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Found 10 results

  1. FRANK BUNTZ for CITY COUNCILMAN SOUTHERN DISTRICT, LOS SANTOS Family. Freedom. Future. "When the voice of freedom talks, Los Santos better listen." BIOGRAPHY: Frank Buntz was born in a working class household in Detroit, as the son of Jewish German immigrants. Frank's father Rudolf worked for decades in a meatpacking plant in Delray, while his mother Barbara was a homemaker and part-time accountant. Frank attended a predominantly African-American high school, where he held interests in sociology. Despite facing much discrimination due to his religion, Buntz persevered and stayed true to his beliefs in family, freedom and the future. After high school, Frank pursued a law degree at Grand Valley State University in Michigan. He began practicing criminal defense in downtown Detroit, representing falsely accused citizens. In civil court, Frank also represented members of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, and was a known ally of Teamsters Local 337. During his time in Detroit, Buntz stood up for the working men and women of the city, of all colors and backgrounds. Seeking to grow his practice, Buntz moved to Los Santos twenty years ago and began representing its citizens in court. Much of his work came from criminal defense trials, as well as seeking people compensation in civil court for failures in our municipal system. Throughout his career, he has represented many homegrown Southern District businesses, including IcyDoll Enterprises and Rich Money Records. He's also maintained friendships with many other prominent institutions of the Southern District, including SheNailz and Bishop's Chicken. Outside of the courtroom, Frank enjoys jazz music and is a talented pianist and saxophonist. He had the pleasure of meeting many in the Davis jazz scene, including Chico Hamilton and Bob Obry. Frank enjoys attending local events and socializing with his fellows in the Southern District, and occasionally showing up to a car meet in one of his custom American classics. PLATFORM: Frank Buntz stands for three things - family, freedom, future. He upholds the American way of life, and firmly believes that the American Dream can be attained by anyone, including residents of the Southern District. If elected, Frank will bring jobs back to the Southern District, strengthening its economy and putting money back in the hands of the community. He'll work to privatize some services, while offering universal benefits of safety, security and sturdy infrastructure. Frank will work first-hand with families and businesses of the Southern District to address key and contemporary issues plaguing the community, and with the grace of God, fix them. He'll work to keep our streets cleaner, our children safer, and our community more prosperous. For too long, the residents of the Southern District have faced turmoil in regards to youth homicide and drug-related deaths. Frank plans to offer resources to parents and youth alike, to promote a healthy and wealthy life in America, and off the streets. By bringing a sense of community prosperity back to neighborhoods like Davis and Rancho, perhaps our lives can change for the better. Frank plans to work hand-in-hand with existing Southern District institutions such as Davis High School, as well as the local Los Santos County Sheriff's Department office, and others in the city government to bring about this positive change - not only for today, but also for tomorrow. A vote for Frank Buntz is a vote for a positive change. SHOW YOUR SUPPORT! Those interested in donating to Frank Buntz's campaign can send a wire transfer of no more than $50,000 to: FRANK BUNTZ - 010040820. Questions, media inquires or concerns can be sent to: [email protected] (( @subway244 )) Thank you, and God Bless America!
