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Latin Counts
Founded1955; 71 years ago (1955)
Named afterPolish Counts gang
Founding locationPilsen, Chicago, Illinois, United States
TerritorySouth Side, Chicago; Southwest Detroit, Lincoln Park and Ecorse, Michigan
EthnicityMexican-American
LeadersIsidro Garza, Victor Vasquez, Benjamin Beightol
ActivitiesDrug activity, racketeering, murder
AlliesVice Lords, Latin Brothers, Spanish Lords, People Nation
RivalsSureños, 12st Players, Almighty Bishops, 4GMz, SVLz, Latin Kings, Two Six, 22Boys, Almighty Ambrose, La Raza, Satan Disciples, Krazy Getdown Boys, Imperial Gangsters, Maniac Latin Disciples, Spanish Gangster Disciples, Insane Deuces, Folk Nation

The Latin Counts is a Latino street gang based in Chicago, Illinois with a significant branch in Detroit, Michigan. It is a member of the People Nation alliance.

History

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The gang was founded in 1955 by Tejano youth who had just arrived to the Pilsen neighborhood of Chicago. The original gang members were all related to one another. They named their gang the Texans in homage to the state they originally lived in. The name was changed two years later to Sons of Mexico City to better reflect their ethnic heritage. The name was changed again in 1959 to Latin Counts, inspired by the Polish Counts gang that operated in the nearby Back of the Yards community. During the 1960s, the Counts came into conflict with other gangs in the Pilsen area such as the Latin Kings, the Satan Disciples and Ambrose. In 1970, a faction broke off from the gang to be named the Bishops, who retained good relations with the Counts due to their sharing of the same bloodlines. Their alliance, known as the Bishop Count Nation, would falter in the 1990s.

In 1978, the Counts were invited to join the People Nation, a gang alliance formed in the Pontiac Correctional Center. This enabled the Counts to enter a truce with the allied Latin Kings, but street-level conflict continued between the two gangs until the 1980s. Starting in 1980, the Counts began to expand their operations to the South Chicago and South Deering neighborhoods,[1] and in the mid-1980s they expanded to Cicero, Illinois and Southwest Detroit.[2] In 1991, a full-scale shooting war erupted with the Latin Kings over turf in Cicero that pitted all Counts and Kings against each other nationwide.[1]

Insignia

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The Latin Counts' symbol consists of a depiction of Count Dracula, a knight's helmet, and a sword with five slashes above it. The helmet was inspired by the image on the Knight brand matchbox. Their colors are black and red.[1]

Territory

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The Latin Counts gang operates in the Chicago area, including the Pilsen, McKinley Park, Marquette Park, Ashburn, South Chicago, South Deering, Cicero, Bridgeview, and Chicago Heights communities.[1] Its territory has expanded to include Southwest Detroit, Michigan, and the suburbs of Lincoln Park and Ecorse.[3][4] The gang's presence has been detected in other Michigan cities including Pontiac, Flint and Lansing.[2]

Activities

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The Latin Counts' main criminal activity involves drug activity and racketeering.[5] Gang members have also been involved in selling stolen weapons, assaults and murders.[4]

Leadership

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Isidro Garza led the gang while incarcerated in the Michigan Department of Corrections, where he was already serving 25-50 years for a 1993 gang-related homicide. He was sentenced in federal court to an additional ten years in prison.[6] In June 2017, gang leader Victor Vasquez was sentenced to 30 years in prison for violating the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act.[4] Benjamin Beightol, the gang's Minister of Information who disseminated Garza's instructions to lower ranking gang members, pleaded guilty to racketeering charges on January 29, 2018, and faced ten years in prison.[6]

