holdover
.475 A&M Magnum
Tren de Aragua
Tren de Aragua, translated Aragua Train, is a gang that was formed by prisoner Héctor “El Niño” Guerrero more than a decade ago in the Tocorón prison in the Venezuelan state of Aragua. Federal officials say the group has grown out of South America and into the U.S. over the last six years.
The translation is train from Aragua.
the media is trying to say it has something to do with the rail road workers, but common sense sense says it was the prisoners agreement of freedom so long as they went to the US (on trains!!) trains from Aragua. Most likely the same fuckers we saw a year or two ago on top of trains heading North.
According to the department, gang member tattoos include the Nike logo of NBA Hall of Famer Michael Jordan along with his uniform number, 23 — with the number referring to “23 de Enero,” or 23rd of January, a Venezuelan neighborhood that spawned a revolutionary group in the 1980s.
Other common gang tats include a crown, weapons like AK-47 assault rifles, stars and gas masks.
Some “Tren de Aragua” members wear tattoos with the initials “HJ,” for “Hijos de Dios,” or Sons of God, which can be part of the gang’s lingo, or the phrase “Hasta la Muerte,” or Until Death, in body ink.
idenifiying tattoos, Trains crowns and clocks
Tren de Aragua, translated Aragua Train, is a gang that was formed by prisoner Héctor “El Niño” Guerrero more than a decade ago in the Tocorón prison in the Venezuelan state of Aragua. Federal officials say the group has grown out of South America and into the U.S. over the last six years.
The translation is train from Aragua.
the media is trying to say it has something to do with the rail road workers, but common sense sense says it was the prisoners agreement of freedom so long as they went to the US (on trains!!) trains from Aragua. Most likely the same fuckers we saw a year or two ago on top of trains heading North.
According to the department, gang member tattoos include the Nike logo of NBA Hall of Famer Michael Jordan along with his uniform number, 23 — with the number referring to “23 de Enero,” or 23rd of January, a Venezuelan neighborhood that spawned a revolutionary group in the 1980s.
Other common gang tats include a crown, weapons like AK-47 assault rifles, stars and gas masks.
Some “Tren de Aragua” members wear tattoos with the initials “HJ,” for “Hijos de Dios,” or Sons of God, which can be part of the gang’s lingo, or the phrase “Hasta la Muerte,” or Until Death, in body ink.
idenifiying tattoos, Trains crowns and clocks