So I am coming to L.A, anyone care to show me around?
So I am coming to L.A, anyone care to show me around?
Hey all, I am going to be in L.A from the 26th till the 31st of March. Was looking for someone to show me around as I have never been there. Wanted to check out the local car/tuner scene and whatever else is fun.
I do have some questions though, I booked a hotel through expedia, it's a cheap place in Bell Gardens. Is Bell Gardens an "ok" area? or do I have to worry about drivebys and being stabbed?
Also let me know of some places that I must see. I already heard Venice Beach is a must. How far would that be from me?
Thanks.
-Carlton
I do have some questions though, I booked a hotel through expedia, it's a cheap place in Bell Gardens. Is Bell Gardens an "ok" area? or do I have to worry about drivebys and being stabbed?
Also let me know of some places that I must see. I already heard Venice Beach is a must. How far would that be from me?
Thanks.
-Carlton
OMG!! Change that reservation now! Bell Gardens.........People are wishing they could go back to Compton after moving to Bell Gardens
They just came out with a report on that area and 18th street gang has infested that area really bad
They just came out with a report on that area and 18th street gang has infested that area really bad
Originally Posted by jonesfromindia
im positive he was ******* with you.
im still new to LA. but i know hollywood pretty well. i could show ya a sweet place to do some touge runs.
im still new to LA. but i know hollywood pretty well. i could show ya a sweet place to do some touge runs.
I just saw you got a new FC?
PM me some contact info.
Thanks!
No, I was painfully Serious. Bell Gardens borders "Cudahy"
http://www.violenceworker.com/my_web..._californ.html
http://www.violenceworker.com/my_web..._californ.html
Cudahy, California - Gangs, Drugs and Crooked Politicians
Cudahy, California is just another tiny suburb of Los Angeles. But Cudahy isn't just any town. It is a corrupt little city run by drug lords, gangs and crooked politicians and for all intents and purposes, it could be located 120 miles to the southeast on the other side of the Mexican border.
The first sign of trouble for Cudahy City Council candidate Tony Mendoza was a pair of thong panties mailed to his wife, with a note telling her to watch her husband’s back. Then came the phone calls — and the death threats.
A political novice in a tiny city of Mexican immigrants that hasn’t had an election since 1999, Mendoza had expected dirty tricks. But to his dismay, the caller, who spoke poor English and called every day for three days, said Mendoza would be killed if he did not leave Cudahy, a 1.2-square-mile city 10 miles southeast of downtown Los Angeles. After the third call, Mendoza pulled out of the March 6 race. “I have my family to think about,” he said.
Running for council seats against a slate of incumbents in a city infested with gangs and drugs, Danny Cota and Luis Garcia faced similar tactics. A truck owned by Garcia, a former city employee, was painted with graffiti, and ex-felon and Cudahy city employee Gerardo Vallejo sought a restraining order against Garcia for criminal threats. A judge tossed the complaint, but Garcia’s campaign was rattled.
Sounds like a nice, family oriented town, doesn't it? It gets worse.
Cudahy resembles a Mexican border town more than it does a Los Angeles suburb. Entrenched gangs and Mexican drug trafficking have trapped working-class legal and illegal immigrants in a cycle of violence and fear, in a city where less than a quarter of the 28,000 residents are eligible to vote. An uneducated city council, a deeply troubled police force imported from Maywood two towns over, and the raw power of the 18th Street Gang — a complex criminal organization with a knack for setting up business fronts and obscuring underground drug activity — make Cudahy residents seem like hostages in their own city.
By most accounts, Cudahy City Council members — two retired union managers, an insurance salesman, a waitress and a grocer — do not run the city as they were elected to do. Rather, they defer to City Manager Perez, a former janitor who is known to favor revenue traps such as DUI and driver’s license checkpoints over aggressive tactics that make gangs and drug dealers less comfortable.
