West Coast Connection Forum
DUBCC - Tha Connection => West Coast Classics => Topic started by: Elano on January 13, 2009, 02:04:07 AM
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The Los Angeles police department is claiming to have indentified Bone Thugs-n-Harmony member Bizzy Bone as the victim of a brutal beating and robbery last Monday (January 5).
Authorities allege that Bizzy Bone, real name Byron McCane, was returning from a restaurant to his Universal Hilton hotel room when he was accosted by several individuals.
The gang allegedly beat and choked Bizzy during the confrontation, and subsequently acquired all the rapper’s jewelry before fleeing the scene.
Police have charged an anti-gang worker named Marlo “Bow Wow” Jones with the assault.
According to the Los Angeles Times, the 30 year old Jones is reputed to be a contract employee for Unity One, an anti-gang organization under the umbrella of the L.A. Bridges II gang rehabilitation program.The group has officially terminated Jones’ employment while this case is pending.
At press time, police report they are looking for additional female and male suspects that participated in the crime.Marlo Jones remains in custody with bail set at $1.1 million.
Last month, the original five man Bone Thugs-n-Harmony roster reunited after 10 years.The group is currently working on a summer 2009 release of Uni 5, the follow up to their 2007 gold album Strength & Loyalty.
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DAMN THAT SUCK BIZZY GETS LOVE FROM THE WEST COAST...THIS SHIT ONLY NEEDS TO HAPPEN TO THEM EAST COAST CATS....DAMN
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it happins
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you are always gonna get desparate broke brothers who will rob anybody to get a quick buck. its the gang land of los angeles.
lets hope bizzy is ok. thats the main thing.
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Hold up so bizzy got assaulted by an anti-gang activist ???
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LOL. Wtf wrong with duke who sposed to be stopping the violence.
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Hold up so bizzy got assaulted by an anti-gang activist ???
LMAO thats crazy right
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yeh, thats ridiculous.
for people like that, they should get double the punishment.
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fucc!!
Luv Bizzy, is a good guy!!!
last year it was Spice 1 now bizzy :(
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I been talking to my homie Q-Loco from the 7th Sign Regime Mo Thug West and he been rpolling wit Bizzy, Bad Azz, Flesh N Bone and Frank Nitty last few months but it just so happens B went solo like he always do and sum bitches set him up for his money REAL TALK TRUE STORY!
That;s what happened dust youself off we back at it just like that.
Magus
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Welcome to L.A.
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I recently read some article online about some anti-gang person named bow wow who did some other crime. Small world. But I wonder about these fools. Do they actually feel good getting certain things by stealing? Is it worth it? It may be just me but earning things you want just feels better than stealing & jacking somebody up. Pathetic :grumpy: And ironmike, DARN STRAIGHT!
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Welcome to L.A.
real talk...
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saw this on KTLA news too. Bow Wow Loc from Grape St. haha.
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bizzy aint know they get bizzy in la????? lol shame on em 8)
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I Wonder wha Bizzy gonna do he shouldn't chalk it up though ;)
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Some anti-gang workers tempted into old lifestyle
(http://www.latimes.com/media/photo/2009-01/44483482.jpg)
USC Coach Pete Carroll, left, and Marlo “Bow Wow” Jones worked to reach gang members
Arrest of Marlo 'Bow Wow' Jones in alleged attack on rapper highlights the challenges of working with youths.
Marlo "Bow Wow" Jones was a well-known gang intervention worker in South Los Angeles. Last March, the former member of the Grape Street Crips was working on a gang reduction effort with USC football Coach Pete Carroll.
Connie Rice, the prominent civil rights attorney, called Jones a charismatic figure who could bring rival gang sects together.
Police officers who worked with Jones said he helped prevent retaliatory shootings.
But on Saturday, Jones was arrested on charges of robbing and beating a member of the rap group Bone Thugs-N-Harmony at the Universal City Hilton hotel.
His arrest has again shaken the world of gang intervention, which relies on former gang members to help police prevent violence and get gang members out of the life.
Jones is the latest of several well-known gang intervention workers to be accused of falling back. And some believe his case underscores the need for changes in the city's gang strategy.
Rice, who wrote a lengthy report on Los Angeles' anti-gang strategy last year, said Jones' arrest raises a key question: how to keep former gang members from slipping back into gangs.
"He was very useful and made himself a go-to person," Rice said.
"He was not a professional. He didn't have the value system of a professional and the dedication of a professional," Rice said.
The Rev. Jeff Carr, who oversees the mayor's anti-gang programs, said Jones' arrest is resonating.
"They are devastated and worried that their comments will be characterized in the frame of this individual," Carr said. "But that's not the lesson that should be learned."
Rice and Carr believe officials need to do more to monitor gang intervention programs, including criminal background checks and drug testing.
At the same time, there is a need to build more professionalism by giving gang interventionists a salary, healthcare benefits and training, they said.
"This is a more high-risk enterprise than most. It's the reality of the business," Rice said.
"We are trying to create a profession here. The [anti-gang] groups are going to stumble. The agencies are going to stumble. This is an experiment," she said.
Jones worked for Unity One, a nonprofit anti-gang group based in southern Los Angeles. The group was a subcontractor for the larger Toberman Neighborhood Center.
"We want people to know about the good, not just the bad," said Gloria Lockhart, chief executive officer of Toberman Neighborhood Center. "You need to remember the young men who are out there at 2 a.m. after a shooting saving lives by preventing another shooting."
