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New York Daily News - http://www.nydailynews.com

Eurotrash making marks on subways

BY PETE DONOHUE

DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER

Sunday, December 10th, 2006

 

Subway graffiti is back - and Europeans are to blame.

Most of the major graffiti attacks on trains are being carried out by twentysomething Europeans who want to leave their marks where the graffiti culture was born, experts said.

 

They come from Germany, Italy, France, Spain, Switzerland, Denmark and Norway to spray-paint their murals and elaborate tags - called "pieces" - on trains, fully aware that the Transit Authority will scrub them clean within hours.

 

The Euro-taggers don't care that New Yorkers won't see their work on the rails: their main goal is to take photographs and videos of their handiwork to bolster their reputations on the other side of the Atlantic.

 

"The majority of the heavy graffiti is being done by foreigners," said recently retired NYPD Transit Bureau Lt. Steven Mona, who until September 2005 was the commanding officer of the Citywide Vandals Task Force.

 

"We've always had foreigners, but in the last five years we've seen an increase."

 

When Mona and his team reviewed last year's graffiti hits, they estimated that 70% were carried out by Europeans.

 

That includes the graffiti group "MOAS," or Monsters of Art Scandinavia, which painted its initials on trains stored on "layup" tracks on Utica Ave. in Brooklyn.

 

Another tag spotted on a train hit on Utica Ave., "Biser," is identified on the Internet as being from Germany.

 

The NYPD wouldn't reveal the nationalities of arrested graffiti vandals. But another expert said the phenomenon is well-known.

 

Sgt. Bobby Barrow, who retired from the squad last year after nearly two decades in the Transit Bureau, agreed the bulk of the big hits are being done by tourists whose idea of a vacation is slinking around the city's tunnels and desolate railyards.

 

"There's a huge subculture to this," Barrow said.

 

Lady Pink, who started spray-painting trains in the 1980s and became the city's most famous female graffiti writer, said New Yorkers are bored with tagging trains.

 

"Painting to take a photograph, for us who live here, is kind of the wussy way out," she said. "The point is to have it run [on the tracks and be seen]."

 

In 2002, a 24-year-old man from Poland and a 25-year-old German were caught with cans of spray paint and a videotape showing each defacing subway cars.

 

The two men spent short stints in jail but were released. They never showed up at their next court appearance.

 

"New York City is not a Disneyland for vacationing Euro-vandals," said Queens City Councilman Peter Vallone, chairman of the Public Safety Committee. "Judges need to send a message by setting bail at arraignment."

 

The Daily News reported last week that subway graffiti has taken off this year, with vandals heavily tagging and scratching 162 cars - more than triple the number defiled in 2004.

 

The 162 subway cars each required at least eight hours of cleaning or repairs, according to the TA, which classifies each incident as a "major hit," including spray-painting train exteriors or scratching drivel onto train windows.

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runnin them thangs

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Graffiti still a homegrown crime, says top transit cop

 

by patrick arden / metro new york

 

DEC 12, 2006

 

MIDTOWN — Don’t blame European tourists for the recent upswing in subway graffiti, said James Hall, chief of NYPD’s transit bureau, yesterday.

 

Reacting to a Daily News story blaming “Eurotrash” for the jump in tagging and more elaborate graffiti “pieces,” Hall said, “We’ve arrested some foreign nationals, but when you really look at who we’ve apprehended this year for repeat layup hits, they were born and raised here in New York.”

 

“Layup” hits involve subway cars that are tagged while parked overnight in tunnels or in train yards. So far this year, 31 people have been arrested for “major hits” of subway cars on “layup” tracks. Just four of those were foreigners — three Slovaks and an Australian nabbed in a September sting. “They traveled all the way here to mark up a train, and they were arrested for it,” Hall said.

 

In 2005, only seven arrests were made for major graffiti hits.

 

The Daily News story quoted retired transit bureau cops who believed Europeans could be blamed for 70 percent of subway graffiti last year. They spotted tags on trains from foreigners who posted their work on the Internet, including the group “MOAS,” or Monsters of Art Scandinavia, and “Biser,” a tagger from Germany. Arrested Europeans are most likely back home by the time they have to show up in court.

 

“Seventy percent’s a high number,” Hall said. “There’s no question, I think, that there’s some merit that you have foreign nationals coming to New York City to do graffiti to trains.” But he still considered graffiti to be a crime largely carried out by locals. “Our most prolific taggers this year are all homegrown New Yorkers,” he said. “I don’t think it’s wise to just put all your eggs in the European basket.”

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