Cudahy, California is just another tiny suburb of Los Angeles. But Cudahy isn't just any town. It is a corrupt little city run by drug lords, gangs and crooked politicians and for all intents and purposes, it could be located 120 miles to the southeast on the other side of the Mexican border.
The first sign of trouble for Cudahy City Council candidate Tony Mendoza was a pair of thong panties mailed to his wife, with a note telling her to watch her husband’s back. Then came the phone calls — and the death threats.
A political novice in a tiny city of Mexican immigrants that hasn’t had an election since 1999, Mendoza had expected dirty tricks. But to his dismay, the caller, who spoke poor English and called every day for three days, said Mendoza would be killed if he did not leave Cudahy, a 1.2-square-mile city 10 miles southeast of downtown Los Angeles. After the third call, Mendoza pulled out of the March 6 race. “I have my family to think about,” he said.
Running for council seats against a slate of incumbents in a city infested with gangs and drugs, Danny Cota and Luis Garcia faced similar tactics. A truck owned by Garcia, a former city employee, was painted with graffiti, and ex-felon and Cudahy city employee Gerardo Vallejo sought a restraining order against Garcia for criminal threats. A judge tossed the complaint, but Garcia’s campaign was rattled.
Sounds like a nice, family oriented town, doesn't it? It gets worse.
Cudahy resembles a Mexican border town more than it does a Los Angeles suburb. Entrenched gangs and Mexican drug trafficking have trapped working-class legal and illegal immigrants in a cycle of violence and fear, in a city where less than a quarter of the 28,000 residents are eligible to vote. An uneducated city council, a deeply troubled police force imported from Maywood two towns over, and the raw power of the 18th Street Gang — a complex criminal organization with a knack for setting up business fronts and obscuring underground drug activity — make Cudahy residents seem like hostages in their own city.
By most accounts, Cudahy City Council members — two retired union managers, an insurance salesman, a waitress and a grocer — do not run the city as they were elected to do. Rather, they defer to City Manager Perez, a former janitor who is known to favor revenue traps such as DUI and driver’s license checkpoints over aggressive tactics that make gangs and drug dealers less comfortable.
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ill be there from the 22nd to the 26th
im staying in little tokyo
http://www.newotani.com/
is that going to be an ok place or do i need to watch out for stuff? whats going to be cool and fun near there?
im staying in little tokyo
http://www.newotani.com/
is that going to be an ok place or do i need to watch out for stuff? whats going to be cool and fun near there?
Originally Posted by CARLiTO_
Sounds sweet.
I just saw you got a new FC?
PM me some contact info.
Thanks!
I just saw you got a new FC?
PM me some contact info.
Thanks!
i cant promise i will be up here for the whole weekend. cus i go to san diego frequently. if that happens, i can tell ya some sweet places to go to.
Originally Posted by skrewloose78
ill be there from the 22nd to the 26th
im staying in little tokyo
http://www.newotani.com/
is that going to be an ok place or do i need to watch out for stuff? whats going to be cool and fun near there?
im staying in little tokyo
http://www.newotani.com/
is that going to be an ok place or do i need to watch out for stuff? whats going to be cool and fun near there?
That's one of the nicest hotels I've been to and the food around there is great.
You don't need to worry about anything, the area is pretty safe, sometimes you'll encounter some homeless people but nothing to worry about.
They have alot of Japanese food obviously and a few small centers with some misc. stuff, nothing special to be honest. They have some really good food places around the area if you want to ask the front desk, place called "Pantry" is pretty famous and really good. They serve american breakfqst stuff, it's also 24/7.
If you go farther out they have some museums and stuff if that's your thing.
They also have a light rail station called Union Station that can take you to alot of different places for a 2 dollar round trip ticket. You can hit Pasadena which is a really nice city or something like Chinatown for some sight seeing.
Originally Posted by Kingsfan
yup, all the time!
People from back East always freeze out here.......while I am wearing shorts.
Sweatshirt weather for those visiting.
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