Is your teen a Fighter?
Rough and tumble teens are a handful
Continued from Page 1
In almost every fight, there are dozens of teens cheering
on the pugilists or snapping pictures. Sometimes their schoolbooks are spread out
on the lawns. In one scene, an adult holds the hands of a toddler who watches a
fight as if it's another street game. In another, teens watch the tape as entertainment
at a party like a music video.
During the most gruesome footage, one falling fighter
strikes his head on a sidewalk and is knocked unconscious. While the defenseless
teen's arms jerk spasmodically and his eyes stare upward, his opponent continues
to belt him in the face. As the injured teen is dragged away, his head leaves a
bloody smear on the curb.
Police here learned about fight clubs after Kevin Walker,
16, was jumped and kicked in the head outside his grandmother's house March 11,
suffering a brain hemorrhage and other injuries. Arlington police arrested the producer
of the Agg Townz series, Arlington resident Michael G. Jackson, 18, and five of
his friends, ages 14-19.
Hawthorne says the group would pay teens a few bucks to
fight, or attack other youths, then film the violence with video or cellphone cameras.
Jackson edited the footage, set it to rap and sold two volumes through his own website
for $15-$20 each. The footage of the Walker attack (seized by cops as evidence and
never released) was part of a third volume Jackson was working on when he was arrested,
Hawthorne says.
On Thursday, Jackson and three other adult defendants
were indicted for aggravated assault on Walker and engaging in organized criminal
activity, both felonies, says Jennifer Tourje, assistant district attorney for Tarrant
County. They face possible penalties of two years' probation to 20 years in a state
penitentiary if convicted of aggravated assault and five years' probation to 99
years in prison if convicted of engaging in organized criminal activity. Both charges
also carry possible fines of $10,000, she adds.
In Arlington, fight-club participants can be arrested
on several felony and misdemeanor charges, including aggravated assault, fighting
in public, engaging in organized crime and criminal mischief. Texas law allows police
to arrest active spectators as accomplices to fighting in public. As part of the
crackdown that began May 10, cops have made 40 arrests, including Jackson and his
friends, and issued about 200 citations involving fighting in public or watching
arranged brawls, police spokeswoman Christy Gilfour says.
In an interview with USA TODAY, Jackson confirmed filming
fights and selling DVDs of them. However, he denies instigating fights or paying
teens to take part in them and says he has shut down his website. Jackson says he
simply saw a financial opportunity to exploit fights that were happening anyway.
Messaging fuels combatants
Continued...go to page 3
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