Providence gang member turned nonviolence activist killed in Route 95 crash
June 1, 2009
By W. Zachary Malinowski
Journal Staff Writer
PROVIDENCE — David J. Cartagena, a senior street worker for the
Institute for the Study & Practice of Nonviolence, had put his
troubled past behind him. The former member of the Almighty Latin King
Nation youth gang had spent plenty of time in the Adult Correctional
Institutions and, in his teens, in the state Training School. His
life changed in 2005 when he joined the staff of the nonprofit agency
and became one of its most effective leaders in combating gang violence
and youth crime. Shortly after 2 a.m. Sunday, Cartagena, 38,
was killed in a chain-reaction collision involving his vehicle and
three others on Route 95 near the Providence Place mall. Two of the
other drivers face alcohol-related charges.
State police Lt. Frank Sullivan gave this account, which he stressed was preliminary pending a review by a reconstruction team: Cartagena
was northbound in his Lexus sport-utility vehicle when he struck a Jeep
Cherokee stopped in the breakdown lane and protruding into the travel
lane. A Jeep Wrangler driven by Steven Croteau then slammed into
Cartagena’s vehicle. Cartagena got out of his SUV and was hit by a
Honda Civic driven by Jeffrey Lopes that had caromed off the center
median barrier. Lopes, 21, of 7 Pleasant St., Cumberland, was
charged with driving while intoxicated, Sullivan said, and Croteau, 22,
752 Iron Mine Hill Rd., North Smithfield, was charged with refusing to
take a chemical breath test. Both were released after appearances
before a bail commissioner at the Lincoln barracks. Neither Lopes
nor Croteau was hurt, according to Sullivan. But a North Smithfield
resident who was riding in Croteau’s car was admitted to Rhode Island
Hospital with injuries not considered life threatening, he said. Two
others, the driver and a passenger in the disabled Cherokee, also were
admitted to Rhode Island Hospital, according to Sullivan, who
identified them only as Providence residents. Their injuries were not
serious, he said. On the city’s South Side, stunned street
workers, support staff and friends gathered at the Institute for
Nonviolence to share their grief. Teny Gross, the institute’s executive
director, was particularly close to Cartagena. “He was really,
really close to being my brother,” Gross said. “I don’t have a brother,
but we loved each other. His contribution to society was immeasurable.”
He said the young people who live in the Manton Heights and Hartford
Park housing projects will especially feel Cartagena’s loss. He spent
endless hours meeting, speaking and mentoring young men in those
projects and trying to convince them that violence was not the solution
to their problems. Gross said that everyone — school
administrators, politicians and the police — was charmed by Cartagena
and the way he could connect with people from all walks of life. Last
spring, Cartagena accompanied Gross to Guatemala for a conference on
gang violence, and they mingled with foreign dignitaries including an
ex-president of Guatemala. “Everybody liked David,” Gross said. “He was so committed to his work. He formed relationships.” THE
TURNAROUND in Cartagena’s life was remarkable. Court records show that,
as an adult, he had been arrested 15 times for crimes such as drug
possession, breaking and entering and resisting arrest. One time, he
escaped through the roof of the police station at LaSalle Square. Gross said Cartagena told him he had “harmed and hurt” many people during the course of his life. In
2005, someone told Gross that Cartagena might be a good fit for the
institute. At the time, he was out of jail and working as a janitor at
a bank in the city. After some coaxing, Cartagena submitted a neat,
handwritten resumé to Gross, who said it was the first and only time he
had received a resumé that was not typed. Cartagena was hired. Cartagena
was passionate about setting troubled youth on the right path. He was a
powerful speaker who had credibility, as a former gang member and
criminal, to connect with the kids. Keith Morton, a Providence College
professor who serves on the institute’s board of directors, said it
will be difficult to replace Cartagena and his contacts on the street.
He’s also concerned about rising tensions among gangs across the city. Last week, two members of the Dark Side Rascals were arrested for allegedly gunning down a member of the Asian Outlaw Boys. Last
December, at the institute’s annual Christmas Party, a black-and-white
photo essay about Cartagena’s life was shown on a screen. Cartagena
narrated the powerful presentation that a student from the Rhode Island
School of Design had put together. The presentation showed how far
Cartagena had come. Providence police Sgt. Michael P. Wheeler, head of
the department’s Gang Intervention Unit, had once chased Cartagena,
then a rising criminal, through the streets of Olneyville. He had grown
to like and respect him. He was shocked to learn of his death. “That’s awful,” Wheeler said. “I think David did a very good job. He did everything he could do to help people.” — With staff reports from Gregory Smith






My sincere condolences to the Institute, Teny, and David's family and friends. I know this is a significant loss to all who knew David. May his memory be honored by those whose lives he has touched through their continued efforts in his name.
Posted by: Pamela LaBreche | June 05, 2009 at 10:13 AM