  2. This thread will follow Pearlette "Auntie Pearl" Clary — an elderly native of Davis, South Central. (WIP)
  3. ((Showcase of Victor Graham - Aim to show some rp around South LS))
  4. Latinos in Nineteenth, Twentieth Century San Andreas Latino immigration in the United States is predominantly viewed as a twentieth century phenomenon due to the large number(s) of people from Mexico, South, and Central America who settled in the U.S. during the period. San Andreas experienced small waves of Latino immigration, primarily from Mexico, beginning in the mid-nineteenth century. Mexicans were drawn to the state, like many others, by the prospect of gold. An estimated 10,000 Mexicans came to San Andreas following the famous 'Fool's Gold Rush' of 1869, just two years after San Andreas became a U.S. territory and two years before official statehood. While many gold prospectors from Mexico returned to their home country after finding only limited success, if any at all, some remained, and others began to join them. By 1900, at least 100,000 Mexicans had migrated to the U.S.; over 8,000 of them settled in Los Santos. Ricardo Nores, a Salvadoran notary, said his Latino friends could not understand why he moved his office last year to a black neighborhood on Strawberry Avenue—that they associated with “gangbanging” and drive-by shootings. "'Your crazy', my friends told me." "'How can you live there? They'll kill you,'" recalled Nores, 31. Even now, he said, "a lot of my friends won't visit me here." Ironically, Nores said he moved to South Los Santos to escape the violent drug trade that operated just outside his office in the Central American neighborhood near Morningwood. His new neighborhood, he said, is more peaceful. In recent years, Nores and other Latino merchants and residents have transformed much of South Los Santos from a segregated black community to a Latino barrio. The changes can be both seen and heard near Nores' office at the intersection of Strawberry Avenue and Capital Boulevard, two streets long synonymous with African American Los Santos. Here, dance halls, theaters and shops catered in the 1940s and 1950s to a growing population of black migrants from the rural South and overcrowded cities of the North. At the nearby Templar Hotel, jazz greats Billie Holiday and Duke Ellington held court, occasionally filling the Art Deco lobby with the sounds of an impromptu jam session. Today, however, the glory days of Strawberry Avenue are only a memory, and the community moves to a distinctly Latin beat. Instead of jazz, passers-by hear the slow-tempo melodies of Mexican ranchera music drifting from the Aguila Burrito. And in a sea of Latino-run appliance and furniture stores, only a handful of black-owned businesses survive. One of those businesses is the two-chair New Do Barber Shop of Andrew Richardson, 75, a Strawberry Avenue entrepreneur since 1952. With each passing year, Richardson is doing business in an increasingly Spanish-speaking environment. Indeed, so many Latinos have settled in the area that in 1988 it set a nationwide record for the greatest number of successfully completed applications for the immigration amnesty program. Perhaps nowhere in San Andreas did Latino immigration in the 1980s have a greater impact than in black enclaves of South Central Los Santos. The 45-square-mile area has long been the heart and soul of the largest black community in the western United States. Scarcely two generations ago large portions of the city were racially segregated either through property deeds or social barriers that kept blacks out of other neighborhoods. South Los Santos was then one of few places in the city where blacks could buy homes and operate businesses. Now, rising property values and gang violence are leading many black families to abandon the neighborhoods where they were born and raised. In the process, South Los Santos has become one of San Andreas' fastest-growing Latino communities. According to a recent study by a ULSA (University of Los Santos, San Andreas) researcher, the black population in South Central Los Santos declined an estimated 30% in the past decade. By contrast, the Latino population in that area has increased an estimated 200% since 1980 and demographers predicted the 1990 census would show that Latinos have become the community's majority ethnic group. The Latino population is expected to grow another 214% by the year 2025, according to Focus 2000, a black political research organization. The black population, meanwhile, is expected to decline 23%. Behind this transformation has been the arrival of perhaps 1 million Latino immigrants—the exact figure is uncertain—as the result of political conflict and economic instability in El Salvador, Guatemala and Mexico during the last decade. In years past, many of these immigrants would have settled in established barrios throughout East Los Santos. Rather than crowd into these neighborhoods and pay the increasingly