References

[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The Latin Counts, formally known as the Almighty Insane Latin Counts, is a Mexican-American street gang originating in Chicago's Pilsen neighborhood on the Lower West Side, founded in January 1959 after evolving from predecessor groups such as the Texans (established 1955) and Sons of Mexico City (active 1957–1959).[1] The gang emerged amid social tensions faced by Mexican immigrant families, including racial conflicts that culminated in events like the 1961 Little Village riot following the death of member Matthew Tolber.[1] Affiliated with the People Nation alliance since approximately 1981, the Latin Counts maintain a structured hierarchy with factions divided by age sets, including Senior Counts, Junior Latin Counts (formed 1961), and Little Latin Counts, alongside branches in suburbs like Cicero and Addison, as well as a significant presence in Detroit.[1][2] Primarily composed of Mexican-American males numbering 400–600 members and associates, the gang engages in street-level drug trafficking—including cocaine, heroin, and marijuana—alongside violent crimes such as assaults, drive-by shootings, homicides, auto theft, and weapons trafficking.[2] The Latin Counts' defining characteristics include intense territorial rivalries with Folk Nation gangs like the Ambrose and Satan Disciples, as well as intra-alliance conflicts, notably a major war with fellow People Nation members the Latin Kings escalating in 1991 and a 1996 schism with allied Bishops triggered by a shooting.[1] Symbols such as the knight's helmet, five-pointed star, and letters "LC" or "LCN" in black and red colors underscore their identity, reflecting a history of defensive consolidation against perceived invasions in Pilsen, where they clashed early with encroaching groups like Ambrose at 18th and Loomis streets.[1][2] These ongoing feuds and criminal enterprises have positioned the gang as a persistent factor in Chicago's gang landscape, contributing to cycles of violence despite periods of alliance shifts, such as the dissolution of the BCN coalition in 1995.[1]

Origins and Development

Founding in Chicago

The Latin Counts originated in Chicago's Pilsen neighborhood on the Lower West Side, forming around 1955 as one of the earliest Mexican-American street gangs in the area.[1] Initially composed of young Mexican relatives and immigrants, the group started under the name "Texans," reflecting their ties to Mexican heritage amid a predominantly Czech immigrant community.[1] This formation occurred during a period of ethnic tensions and limited opportunities for Hispanic youth in Chicago's industrial neighborhoods, where gangs often emerged for protection and social cohesion.[3] The gang's early activities centered on 18th Street in Pilsen, establishing a foothold in what would become a hub for Latino gangs.[3] Unlike later alliances, the founding phase lacked formal structure, focusing instead on local rivalries with established white ethnic gangs. No single founder is definitively documented in primary records, though the group's Mexican origins distinguished it from contemporaneous Puerto Rican or other Hispanic formations like the Latin Kings.[1] By the late 1950s, the name "Latin Counts" solidified, emphasizing Latino identity and numerical symbolism possibly denoting membership or territorial claims.[1] This foundational period laid the groundwork for the gang's expansion, though early documentation remains sparse due to limited law enforcement focus on emerging Hispanic groups compared to established Italian or Irish mobs.[3] The Latin Counts' persistence in Pilsen reflects broader patterns of gang formation tied to immigration waves and urban segregation in post-World War II Chicago.[1]

Expansion and Key Conflicts

The Latin Counts expanded beyond their original Pilsen base in Chicago during the 1970s and 1980s, establishing presence in neighborhoods such as South Chicago, South Deering, McKinley Park, and Cicero, Illinois.[4] This growth involved migration and recruitment among Mexican-American communities, leading to territorial disputes that intensified intra- and inter-alliance rivalries. By the 1980s, the gang had extended operations to Southwest Detroit, Michigan, including suburbs like Lincoln Park and Ecorse, where members engaged in drug trafficking and racketeering activities documented in federal prosecutions.[5] [6] Key conflicts arose in the 1960s as the Latin Counts clashed with rival gangs in Pilsen, including the Satan Disciples—who encroached on 18th Street—and Ambrose, amid competition for control of Hispanic-dominated areas.[1] These early wars contributed to a pattern of violence against Folk Nation affiliates, such as Satan Disciples and Spanish Cobras, reflecting broader People Nation-Folk Nation hostilities over drug markets and turf.[7] A notable escalation occurred in 1991 with a nationwide shooting war against fellow People Nation members, the Latin Kings, triggered by territorial encroachments in Cicero, where Counts factions challenged Kings dominance, resulting in widespread retaliatory attacks.[8] [9] Persistent rivalries with Latin Kings persisted into later decades, as evidenced by drive-by shootings and vigil attacks in areas like Hammond, Indiana, where Latin Counts targeted Kings members in retaliation for prior killings, leading to federal racketeering indictments for murders in 2015.[10] [11] Such intra-alliance conflicts, driven by localized power struggles rather than national directives, undermined People Nation unity and fueled cycles of homicide, with law enforcement attributing multiple fatalities to these feuds.[12]

