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3. Gang Injunction Discussion <br />Committee Chairman Benavides introduces Chief Rojas. Chief Rojas thanks members of the <br />community for coming out to express their opinions. Chief Rojas states that community- oriented <br />policing is at the forefront of the Police Department, and invites anyone who has any questions <br />relating to any matter of law enforcement to contact him directly. He introduces Commander <br />Tammy Franks. <br />Commander Tammy Franks, Crimes - Against- Persons Division, opens up the discussion <br />regarding the gang injunction. Cmdr. Franks has two handouts: a graph titled "Crime in Santa <br />Ana's Safety Zone" which shows the numbers of crime types (battery /assault with a deadly <br />weapon, robbery, weapons violations, narcotic violations, probation/parole violations, SAMC <br />violations, auto theft, disturbing the peace, malicious mischief, and trespassing) prior to and <br />following injunctions. There is also a narrative titled "Operation Safe Neighborhoods, Santa <br />Nita Gang Injunction." <br />Commander Franks gives an update on the Santa Nita gang injunction and injunctions in general. <br />The definition of an injunction is that it is a civil lawsuit against a criminal street gang and its <br />members based on a legal theory of a public nuisance. The allegation is that the conduct and <br />activities of the gang within a defined area interfere with a community. There are 12 gang <br />injunctions in Orange County; Santa Ana has one, the Santa Nita injunction which was <br />established in 2006. Commander Franks gave an overview of the Santa Nita injunction by <br />describing the safety zone, the square mileage it covers, the boundaries, the grids. She further <br />explains how the gang injunction works after it has been signed by a judge in court. The <br />injunction now becomes a court order. The injunction will name certain individuals who will be <br />served with the paperwork and describes prohibited behavior which must occur within the safety <br />zone, a public place, in order for police to enforce it. Commander Franks explains that since the <br />Santa Nita gang injunction's implementation in 2006, it has effectively reduced gang - related part <br />I serious crimes by 24 percent. This was compared to one year before the injunction was <br />implemented and two years after. It has reduced these Part I crimes by 60 percent when <br />compared to current crime trends. There have been 155 arrests to date and 82 criminal cases <br />filed the OCDA. The injunction has been effective in reducing crime and is just one tool that the <br />Police Department uses. It is a collaborative effort between the Police Department, the Orange <br />County District Attorney's Office, and the U.S. Department of Justice. <br />Assistant District Attorney Tracy Rinauro, the lead district attorney who worked on the Santa <br />Nita gang injunction, speaks to the audience. She states that there is no simple solution to the <br />gang problem, but she is excited to see that there are so many people who have come out to <br />speak. ADA Rinauro states that gang violence has to stop and that the young people, children, <br />and residents of Santa Ana should not be killed because of it. She reads sealed depositions that <br />