California city's police tackle those who flash Cowboys logo
The self-employed accountant jumped in his Mercedes-Benz convertible — outfitted with a custom license-plate frame declaring his dedication to the five-time Super Bowl champions — and drove to the police station to make sure he was in the clear.
Turns out "America's Team" is holding its summer training camp in probably the only city in the nation where wearing Dallas Cowboy paraphernalia could draw a $1,000 fine or six months in jail.
"All I needed was to get shot at or pulled over for interrogation," said Gallegos, 42, who is among hundreds of local fans ready to welcome Dallas Cowboys players, coaches and cheerleaders as they begin training today in Oxnard.
Police and prosecutors this year obtained an injunction that prevents the city's largest and most violent street gang from congregating in public, flashing gang signs and wearing Dallas Cowboys attire within a 6.6-square-mile "safety zone" in the heart of Ventura County's largest city. Violators are subject to arrest and misdemeanor charges.
Authorities, however, assured Gallegos that he would have no trouble behind the wheel of his CLK 320. "They said, 'I don't think gang members drive cars like this,' " he said.
Members of Oxnard's Colonia Chiques adopted the team's apparel and logo in the mid-1980s, police say. They remove the W on Cowboys T-shirts and jerseys to form the words "CO BOYS," short for "Colonia Boys." They also took a liking to the Dallas Cowboys' star — tattooing it on their shaved heads, for example.
Officers said they recently encountered a suspected Colonia gang member with Dallas Cowboys bedsheets.
Just the sight of a Cowboys jersey or cap is enough to spur an attack from a rival gang member, even if the wearer is an innocent football fan, authorities alleged.
Since the injunction was granted last month on a preliminary basis, the Chiques have laid low and street violence has subsided, Oxnard Police Chief Art Lopez said.
He said the clothing restrictions apply only to the three dozen or so Colonia gang members who have been served with a copy of the court order.
Lopez said neither the team nor the herd of Cowboy-crazy fans expected to ride into town in the next three weeks should worry.
"The guys we are concerned about aren't true Dallas Cowboys fans," Lopez said. "Our guys know who the gang members are."