Recent Trajectory and Decline

In the 2010s, the Latin Counts maintained territorial presence in Chicago's Pilsen and surrounding areas, as evidenced by ongoing rivalries with Folk Nation affiliates like the Latin Kings, but federal law enforcement intensified efforts against the gang's operations. A 2018 federal indictment targeted the Jackson Street Latin Counts faction in Hammond, Indiana—a key branch near Chicago—charging multiple members with racketeering, drug trafficking, and murder in aid of racketeering, stemming from activities including a 2015 vigil shooting that killed two bystanders.[11] These charges disrupted leadership, with convictions following in subsequent years, such as Jeron Williams and Robert Loya pleading guilty to related murders in 2022.[13] By the early 2020s, RICO prosecutions further eroded the gang's structure, exemplified by Ivan Reyes's 2022 conviction for the same 2015 double homicide and Eduardo Luciano's 2024 sentencing to three consecutive life terms for ordering the attack as a faction "jefe."[12] [13] Such cases, leveraging evidence from wiretaps and informants, highlighted the gang's reliance on violence to protect drug distribution but exposed vulnerabilities, leading to the incarceration of high-ranking members and reduced coordinated activity in affected territories.[14] This pattern of federal interventions contributed to a decline in the Latin Counts' operational cohesion, particularly in peripheral strongholds, amid broader Chicago gang fragmentation from sustained policing and community disruptions. While core Chicago territories persisted as of 2022 gang boundary mappings, the loss of key enforcers and suppliers weakened enforcement of alliances within the People Nation, shifting dynamics toward smaller, less hierarchical cliques.[15] No precise membership figures are publicly documented for recent years, but the cumulative impact of these takedowns mirrors trends in other People Nation sets, where leadership decapitation has curtailed large-scale violence and revenue streams.[16]

Organizational Features

Insignia and Symbols

The Latin Counts, a Hispanic street gang originating in Chicago's Pilsen neighborhood, primarily use black and red as their identifying colors, which were adopted from the earlier Polish Counts gang during the organization's formation in the mid-1960s.[1] In graffiti and territorial markings, members frequently employ a shield symbol, a design also utilized by allied or similar gangs such as the Simon City Royals and 2-2 Boys to denote affiliation and claim areas.[17] This shield often appears alongside initials like "LC" or the full name "Latin Counts" in black and red spray paint, serving as a visual assertion of presence and warning to rivals.[17] As part of the People Nation alliance formed in the 1970s, the Latin Counts incorporate broader alliance identifiers, including the five-pointed star and other motifs shared among member gangs like the Latin Kings and Vice Lords, though specific factional variations emphasize "Counts" nomenclature in tattoos and apparel.[18] Tattoos commonly feature "LC," devil imagery, or crowned counts motifs, reflecting internal hierarchies and loyalties, with black and red ink predominant in visible placements on the body.[1] Hand signs are less distinctly documented for the Latin Counts compared to larger People Nation groups, but members may use modified "folk" gestures—such as an upward pitchfork or "C" formation—to signal allegiance without unique variants confirmed in primary identifiers.[18]

