Mongols vow lawsuit to hold rooms at inn

This story appeared in the Antelope Valley Press
Thursday, July 16, 2009.

By CRAIG CURRIER
Valley Press Staff Writer

LANCASTER – An attorney for the Mongols outlaw motorcycle club said they will sue to keep their rooms at the Desert Inn.

Called “domestic terrorists” by Mayor R. Rex Parris, who said the city will shut down the Desert Inn if necessary to keep their annual meeting out of Lancaster, Mongols members have agreed to pay more than $16,000 for 113 rooms, the banquet hall, restaurant and bar this weekend at the Desert Inn and also paid for 13 rooms at Lancaster’s Oxford Inn.

“The club’s constitutional rights are at stake by these threats made from the City of Lancaster, Mr. R. Rex Parris and Mr. David McEwen (city attorney),” attorney Albert Perez Jr. wrote to the Desert Inn’s general manager. “Club has also authorized my firm to proceed legally against any person and or individual who interferes in their right to associate, speech and contract.”

Desert Inn owner Hui Su said she had no idea she was doing business with members of the Mongols when she signed the contract to let them stay at the 144-room resort on Sierra Highway. Su said two men entered her hotel last week requesting a price quote for between 200 and 300 guests who would stay Friday, Saturday and Sunday.

They returned Monday and signed a contract with Su, renting the rooms for roughly $14,000 and agreeing to spend at least $2,500 at the hotel’s restaurant and bar during their stay. The restaurant and bar have been closing around 2 p.m. due to lack of business, Su said, but she plans to keep them open until 2 a.m. this weekend.

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AV Youth for Peace Workshop

Presented by Alternatives to Violence Project Antelope Valley
Sponsored by Antelope Valley Partners for Health

July 20-24 Monday-Friday
9 am – 1 pm
Eastside High School

Free to high school students. Limit 20 participants.
Snacks provided. Certificate upon completion.

For more information and registration
Contact: Charlene (661) 942-4719 ext. 322

Workshop Focus:

  • Communication
  • Affirmation
  • Trust
  • Cooperation
  • Conflict Resolution
  • Participant must attend all five days

District kicks off peace program

‘Violence-Free Zone’ initiative begins at schools

This story appeared in the Antelope Valley Press
Wednesday, January 16, 2008.

By TITUS GEE
Valley Press Staff Writer

PALMDALE – Antelope Valley Union High School District kicked off a new anti-violence program Tuesday with assemblies introducing the Violence-Free Zone initiative to students and the public.

The initiative, an offshoot of the Washington based Center for Neighborhood Enterprise, enlists community members to walk school hallways as “student advisers” who build relationships with students and help to defuse tension between teens. At the same time, district officials announced “30 Days of Peace,” a campaign asking students to promote nonviolence and good behavior for the next four weeks.

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Teen gets probation in beating incident

This story appeared in the Antelope Valley Press
Saturday, January 12, 2008.

By VERONICA ROCHA
Valley Press Staff Writer

LANCASTER – A 15-year-old former Knight High School student was sentenced to three years’ probation Friday as part of an offer he accepted in connection with a September 2006 attack by a group of black youths on two Latino teenagers walking home from the school.

In an Antelope Valley Superior Courtroom, Judge Lisa Chung sentenced Mark Broussard III, who was charged as an adult on hate crime allegations and felony assault charges, to felony probation Friday.

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Program to fight teen violence to begin this month

Violence-Free Zone kicks off at Knight and Eastside High

This story appeared in the Antelope Valley Press
Saturday, January 5, 2008.

By TITUS GEE
Valley Press Staff Writer

Organizers of an initiative aimed at reducing youth crime and violence on area high school campuses this week began final preparations for a January launch.

Officials from the Antelope Valley Union High School District and the cities of Palmdale and Lancaster met Thursday with representatives for the Violence-Free Zone initiative. The group laid plans to kick off the new program January 17 at Knight High and Eastside High, officials said.

The Violence-Free Zone Initiative, an offshoot of the Washington -based Center for Neighborhood Enterprise, enlists community members to walk school hallways as “student advisers” who build relationships with students and help to defuse tension between teens.

Program leaders look for parents raising successful kids in tough environments and those who made mistakes early in life, then got their acts together. Such people already have the skill set to help students cope, said Robert Woodson, founder of the Center for Neighborhood Enterprise, which runs similar programs at 25 high schools in six cities across the nation.

Under the plan, the Antelope Valley residents will walk school yards and halls as an adult resource for students and teachers. They will run tardy rooms, detention classes and in-school suspension programs, organizers said.

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