But she said her group won't tolerate any criminal behavior. "If you derail, you aren't going to be here," she said.
Jones had served seven years in state prison after being convicted of robbery and narcotics charges.
Even after he became a gang intervention officer, he continued to have trouble with the law.
In October, he pleaded no contest to felony spousal abuse and was placed on five years' probation, according to police and prosecutors. It is unclear, however, whether his colleagues or employees in the gang intervention community knew about the plea.
Jones was known to ride with Coach Carroll as he made inroads into the toughest parts of the city with his A Better LA charity, which helps fund Unity One.
Last April, it was Jones who provided the escort in a beat-up car as Carroll and a sports columnist for The Times accompanied them into Watts.
"Hey man, you're doing great, keep it going," Carroll told Jones.
"Coach, thanks," Jones replied. "It's been tough lately . . . we're holding on."
(Carroll said he was aware of the situation but declined to comment at this time.)
On Jan. 5, Byron McCane, also known as Bizzy Bone, had returned to his room at the Universal City Hilton, where he was confronted by several men who beat and choked him before taking his jewelry, police said. LAPD officials said they are seeking other suspects.
Jones was arrested at 8:50 a.m. Saturday in South Los Angeles and is being held on $1.1-million bail at Parker Center Jail downtown. Jones could not be reached for comment.
He is far from being the first gang intervention worker to face new accusations.
Last summer, Mario Corona, once a top official with the Communities in Schools group that helped ex-gang members secure jobs, was sentenced to 32 months in prison for alleged drug violations.
Last year, Hector "Big Weasel" Marroquin, the director of the anti-gang organization No Guns, which the city of Los Angeles once paid $1.5 million to steer Latino youths away from lives of crime, pleaded guilty to illegally selling assault weapons to federal undercover officers and was sentenced to eight years in prison.
Councilman Richard Alarcon, who in the early 1980s oversaw the city's role in the countywide gang program for Mayor Tom Bradley, said success in gang intervention always means walking a tightrope.
"If you lean too much one way, you aren't trusted by the people you work with," Alarcon said. "If you lean the other way, you run afoul of the law. There's a very difficult balance."
andrew.blankstein
@latimes.com
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im glad
maybe thisll change his whole outlook.. the last couple years you couldnt hear a bizzy verse without 4 bars about the holy spirit and god the merciful, etc etc
im sure hes fine. maybe thisll make him toughen up and get his ass back to the lil ripsta we used to love instead of the shell of a man he is
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bizzy bone = outbound
:sign_wrongforum:
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bizzy bone = outbound
:sign_wrongforum:
it happened in la idiot
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YEA THIS HAPPENED IN LA BIZZY BONE JUST FINISHED A ALBUM UNDER HI POWER ENT. HE FINISH A PROJECT THAT IS CALLED BACK WIT THA THUGZ I THINK HE JUST FINISHED IT LIKE A WEEK BEFORE THE ASSUALT SO HE MUST OF BEEN LIVING LARGE WITH THE MONEY AND DIAMONDS BUT LA IS GANGSTER AND I GUESS HE WENT ON HIS OWN FOR A WHILE AND SHIT HAPPENS BUT I HEARD HE IS OK AND HE IS NOW GONNA DROP SOME GANGSTER ALBUM WITH BAD AZZ FROM THE DPG CALLED THUG POUND I DON'T GOT ALL THE INFO BUT I WILL HAVE IT SOON AND I WILL SEE HOW HI POWER IS TAKING THIS BECAUSE ANYONE DISRESPECTS A SOLDIER IT'S ON .. I WILLL KEEP U UPDATED
MARCH 10TH BIZZY BONE "BACK WIT THE THUGZ"
ALSO COMING SOON KRAZYIE BONE PRESENTS
AND
BIZZY BONE AND BAD AZZ "THUG POUND"
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Welcome to L.A.
real talk...
What do you know? You live in France lol
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Welcome to L.A.
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Welcome to L.A.
real talk...
What do you know? You live in France lol
First of all I went to LA ten times mayne!!
And L.A isn't the city of gangbangin'??!!?? So This is what i know ! lol funny bitch
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yeh, thats ridiculous.
for people like that, they should get double the punishment.
1.1mill bail.....sucks for him lol
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Damn that's terrible. I hope Bizzy is okay.
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this is why i would never want to be famous...or even well known...cause EVERYBODY knows you got it and they want it lol
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hope bizzy doin ok
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es is on probation stemming from his no contest plea last November to one count of felony spousal abuse, according to the District Attorney's Office.
He also was convicted in 1996 of robbery and in 1999 of possession of cocaine, the District Attorney's Office reported.
Jones, who was arrested Saturday, is being held in lieu of $300,000 bail. If convicted as charged, Jones faces up to 28 years in state prison, according to the District Attorney's Office.
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Welcome to L.A.
real talk...
What do you know? You live in France lol
THIS. This is why I love this place.
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Welcome to L.A.
real talk...
What do you know? You live in France lol
funny shit haha
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fucc!!
Luv Bizzy, is a good guy!!!
last year it was Spice 1 now bizzy :(
props 2 both. 8)
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hope bizzy doin ok
i dont think bizzy was doing ok even before this happened
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was that jus a rumor afterall that spice had shot himself?
fucc!!
Luv Bizzy, is a good guy!!!
last year it was Spice 1 now bizzy :(
props 2 both. 8)