high rents, some of the immigrants have become urban pioneers. They have moved into South Los Santos, breaking the informal barriers that have divided the city ethnically for decades. All along Capital Boulevard, and in communities like Rancho, El Burro Heights and even Vinewood, the influx of thousands of Latino immigrants like Nores has created racially mixed neighborhoods. Sometimes, the grandchildren of Southern sharecroppers live side by side with peasant and working-class families from Mexico and Central America. On Innocence Boulevard, and other major thoroughfares, storefront Latino evangelical churches have formed next to black Baptist churches. Soccer rivals basketball and football as the sport of choice at BJ Smith's and other neighborhood playing fields. Three South Los Santos high schools that had overwhelmingly black student populations in 1980—Davis High, Rancho High, and La Mesa Arts Institute—now have Latino majorities. The change is most dramatic at ULSA where Latinos constitute 70.4% of the student body as compared to only 3.9% in 1980. In Rancho, most Latinos left after the 1992 Los Santos riots, a six-day upheaval that made the community a symbol of black anger. Today, immigrant families have reestablished the Latino colony that Mexican railroad workers founded there at the turn of the century. Across the street from Richardson's barber shop, Mexican salesmen barter with customers at Pedro's Place No. 2, a used-car lot. Next door, Nores, the Salvadoran notary public, advertises assistance with "Seguros de auto"— car insurance. Even some of Richardson's customers are now Latinos. "They sometimes come in and get a haircut," Richardson said. "But the conversation is limited because they don’t speak much English. I should buy me a book so I can be able to speak Spanish." Anthony H. Truitt, a ULSA geographer who has studied black flight from South Los Santos, said he believes the area has passed a historic turning point in its transition from a black enclave to a predominantly Latino community. "I think parts of South Los are already a (Latino) barrio," Truitt said. "As the remaining older blacks die off, I don't see younger blacks buying their houses and grabbing hold of these communities." Some Latinos have bought and refurbished properties in Chamberlain Hills, in the shadow of South Los Santos’ state-famous landmark— the BJ Smith Recreational Center. TEST Gang The 38th Street Gang was founded sometime in the 1920s and made its way to San Andreas in the early 1940s, late 1950s. This was also the time of zoot suit hysteria, as white law enforcement on the west coast began harassing Latino and Filipino youths for their oversized suits. Terms like "Pachuco" and "Zoot Suitor" were published in the press as coded language synonymous with gangster and criminal. The 38th Street Gang expanded over the years and was soon heavily involved in the narcotics trade. By the 1980s, Los Santos actually closed roads around Strawberry Avenue due to the overflow of people going there to buy drugs, although the gang does not have much of an impact on the area there no more. Like other large gangs, the 38th Street Gang has a number of sets that aren't related to each other aside from being under the same name. Both law enforcement and other gangs have targeted 38th Street, and they have long-standing violent rivalries with other groups. 38th Street is one of the largest and continuous growing gangs in San Andreas, they also share close ties to the Mexican Mafia, a dominant prison gang. The large geography of South Los Santos has contributed to several sub clicks being formed over the years. Their clicks are: Alta Street Locos (ASL) Down Azz Lowks (DAL) Gardenas Locos (GLS) Tiny Diablas (TDS) - female clique Night Owls (NLS) Gatos Locos (GLS), Krazy Kats (KKS), Krazy Cats (KZCT, KZK) Cut Downers (CDS) Las Locas (LAS) – female clique Midgets (MLS) Pee Wees Locos (PWLS) Pee Wees (PWS) South Los Locos (SLLS) Tiny Locotes (TLS) Javier "Sparky" Berrocal was a known high-ranking member in the 38th Street Gang, a prominent key figure. He rose to street fame after murdering an on-duty police officer in broad daylight who was apparently "messing" with him. Berrocal was born on April 15, 1988, in Los Santos, San Andreas, the son of second-generation Mexican immigrants Anita (née Alvarado) and Jose Berrocal. The family raised Javier in North Los Santos but later moved to the south side due to financial problems where Javier attended Davis High. Javier Berrocal became a tagger of the Night Owls (a huge & popular 38th Street tagging crew at the time). He was incarcerated at Grapeseed Vocational Institution after he and Sebastian Gálvez, a founding member of the Night Owls tagging crew, stabbed a cop to death outside of a dancehall called 'Salón Feijoo' in 2004. At the time of his conviction, Javier was only 16 years old. While incarcerated, he earned the respect and admiration of the members of the Mexican Mafia