The late 1960s and the 1970s saw the formation of the
Crips and the
Bloods, which became
rival gangs, but by the 1980s the infiltration of
rock cocaine and high-powered weapons into poor
inner cities had created infighting among factions. By the early 1990s, after 20 years of increasing gang warfare across
public housing projects that saw peak crime rates in Los Angeles, gang members themselves began trying to stem the violence. An effort took place in 1988, which was dubbed the "Year of the Gang" by the
LAPD and city leaders following the
murder of Karen Toshima in the city's
Westwood neighborhood. In July of that year, the Rev. Charles Mims Jr. and others organized a gang summit in
South Los Angeles, but formal support for gang prevention was non-existent at the time and this early effort was short-lived in media. Most of the members attending kept the truce going and did not resort to violence against each other, in particular the two Watts gang factions, the Bounty Hunter Bloods and the A Line Crips, and the truce still stands to this day. In October 1989, Minister
Louis Farrakhan visited Los Angeles to deliver his Stop the Killing speech aimed at curtailing gang killings. He returned for part two at the
Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena in January 1990 where hundreds of Crips and Bloods members were in attendance. ==1992 peace treaty==