Hierarchy and Internal Governance

The Latin Counts operate with a decentralized structure characteristic of many traditional Chicago street gangs, emphasizing local autonomy over centralized command. Unlike highly formalized groups such as the Latin Kings, the gang lacks a rigid national hierarchy, relying instead on influential "shot-callers" or neighborhood leaders who manage day-to-day operations, including territorial defense, recruitment, and revenue-sharing from illicit activities. These local figures enforce internal discipline through informal mechanisms, such as beatings or expulsion for violations like cooperating with rivals or failing to contribute to gang finances. Membership is segmented into age-graded cliques, such as senior members, juniors, and younger recruits (e.g., Little Latin Counts or Pee Wee Counts), facilitating progression from shorties (juveniles) to full soldiers while maintaining family-like bonds among blood-related members. Internal governance prioritizes loyalty and brotherhood, with decisions on alliances or conflicts often influenced by consensus among key territorial leaders rather than top-down edicts.[18] As a charter member of the People Nation alliance—formed in the 1970s to unite Hispanic and Black gangs against Folk Nation rivals—the Latin Counts adhere to the alliance's foundational charter. This document outlines rules for standardized symbols (e.g., five-pointed star, upside-down crowns), membership protocols prohibiting Folk affiliations, and procedures for inter-gang cooperation, including profit-sharing and mutual defense pacts. Breaches of these alliance-wide norms can trigger internal sanctions or expulsion, though enforcement remains inconsistent due to the gang's fragmented nature.[18][19]

Territorial Control

Core Territories in Chicago

The Latin Counts originated in Chicago's Pilsen neighborhood on the Lower West Side, forming around 1955 initially as the Texans gang near 16th and 17th Streets by Loomis Boulevard in a predominantly Czech area, before adopting the Latin Counts name in 1959 as the first Mexican street gang there.[1] Their foundational territory in Pilsen spans from 16th Street to Cullerton Street, between Racine Avenue and Paulina Street, designated as the "Most Wanted Side" and maintained actively since the late 1950s, supported by historical social service records from the Howell House settlement at 17th and Racine.[1] In McKinley Park, the gang established a core presence from 35th to 37th Streets, between Hoyne and Honore Avenues—known as "Honore City"—dating to 1983 and persisting as a stronghold.[1] South Deering represents another enduring territory, with the gang recruiting Hispanic youth and solidifying control, including the Vets Park set around 98th Street and Escanaba Avenue since the 1990s, alongside broader areas from 105th to 109th Streets between Oglesby and Torrence Avenues.[1][20] The South Chicago section, organized in 1983–1984, covers 91st Street to South Chicago Avenue between Manistee and Houston Avenues, with subsequent expansions to 90th–92nd Streets from Brandon to Burley Avenues, forming a key operational base.[1] These neighborhoods—Pilsen, McKinley Park, South Deering, and South Chicago—constitute the gang's primary Chicago territories, as reflected in Chicago Police Department gang boundary data assigning Latin Counts approximately 29,754 square units of control citywide in 2022.[21]

Branches and Presence Elsewhere

The Latin Counts maintain a notable branch in Detroit, Michigan, known as the 5600 TMC or Toledo Mafia Counts, centered on the 5600 block of Toledo Street in the southwest neighborhoods and extending to downriver suburbs including Lincoln Park and Ecorse, where the group has engaged in organized criminal activities such as drive-by shootings and drug trafficking.[6][22] This clique, active since the 1980s, uses red and black colors and maintains a strong anti-Folk Nation stance. Federal court records from multiple indictments confirm the gang's operational structure in these areas, with leadership figures coordinating violence and narcotics distribution as early as the late 2000s, though migration patterns suggest earlier establishment in the 1980s.[23] A 2019 RICO case highlighted narcotics distribution, violence, and organized retaliation by this faction.[6] This Detroit faction has faced repeated law enforcement scrutiny, including a 2019 sentencing of a gang leader to 20 years for orchestrating a shooting and a 2018 indictment of members for related assaults.[6][24] Beyond Detroit, the Latin Counts' presence appears limited, with sporadic detections in other Michigan locales such as Pontiac, Flint, and Lansing tied to individual members or low-level operations rather than formalized branches.[25] No verified expansions into distant states like New York, California, or Texas have been documented in federal or law enforcement reports, distinguishing the gang from broader-reaching affiliates like the Latin Kings. Suburban outposts near Chicago, such as Addison and Cicero in Illinois, reflect peripheral influence but align more closely with core territorial control than independent branches.[26] Overall, the gang's extraterritorial footprint remains concentrated in Michigan, driven by migration from Chicago's Pilsen origins, without evidence of nationwide proliferation.

