Scott Redd watched as five young men juked the basketball around defenders, putting up jump shots as music boomed and people trickled in and out. On a typical night, open gym at Sabathani Community Center draws 40-50 people from around the neighborhood.
To Redd, Sabathani’s chief executive, the scene in front of him is part of the reason he describes the nonprofit as the “heart” of south Minneapolis — not just because of its location along E. 38th Street, but also because of the range of services it offers the community, including food distribution, senior housing and career services.
As Redd described the resources that flow through Sabathani, he also spoke of a darker reality that’s long haunted the young people walking through their doors.
“This is a Bloods neighborhood,” he said, referring to the gang that’s long had a violent grip in south Minneapolis.
About a mile south of Lake Street, Sabathani falls in territory claimed by the Bloods gang that, for decades, dealt drugs and committed gun crimes against their rivals. Though their violent dealings made headlines, a series of federal racketeering trials against their members and that of other prominent Minneapolis gangs — the Highs and the Lows — have shed light on another sinister trend at the heart of their enterprise: the indoctrination of young children to do their dirty work.
For generations, Minneapolis gangs have lured vulnerable children at tender ages through promises of protection, a lucrative life or by preying on their desire for acceptance.
In actuality, prosecutors said, the children served as the gang’s “cannon fodder.”
“While the Bloods have wreaked havoc throughout the Minneapolis metro area, they have done the most damage to the community within their would-be kingdom,” read sentencing documents by Kristian Weir, the assistant U.S. Attorney for Minnesota who prosecuted a case against the south Minneapolis gang. “The impact of the Bloods gang within this community begins with their predation on its children.”