LA Gangland Tours

The controversial LA Gangland Bus Tours, which for $65 a head takes tourists on a two-hour bus tour of Watts and South-Central Los Angeles to visit sites significant to the history of street gangs in the US, is scheduled to give its first tour this morning. The tour, led by a former gang member, will raise money for said former gang member’s non-profit organization, though questions about ethics and taste have been raised, most recently in the New York Times:

Alfred Lomas, 45, a former gang member and the creator of the tour ($65, lunch included), said this drive-by was about educating people on city life, while turning any profits into microloans and other initiatives aimed at providing gang members jobs.

But aside from its unusual logistical challenges — the liability waiver describes the tour as “inherently dangerous” and warns of the risk of death — the venture has also generated debate about its appropriateness. Chicago has a tour of Al Capone sites and Las Vegas has one devoted to the mob — but this gangland lore is still happening.

“Everybody says we are the gang capital of the world, and that is certainly true, no denying that,” said the Rev. Gregory Boyle, who has spent decades trying to steer people out of gangs into legitimate work. “It’s hard to gloss over that. But there are two extremes we always need to avoid. One is demonizing the gang member, and the other extreme is romanticizing the gang.”

Others fear that the tour, which initially is to be conducted monthly, may conjure up the so-called slum tours of shantytowns and impoverished areas of Rio de Janeiro and Soweto, South Africa, which bring tourists close, but not too close, to misery, with questionable benefit.

Every newspaper article I’ve seen about these tours in the last few weeks has been remarkably similar. Presumably, they are all just working off of the same press release. There’s a lot I’d like to know about the tours that hasn’t been answered in any article I’ve read on on the organization’s website.

In my opinion, the tours themselves are a good idea and could be valuable educational/diplomatic exercises, creating awareness among the general public about certain misundersood aspects of the lives of the urban poor. This is very much dependent on the tours being done right though, neither demonizing nor romanticizing, as Rev. Boyle puts it above.

There’s some reason to think this particular organization is leaning towards the sensational. One anecdote the articles love to report is that, until recently, there were plans to have young gang members squirt tourists with water guns and sell shirts reading, “I got shot in South Central LA.”

LA Gang Tours is a non-profit organization, but their website is dedicated entirely to selling tour tickets and soliciting donations. It contains no information about their Board or staff, other than founder Alfred Lomas, and precious little about the programs that these ticket sales are going to fund:

The objective is to create jobs for the residents of South Central, Los Angeles; to give profits from the tours back to these areas for economic growth and development, provide job/entrepreneur training, micro-financing opportunities and to specialize in educating people from around the world about the Los Angeles inner city lifestyle, gang involvement and solutions. This project will create opportunities to contribute to the economic health of South Central and the tools needed to access the American market.

Your participation allows the success of a cease-fire agreement between three of the largest and most notorious gangs in L.A. history. This agreement will allow young people and children safe passage (gun fire free safety zones). It will provide the framework to create a peaceful environment conducive to their physical, spiritual and emotional well-being. With your help together we will save lives and create sustainable change.

And that’s the full extent of it. It’s not even clear that they are a federally recognized charitable organization. Their donations page, anyway, makes no reference to donations being tax deductible.

I hope they get their act together, or someone else picks up on the idea and executes it better, because I think it has a lot of potential.



4 thoughts on “LA Gangland Tours”

  1. The danger there is that if another organization “executes it better” they’ll probably be targeted for execution by Lomas and his associates. $65 to ride through the shittiest parts of LA? No thanks.

    • Haha, I hadn’t thought of that.

      The times actually ran a follow-up article this morning, apparently by a journalist who took the tour. It sounds like interactions with former gang members were the most popular part of the tour, which is what I would have expected:

      At a few stops, several former gang members aboard the bus took the microphone to testify to life on the streets, something several tourists said they found to be the most riveting part of the tour.

      “How you all doing?” began Frederick Smith, 38, who described himself as a Crips member better known as Scorpio. “I grew up in the projects all my life. I’m a product of the streets. I grew up in the business, as you say.”

      He said he had recently been paroled from a federal prison after serving nearly 14 years for drug dealing. Now, he said, he has started a nonprofit group, Parolees for Peace, that confronts gang members bent on mayhem.

      “I say, ‘Why you doing that shooting?’ ” he said. “I am a product of Watts, and I am trying to do what’s right now.”

      There was hearty applause for Mr. Smith and, later, for the others who told similar stories of trying to turn their lives around.

      And there was also the predictable awkwardness and “slum tour” element:

      Still, some people in the community have expressed concern that the tour glamorizes gangs or amounts to a “slum tour,” putting poverty and criminal elements on display.

      Parts of the tour will do little to dampen such feelings.

      As the bus riders peered out the windows in air-conditioned comfort, their views included homeless people pushing carts; men idling on sagging porches; and rundown storefronts.

      Mr. Lomas said that he had taken pains to be sensitive and that although he had considered driving through two housing projects considered home to large gangs, he had changed plans and now only included a “snippet” of one. The few people who were outside that project when the bus passed paid it no mind, except for one woman who stared, mouth agape.

  2. March 3, 2010,

    I saw this “BUSTOURS” thru L.A. gangland and I have mixed emotions as I grew up in L.A. gang territory. What a concept! Give them lunch AND take $65 from people? Hell, I should join up with this kind of HUSTLE and show different places of violence that we endured as kids! How much can I get per person? What neighborhoods are these tours going through, Watts, Compton, 54th and Crenshaw? Does Mr Lomas take the tour to HIS old stomping ground? I tell ya what…once the gangs realize this shit is goin down??….watch out. True street mentally will be provoked and mad mayhem could ensue! How absurd is it to waive your rights, board a bus to oogle @ people and places and shit you’ve never seen before?….only to anticipate being shot at or robbed or…. I can’t believe this type of tour is really taking place while gangs are still prevalent and active. I don’t know….seems very inappropriate to me.

    • Thanks for stopping by, Dianne. FWIW, Lomas claims to have negotiated some sort of truce with the various LA gangs that will ensure safe passage for the tours. I don’t know for sure that there haven’t been any incidents, but I imagine we would have heard about it if anything had happened so far. I wouldn’t be shocked if something did go down, though.

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