which was well in its development stage. According to Corrections Officer Brian Bakers: By 2006, administrators at GVI, alarmed by the escalating violence, had transferred a number of the charter eMe members to Bolingbroke, hoping to discourage their violent behavior by intermingling them with hardened adult convicts. It didn't work. For example, the story goes that Javier Berrocal arrived on the lower yard and was met by a six-foot-five, 350-pound black inmate who planted a kiss on his face and announced this scrawny teenager would now be his 'bitch.' Javier returned a short time later, walked up to the unsuspecting predator, and stabbed him to death with a jailhouse knife, or shiv. There were more than a thousand inmates on the yard. No witnesses stepped forward, and only one dead man entertained the idea that Berrocal was anybody's bitch. The night before his death, Javier Berrocal had received multiple death threats and knew that when he left his cell in the morning, he would be leaving it permanently. On the morning of December 27, 2016, Berrocal was asked if he wanted to leave his cell with the rest of the prisoners; rather than avoiding his fate and staying in his cell, he stepped onto the tier of his cell bright and early. He was stabbed repeatedly with shanks and beaten with a pipe by Black Car assassins. He was stabbed an estimated fifty times on the tier and thrown off a third story tier onto the concrete floor below and stabbed another dozen times, which immediately started a riot between blacks and browns. Berrocal was subsequently buried at a cemetery in Vespucci Beach, Los Santos with an inscription reading, "Siempre amado por tu madre y tu familia." (Forever loved by your mother and family.) His parents would divorce shortly afterwards. Berrocal's murder sparked an era of gang warfare within the San Andreas penal system. Over the next year the lives of 21 prisoners were lost in tit-for-tat killings. The carnage and animosity from his murder still exists years after his death. The 38th Street gang occupies a small area on the westside of South Los Santos in Strawberry. Some members have also been spotted on the eastside of South Los, and some areas in East Los Santos. These neighborhoods had been historically known to be some of the most dangerous in the nation. Their rivalries expand to most neighborhoods all over Los Santos County. They also have confirmed cliques in: Salt Lake City, West Valley City, Magna, Kearns Utah, and Wisconsin. Also, in Chicago. Happy Balloons & Homicide On a Saturday night, the "party car" gets word from an undercover officer that a flier party with local gang members attending is about to start on Davis Avenue in Davis. Davis Division Senior Lead Officer Camilo Torres, who coordinates the Friday and Saturday night party detail, is worried because the house is located on Davis Bloods gang turf. Within 15 minutes of getting the call, Torres and five other officers pull up to a rented white bungalow. Teenagers are milling about on the front lawn and the street. They scatter when they see the cruisers roll up. Hip-hop music and loud voices blast from the backyard. The six officers walk to the side gate leading to the backyard party and tell the more than 250 partiers, most of whom are Latino and, in their teens, to disperse. After a few minutes, the kids begrudgingly file past the officers. A teenager complains about losing his $5 entrance fee. The officers continue to the backyard, which is completely dark except for the white Christmas lights around the DJ's amplifiers and turntables. The cops tell the DJ to pack it up. A handful of stragglers attempt to jump the back fence, but the officers corral them through the side gate. Bottles of beer are scattered on the grass. One of the partiers, 26-year-old Dante, says he goes to flier parties a lot, since he can't get into bars because, as a resident of Mexico, he isn't eligible for a San Andreas ID. His friend Ricardo, the busted party's DJ, throws parties every weekend in the Tongva Valley. "Word of this party," says Dante, spread from "fliers passed out at Davis High School." Officer Torres explains to Dante how dangerous these parties can be. His words fall on deaf ears. "We will see you next time?" asks Torres. "I guess you will," laughs Dante. This type of intervention is relatively new. Last May, LSPD's Davis Division, which patrols Davis and the border of its surroundings, started a party-suppression detail, made up of overtime and reserve officers, in the hope of stemming the tide of flier-party violence that has spiked dramatically over the past year. As if to confirm the need for the detail, 27-year-old Lucho Alemán and 23-year-old Axel Martí, both DJ assistants, were gunned down by alleged gang members at a Chamberlain Hills party attended by hundreds of Davis High School students the very weekend the initiative was inaugurated. Since its inception, LSPD officials said, the “party car” broke up