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Los Angeles Times
Oct 20, 1993
Los Angeles Times. Los
Angeles, Calif.: Oct 20, 1993. pg. 2 -
REBECCA BRYANT
Copyright, The
Times Mirror Company; Los Angeles Times 1993 all Rights reserved
Gang members
had their eyes on Tony Newsom when he was growing up at 83rd and
Western, less than a mile from the corner where the Los Angeles
riots would break out years later.
But Newsom
steered clear of gangs, he says, because he had hope for himself
and the future. Not to mention a father who was a 250-pound
boxer.
Now 33 and a
Los Angeles police officer, Newsom can't provide a hulking
father to watch over youths in danger of being lured by gangs.
But he can provide hope.
Newsom founded
the West Valley version of the Los Angeles Police Department's
Jeopardy program, in which officers attempt to help youngsters
in danger of becoming involved in gangs or crime. And last
year, he founded The Positive Results Corp. to produce
television programs that would reach youths through "the big
baby-sitter."
"The No. 1
killer of youth in the United States is lack of hope and lack of
desire," said Newsom, who was named Outstanding Young Public
Safety Officer by the California Junior Chamber of Commerce last
summer. "There's a lot of kids out there who don't know they can
do anything."
Newsom is a
moving mountain of energy. At the West Valley YMCA recently,
he put 10 teen-agers through a strenuous workout, helping as
they curled heavy weights and jogged on treadmills.
Randy Brard,
14, said he was referred to the program after being stopped by
police for vandalism. "I had eight cans of spray-paint on me,"
the Reseda resident said. Randy said Newsom and partner Mike
Piceno took him to "the slammer" to show him what he could look
forward to.
"We take them
to jail and show them, `This is what comes out of jail,' "Newsom
said.
He keeps a set
of street clothes in his car and puts them on, playacting the
part of a gang recruiter to show kids how easy it is to be
seduced.
"Here, kid,
here's a buck. Go get yourself a soda," Newsom said he tells
them. Then a burger, then some beer. "There comes a time later,
a time to pay back," Newsom said.
"It gets to the
point where you're involved in something you can't get out of,"
Newsom said. "You'll do or you'll get done."
Newsom tries to
help the youths find other interests. "If a kid likes Bruce Lee
and Jean-Claude Van Damme movies, I don't push him to football,
and if a kid likes the Raiders and the Rams, I
don't push him to karate," Newsom said.
Casey Crouch
was a straight-F student on probation for shoplifting when he
came to Jeopardy. Newsom said the lanky blond Van Nuys teen-ager
has turned himself around. Casey practiced in the
gym-maybe showed off just a little-with spins and kicks as the
other youths lifted weights. Newsom held his hand
up above his head as Casey whirled and snapped his foot about an
inch from Newsom's open palm.
"They have
energy, all of them, on the street. It just needs to be
directed," Newsom said. Byline: REBECCA BRYANT
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