Even the old-timers in Detroit never have seen anything like this: A mob of 40 black people moved into a convenience store and will not leave.
They say they now own it. They eat. Smoke. Cuss. Threaten. Spit. Rob. Sell drugs. All on video.
Police, ministers, neighbors, the store owner and just about everyone else seems powerless to stop them.
'It’s a Bad Crew gas station,' said one of the mob to the local Fox affiliate. 'If you don’t know what that is, I can’t even tell you.'
The owner calls police, but nothing happens. The police 'come here and then they leave. Two minutes later they (the mob) are back.'
Driven by gangs, drugs and guns, the bloodshed in President Obama's adopted hometown has resulted in a body count that exceeds the 312 murders this year in New York and 212 in Los Angeles, cities with populations dwarfing that of the Windy City. The toll here is up 25% from 2011: 391 through Sept. 23.
'There’s no solution to the violence,' one gang member tells him. 'Killing, killing is the solution.'
'Rob, steal and kill. That’s the only way. We didn’t grow up in Beverly Hills. We don’t get it handed to us'
'This is a block-to-block war here, a different dynasty on every street,' said a dreadlocked young man heavily inked in gang tattoos who calls himself 'Killer'.
'All the black brothers just want to get rich, but we got no jobs and no hope. We want the violence to stop but you ain't safe if you ain't got your pistol with you. Too many friends, too many men are being killed. We don't even cry at funerals no more. Nobody expects to live past 21 here.'
The mayor of Costa Mesa proposed to get rid of soup kitchens to deal with the area’s homeless problem at a city council meeting on Tuesday.
'My belief is that if we manage to put the soup kitchen out of business that will go a long way to addressing the attractiveness in our city that’s creating a huge negative impact,' Eric Bever said.