an average of five parties a night. But its winning streak came to an end on October 24 of 2022, when Zamari Beasley was shot dead, also in Chamberlain Hills. "They were on their way when the homicide occurred," said Davis Division's Sergeant Mitch Roberts. Zamari Beasley's demise has become all too familiar— a young man looking for fun ends up on the wrong end of a gun. If he hadn't been stood up, he might still be here. He'd planned to play pool with his neighbors, but by 9:30 p.m., the 6-foot-7-inch salesman hadn't heard from his friends. When three of his co-workers pulled up at his house on Grove Street and invited him to a pre-Halloween bash in Chamberlain Hills, Beasley, 24, decided to tag along. It was Saturday night, after all, and, like most single men his age, he wanted to have fun. The flier advertising the party promised half-price drinks, indoor/outdoor partying, Jell-O shots, happy balloons (nitrous oxide) and DJs playing all the best music. Beasley, a Los Santos native, drove in his 2012 gray Impala with a friend while his other two friends followed behind. The night was still pretty young by the time they arrived at 12866 Carson Avenue, a vacant single-family home on a mostly Latino residential street near Alta Street that the party organizers had secretly secured. The group paid their $3 fee and entered a space barren, save for the Halloween decorations hanging from the ceilings and walls. The Secret Society, the party crew hosting the bash, was selling drink tickets. Beer was $2. The party, which started around 8 p.m., was an eclectic cross section of young Los Santos. Partiers ranged from local high school kids to young suburban professionals to gang members. The one thing they had in common was that they had managed to navigate their way through the secret codes and cues of the latest flier party and had found themselves here. By the end of the night, they would have another thing in common: this party, like so many others over the past year, would end in bloodshed and violence. There were warning signs that trouble was brewing. A neighbor had called police earlier in the evening to complain about the loud music coming from the vacant house and the cars driving too fast down Carson Avenue. On a slow night, such complaints might have busted up the party before it turned tragic. Unfortunately, by the time LSPD dispatchers sent out the neighbors' complaint, patrol officers were delayed due to a vehicle pursuit and injury at the intersection of Carson Avenue and Alta Street. "When something like that happens, you instantly drain all your resources and end up playing catch-up the rest of the night," said Sergeant Roberts. "The pursuit created a domino effect that backed up the patrol cars." Dozens of other calls had to be attended to before police could respond to the ruckus at the party. When a patrol car finally pulled up to check on the house, it was filled with more than 150 partiers at full tilt. The surrounding streets were lined with cars. While the officers were waiting for the party-suppression detail to show up, partygoers began running from the scene. A few told officers that someone had been shot. What happened inside was as banal as it was unfortunate. After a while, Beasley had struck up a conversation with a girl. Her boyfriend took exception and started to beef with Beasley. According to friends, Beasley backed off. It is not clear how the conflict escalated, but by the time the cops finally went into the house, there was nothing left of the party except 3-by-5 photocopied fliers and empty beer bottles littering the floor, DJ gear, kegs of beer and bottles of tequila, a broken window in the back where the organizers had gained entrance, and Zamari Beasley, dead in the living room, the victim of a bullet to the back of the head. The fun-loving giant was pronounced dead by paramedics at 1:25 a.m. A Dodge minivan and poor description of a short Latino male was given to officers. Deputy Sheriff Matthew Jones was assigned to investigate Beasley's murder. On November 12, Jones proceeded to the Alta Street gas station, an area considered to be 38th Street gang territory, to look for gang activity and vehicles which may have been involved in Beasley's murder and unrelated shootings. Jones saw a vehicle he identified as a red Monte Carlo which attracted his interest. Luz Romero, a 38th Street Gang seasoned veteran, was with four other male Latins near the car, drinking alcohol. When Jones made a second pass of the area, he saw a van parked in Romero's driveway which matched the description of the van used in Beasley's murder. When Jones returned to the group of men, two had fled down an alley. Jones questioned the remaining men as to the ownership of the Monte Carlo. Romero volunteered he owned the van. Jones subsequently arrested Romero. A year later following his arrest, Romero blew trial and was sentenced to over 30 years in state prison for the murder of Zamari Beasley.