Criminal Operations

Primary Illicit Activities

The Latin Counts engage primarily in drug trafficking, with members conspiring to possess with intent to distribute and distribute controlled substances such as cocaine and marijuana, as evidenced by federal indictments in Hammond, Indiana.[27][28] This activity forms a core revenue source, often intertwined with racketeering enterprises that protect distribution networks through intimidation and territorial control.[5] Racketeering conspiracies involve a pattern of violent crimes to enforce gang discipline, eliminate rivals, and maintain dominance, including murders, assaults, and robberies. In Detroit operations, members have committed homicides such as the April 18, 2014, killing of Mustafa Al-Yasiry during a turf dispute and the August 18, 2013, murder of Terrence McClearen, alongside assaults and home invasions to facilitate drug sales and firearm trafficking.[5] Similarly, in Hammond on June 29, 2015, Latin Counts leaders orchestrated a drive-by shooting targeting Latin Kings rivals at a vigil, resulting in the deaths of 16-year-old Lauren Calvillo and 33-year-old Christopher White, charged under racketeering statutes for using firearms in furtherance of gang activity.[27][28] Additional activities include trafficking stolen firearms to support violent enforcement and burglary of homes and businesses for profit or leverage, as documented in racketeering pleas from southwest Detroit factions.[5] These operations reflect a structured criminal enterprise originating from Chicago but extending to Indiana and Michigan, where violence sustains drug markets and deters cooperation with law enforcement.[28] Federal convictions, such as those of Eduardo Luciano in 2022 for racketeering and drug conspiracy tied to the 2015 murders, underscore the gang's reliance on these intertwined illicit pursuits.[28]

Patterns of Violence and Rivalries

The Latin Counts, as a member of the People Nation alliance, maintain longstanding rivalries with Folk Nation-affiliated gangs, leading to territorial disputes and retaliatory attacks primarily over control of drug distribution areas in Chicago's Pilsen neighborhood and surrounding regions.[18] Early conflicts arose in the 1950s and 1960s when the gang clashed with invading groups like the Ambrose gang near 18th Street and Loomis Avenue, where territorial incursions sparked direct confrontations over neighborhood dominance.[1] These rivalries extend to broader People-Folk hostilities, manifesting in sporadic violence such as shootings and assaults aimed at enforcing boundaries, though specific inter-gang incidents in Chicago are often underreported or tied to narcotics enforcement rather than standalone feuds.[29] Patterns of violence among the Latin Counts emphasize retaliation and intimidation, with drive-by shootings serving as a primary tactic to target perceived rivals or defectors, as evidenced by federal prosecutions documenting orchestrated attacks to maintain hierarchy and deter encroachments, including a 2019 RICO case in Detroit where a gang leader was sentenced to 20 years for directing a drive-by shooting as part of organized retaliation extending beyond Chicago.[6] In Chicago-area operations, such violence frequently correlates with drug-related enforcement, including murders and non-fatal shootings to punish violations of trafficking territories or internal rules, contributing to elevated homicide rates in gang-held zones like Cicero and Addison during the 1990s and 2000s.[26] Gang-related incidents often spike around anniversaries, funerals, or symbolic dates, aligning with broader Chicago gang dynamics where expressive violence reinforces loyalty and deters cooperation with law enforcement.[30] While internal discipline involves physical beatings for rule-breaking, external aggression prioritizes rapid, firearm-based responses to preserve operational control, resulting in convictions for racketeering-linked homicides as recent as 2022.[28][31]

