SA Council Poised To Drop $3 Million On Gang Crackdown

The San Antonio City Council will decide Thursday whether to allocate about $3 million to expand the city’s Texas Anti-Gang program. The funds would add staff and cover equipment, training, and leasing costs.

KENS5 reports the proposed $3 million award would be managed by the San Antonio Police Department if approved by the City Council. The funding would create six new positions: two sworn officers and four civilian roles—a fiscal analyst, crime-intelligence analyst, police program specialist, and analysis manager. Remaining funds would cover equipment, training, a building lease, and professional or contract services.

Raid That Prompted The Push

A mid-November multi-agency operation on the North Side highlighted transnational gang activity and helped prompt this funding request. The Nov. 16 action detained roughly 150 people, including about 143 taken into ICE custody, with dozens linked to Venezuela’s Tren de Aragua. Numbers vary slightly depending on federal and local reports, including HSToday and KSAT.

Community Reaction And Policing Questions

Coverage of the raid has raised questions about coordination between local officers and federal teams, particularly on enforcement intersecting with immigration. SAPD provided perimeter and traffic support during the operation. So far, only a small number of people have faced federal criminal charges, with the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Western District of Texas filing initial illegal re-entry charges against two individuals, according to the Express-News.

The council’s A-session is scheduled to start at 9 a.m. Thursday, and members are expected to take up the ordinance to accept and extend Texas Anti-Gang program funding. If they approve the appropriation, the San Antonio Police Department would administer the grant money and move ahead with the hiring and purchases outlined in the staff proposal, according to the City of San Antonio…

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