  5. South Los 13 - The South Los 13 (SXL13) is a predominantly Hispanic street gang in South Los Santos. This gang is still loyal to the Mexican Mafia to this day, as indicated with the number “13” in the street gang's name. Their territory stretches from Jamestown Street to Macdonald Street, between Innocence Boulevard to Carson Avenue. They feud with the 18th Street Gang, Florencia 13, Junior Mafia 13, Playboys 13, Barrio 13, Capones 13, Gardena 13, all East Coast Crips and all Hoover Criminals. South Los originated from the Raymond Avenue Crips, a Mexican by the name of Bozo allegedly started the South Los 13 gang. They were able to sustain themselves with the support of the Raymond Avenue Crips. The Raymond Avenue Crips helped South Los 13 to fight off a variety of gangs, the most notable Gardena 13. South Los is said to be originated about 1975, they gained traction through gang violence, and everything that comes with gangbanging. Hoovers vs Sox Los - The most notable beef that the South Los’ do have, are the Hoover Criminals. The Hoover Criminals and the South Los’, at one point and still are sworn enemies. During the mid 80’s, the South Los’ and Hoover Criminals were on decent terms. Their territories were pretty close to each other, so it made it almost impossible to avoid them. During the mid to late 80’s, the South Los’ started the war with the Hoovers, the reason being that the Hoover Criminals were selling drugs in the South Los’ turf. Friction and tension built up between the two sets, school fights and brawls were happening almost everyday. A select few South Los members started going into the 112 Hoover Criminals turf, antagonizing them. Allegedly, a South Los member named Bugsy would roll his wheelchair inside of 112 Hoover Criminals territory and stand down the Hoovers, while dissing them. In 1989, a few 112 Hoover Criminal members were shooting dice with a South Los member, allegedly the South Los member had gotten upset that he had lost the game, leading him to rob the dice game. The South Los member then retrieved his firearm and started opening fire at the 112 Hoovers, two of the Hoover affiliates were struck in the head by the bullets, leading both of them to death upon arrival. Tensions between the sets reached a new height after this incident. In 1990, Bugsy from South Los rolled into the 112 Hoover territory with his wheelchair, and began taunting them. This time, the Hoovers didn’t give Bugsy a pass, and opened fire on Bugsy. Bugsy was left for dead on the street, dying from his gunshot wounds. Bugsy’s death was the official kick off to the South Los and Hoover war. After Bugsy’s death, South Los applied major pressure to the 112 Hoovers. Around this time, South Los were at their peak, they had the advantage over 112 Hoover. The 112’s were in a vulnerable state, due to the other beef they were engaged in. The South Los 13 was reportedly pushing the hardline on the 112 Hoovers. Daily shootings and murders would occur, allegedly sending groups to jump the Hoovers in traffic, and boldly hanging out in the 112 Hoovers territory. Around the 1990’s, South Los had the upper hand on the 112 Hoovers, pushing them out of their territory. By the late 90’s the 112’s started sharing neighborhoods with the 107 Hoovers, also known as the Selos. South Los vs Gardena 13 - On May 18th, 1990, at about 11:30, seven young people left the carnival together and began walking home. The group noticed a dark van pass them, the group continued walking and the same van passed them again. As the group approached an intersection, the group noticed the same van for the third time. Someone in the group gave the van the middle finger, the van turned right and stopped. Four members of the group crossed the street, while three stopped on the corner. A South Los member walked up to the four members, he asked the group were they were from, but without giving them time to respond, he raised his right hand and started shooting. He fired five times before returning back to the van, and entered the passenger side. One shot struck a female Gardena 13 member in her leg, three hit a male Gardena 13 member in the chest, abdomen, and the leg, the other members of the group ended up running away. The male shot three times ended up dying from his gunshot wounds. On March 18th, 2017, a few Gardena 13 members entered a territory claimed by the South Los 13. The G13 members spotted a known South Los member inside of a house party. The G13 members stayed outside of the house party and waited for the South Los member to come outside. Once the South Los member came outside, the G13 members asked him where he was from. The South Los affiliate responded with “This South Los, foo.” This resulted in the South Los member being gunned down in front of the party. Modern Day South Los - In current times, the South Los’ aren’t as active as they used to be. This is because of all the beefs they had, they couldn’t hold their own. The police played a big part in this gang's fall, several members getting arrested on a daily basis. The younger generation of the South Los gang are known to be a little more reckless than before. They tend to be more reckless so they can put their gang out there, since most of the older members are incarcerated or dead. The newer generation of the South Los’ push the hardline on all Hoovers, they don’t like any Hoovers at all. They also don’t like the Gardena 13 gang, as well as 18th Street, another Mexican gang. South Los beefs with a large amount of street-gangs, still to this day. Their rivals go as far as MS-13, Playboys 13, Florencia 13, and East Coast.
