rios, Jr.: here on behalf of Boys and Men of Color. Rios believes the gang injunction <br />will not only affect those on the list, but entire families. He states that gang injunctions are for <br />life so children in the elementary schools can be put on the injunction by being in the safety <br />zones and by simply knowing people. He stresses the need for prevention strategies, not just <br />punishment. Rios reads from an essay by Dr. Victor Rios, a Professor of Sociology at Cal State - <br />Santa Barbara, who has studied gang injunctions. <br />