The men arrived in twos and threes, Crips and Bloods, young and middle-aged, gathering around a picnic table in a Compton park to confront their sworn enemies.
After two hours of negotiations on a chilly, overcast Saturday in April, they came to an agreement — not a truce, exactly, but a tentative cease-fire.
The losses had been heavy, with nearly a dozen dead on each side. It was too soon to talk friendship.
But at least the Swamp Crips and the Bloods-affiliated Campanella Park Pirus could agree to stay away from each other’s territory and stop shooting at people.
Read the full story at LATimes.com.
They're still the Bloods and the Crips. But they're putting down the guns to live w/@cindychangLA https://t.co/h2mw1907xy
— Nicole Santa Cruz (@nicolesantacruz) June 23, 2019
Here's a video of Boogy discussing the ceasefires. @jjluna17 https://t.co/Iyso0UGnU5
— Cindy Chang 張心澤 (@cindychangLA) June 23, 2019