  6. Property Listing: Casa Cristina Room 15 Property features: Spacious living room, a beautiful kitchen with a modern bathroom. 1 master bedroom. Property Information: Starting Price: $60,000 Buyout: $150,000 Interior Pictures:
  7. The following thread chronicles the life of Taynara "Taya" Devereaux Backstories: Taynara -also nicknamed "Taya"- was born in New Orleans on the 19th of December, 2000. She has got one older sister, Azalea. Their mother died at a very young, when Taya was just 3 years old. Their father was a heavy drug-addict, and was unable to take care of his daughters, nor really cared about them. Thus, the Devereaux sisters moved to their Grandma where they grew up, in a house with 5 kids. They had financial struggles, and lived mostly in poverty. Despite such, the family was really close with each other and lived in happiness together. In fact, this period was the last time Taya truly experienced any happiness in her childhood. When Taya was 8, her Grandma unfortunately passed away, and so the two sisters got adopted by a family in Davis, Los Santos. This was a complete mismatch, however. The new family treated the girls horribly, as they fell victim to domestic violence. Taya was often abused both physically and sexually, to a point where it became a daily occurance. Because of this, Taya's personality and attitude also suffered greatly, as she became a rather violent person herself and often got herself suspended at school, and at one point even kicked out. Because she dropped out and was left without any educational certifications, her "mother" had new purposes for Taya, going as far as to selling her to strangers for sexual pleasure at still a considerable young age. When Azalea turned 18, she immediately moved out and took Taya with her, as she always took care of her little sister and continues to be a mother-figure for her to this day. Personalities: Whilst her sister Azalea is a calm, sensible, strong and intelligent person, Taya on the contrary is often seen as childish, violent, unintelligent and very easy manipulated. Taya suffers from emotional and psychological trauma — her childhood has a devastating impact on her physical, mental and emotional health which includes depression, shame, anger and suicide. She often uses alcohol and other drugs to deal with the pain. Furthermore, Taya is a complete stranger to positive and respectful relationships. Azalea on the other hand certainly has a temper and still finds herself making poor decisions, but most of her energy is spent trying to unravel the years of trauma inflicted on Taya by providing for her and being her only support system. Lastly, Taya suffers from ADHD, resulting in her being extremely energetic and wild. The usage of marijuana and her ADHD medication pills are nearly the only possible way to get her to calm down and "put her on a leash". This thread will be documented by myself, portraying Taynara. It's going to be my first character story thread, so any feedback is absolutely welcome.
  8. SOUTH LOS SANTOS = SOUTH LOS ANGELES DAVIS = COMPTON RANCHO = WATTS STRAWBERRY = THE CRENSHAW DISTRICT CHAMBERLAIN HILLS = BALDWIN HILLS CARSON AVENUE = ROSECRANS AVENUE / WESTERN AVENUE INNOCENCE BOULEVARD = COMPTON BOULEVARD / CRENSHAW BOULEVARD STRAWBERRY AVENUE = SLAUSON AVENUE ROY LOWENSTEIN BOULEVARD = EL SEGUNDO BOULEVARD This thread was made to cover the various lifestyles of civilians and gang members living west of the infamous Innocence Boulevard street in South Los Santos. On this thread you will encounter civilians, gang members, teenagers who all live in South Los Santos on the westside of Innocence Boulevard. Blood & Crip gang lifestyles are to be covered on the thread as well as regular everyday South LS citizens trying to survive in the big city's ghetto. ((In order to have permission to post screenshots on this thread, you must PM @PapaDoc or @GoGetta)) This thread was made to follow the lives of different characters who gangbang in the city of Los Santos, San Andreas. The thread is designed to depict the lives of the many related active gang members and South Central Los Santos residents. Screenshots that are posted will show what drama the hood life does to affect one's character mentally, physically and emotionally. Sports teams play a large role in the gang community of South Los Santos. The logos of these teams represent the section that the person who's wearing comes from. It can be deadly for a person to wear a Kansas City Royals hat in a Nutty Blocc Carson Crip neighborhood. It. That's how serious these logos are taken in the hood. Usually the Crips and Bloods would take a logo that best represents their section and gang color, but this is not always the case. There have been instances to where innocent lives were affected and conflict was thrown out of proportion and war became imminent. Sports team logos are to be treated like a flag and should not be taken lightly by civilians. AVOID WEARING SPORTS LOGOS IN SOUTH LOS SANTOS AT ALL TIMES.
  9. Name: Bojan Alexander Slijepcevic. Alias(es): Boki, Boj, B.
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