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The Fresno Bulldogs can be traced back to the 1970s but did not become an independent street gang until the 1980s. Their independence developed in the California prison system during the prison wars of 1984—1985.
That hassle started with a fight in Wausau. During this time, M.O.D members were migrating to the Midwestern states while having a turf war with Tiny Rascal Gang in Fresno, California. [8] Menace of Destruction gang members attacked five girls in a car in Wausau during April 1995. Bottles were thrown at the vehicle and windows were smashed.
Fresno Bulldogs; Street gangs. 18th Street gang graffiti. ... the gang must have a Wikipedia article with references showing it is a California street gang.
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Two of the three men were armed with handguns and were identified by detectives as Fresno residents Robert Joe Hernandez, 27, and Emilio Tito Alvarado, 26. Both are documented Bulldog gang members ...
Fresno Bulldogs: Mexican American street and prison gang. Fresno Bulldogs are largely conflicted with other prison gangs and are the biggest Hispanic gang in California unaffiliated with Sureños and Norteños. [18] [19] [10] Latin Kings: Hispanic street and prison gang established in Chicago in 1954. [20] [21]
Local, state federal law enforcement on Friday announced the arrest of 34 people and the seizures of 64 guns in an operation that targeted prison and street gangs in Fresno County.
Nuestra Familia was organized at Correctional Training Facility in Soledad, California in 1965. [1] In the late 1960s, Mexican-American inmates of the California state prison system began to separate into two rival groups, Nuestra Familia [7] and the 1957-formed Mexican Mafia, according to the locations of their hometowns (the north-south dividing line is Bakersfield, California).