Leadership and Accountability

Prominent Leaders

Eduardo Luciano served as the leader, or "jefe," of the Hammond, Indiana, faction of the Latin Counts, a group originating from Chicago with operations in northwest Indiana.[32] In 2015, Luciano ordered a shooting at a vigil for a deceased gang member, resulting in the deaths of two bystanders—a 16-year-old girl and a 33-year-old man—who were not intended targets.[28] He was convicted in 2022 on charges including two counts of murder in aid of racketeering, racketeering conspiracy, and drug conspiracy, and sentenced to three consecutive life terms in federal prison in February 2024.[32] [27] Victor Vasquez held a leadership position in the Detroit branch of the Latin Counts, overseeing violent racketeering activities including murders, shootings, and drug trafficking in southwest Detroit neighborhoods.[33] In June 2017, he was sentenced to 30 years in federal prison following convictions for racketeering conspiracy and related offenses tied to gang-directed violence, part of broader "Detroit One" law enforcement efforts targeting the group alongside affiliates like the Vice Lords.[34] [35] Christopher Nicholas Rishell, also known as "C-5," acted as president of the Toledo Mafia Counts, a subset of the Latin Counts operating across southwest Detroit, Lincoln Park, and Ecorse, Michigan.[6] In October 2017, Rishell orchestrated a drive-by shooting that killed one person and wounded two others, aimed at rival gang retaliation and intimidation.[6] He pleaded guilty to assault with a dangerous weapon in aid of racketeering and received a 20-year federal sentence in December 2019, amid indictments of seven gang members in the case.[6]

Prosecutions and Law Enforcement Responses

Federal authorities have pursued racketeering charges under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (RICO) Act against Latin Counts members, focusing on organized violence, drug trafficking, and murders linked to gang activities. In the Hammond, Indiana, faction—stemming from the gang's Chicago origins—Eduardo Luciano was convicted on July 26, 2022, of racketeering conspiracy resulting in the 2015 murders of a 16-year-old girl and a 37-year-old man during a targeted shooting against rivals.[28] Luciano received three consecutive life sentences on February 7, 2024, after a trial revealing his role in ordering the attack to retaliate against perceived enemies.[36] Associated defendants, including Ivan Reyes and Jeron Williams, pleaded guilty to racketeering conspiracy in the same case, admitting involvement in gang-directed violence.[27] Alonzo G. Horta, another Hammond Latin Counts member, was sentenced to 27 years in prison on September 9, 2020, for murder in aid of racketeering and related conspiracy charges tied to gang enforcement of drug territories.[37] These prosecutions, handled by the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Northern District of Indiana in coordination with ATF and FBI, underscore federal emphasis on dismantling the gang's hierarchical structure through evidence of predicate acts like shootings and narcotics distribution. In Chicago proper, U.S. Attorney Joel Kirsch noted in June 2019 that prior indictments had targeted Latin Counts alongside other gangs for violent crimes, signaling ongoing federal scrutiny of their operations in the region.[38] The Detroit branch has faced extensive federal crackdowns, with 33 members indicted in 2014 on RICO charges involving racketeering, shootings, and drug conspiracies.[39] Subsequent cases included six members charged on April 27, 2018, for murder conspiracy and non-fatal shootings in southwest Detroit, leading to pleas like that of Kyle Voltz, who admitted racketeering and faced up to 30 years.[22][40] Leaders such as one sentenced to 20 years on December 4, 2019, for orchestrating a drive-by shooting, and Alberto Jackson, who received 30 years on October 17, 2019, for a similar incident, highlight the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Eastern District of Michigan's use of RICO to prosecute gang-directed assaults.[6][41] Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) has intensified immigration-related enforcement against Latin Counts affiliates, arresting 30 members and associates in the Chicago area during Project Wildfire Surge on August 5, 2025, as part of nationwide operations targeting gangs including the Latin Counts and Folk Nation allies.[25] An earlier ICE-led operation on July 9, 2025, resulted in 17 arrests in Illinois, including Latin Counts members among other gangs like Latin Kings and Sureños-13, focusing on removable aliens with violent histories.[42] These actions reflect interagency strategies prioritizing deportation and disruption of gang networks, often yielding evidence for subsequent criminal prosecutions. Local law enforcement in Chicago and suburbs, such as Cicero and Addison, has documented Latin Counts involvement in violent incidents, contributing intelligence to federal cases, though primary accountability falls to RICO prosecutions due to the gang's interstate scope.[29] Overall, these responses emphasize evidence-based takedowns of leadership to fracture the gang's command, with sentences ranging from decades to life reflecting the severity of documented predicate offenses.

References

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