| June 10,
2007 |
By Paul Harasim
Review-Journal
|
Future looking good for former gang
members
Free tattoo removal helps erase stigma
Estephanie Alvarez holds this truth to be
self-evident: When people assume on sight that you’re scum, life sucks.
So it goes, she says, when you’re sporting tattoos
that can mean you’re a murdered, ex-con or gangbanger.
“It’s a terrible way to have to live,” the
40-year-old mother of five said before she headed to an appointment to
remove teardrop ink marks near an eye. “It becomes almost impossible to
get a good job or to even have a nice dinner at a restaurant. People
look at you and they are sure they know what you stand for. It’s
embarrassing to be treated worse then a leper.”
Alvarez has dreamed for years of ridding herself of
the stigma spawned by her gang-related tattoos.
One of her children told her about a program
offered by Mary Arnold-Ronish, a former registered nurse who in May
publicly offered to remove the tattoos of former gang members for free.
“I just can’t believe this is finally happening,”
Alvarez said, choking back tears. “Every time I think about it, it makes
me cry. I could have never afforded to have 15 tattoos taken off.”
Alvarez said she was pressured by family members,
who were affiliated with a gang, into getting the tattoos, including two
ink teardrops under her right eye.
Teardrop tattoos have various interpretations, one
of which is that the bearer has committed a murder.
“I never killed anyone,” Alvarez said. Nor, she
said, has she ever been in prison.
Arnold-Ronish, owner of Professional Permanent Cosmetics (sm) on West Charleston Boulevard, said her tattoo removal program
is a way for her to give back to the community.
“I think people deserve a second chance,” Arnold-Ronish
said.
That same kind of thinking prompted District Court
Judge William Voy, who is responsible for juvenile delinquency cases in
Clark County, to start a free tattoo removal program for juveniles
trying to break away from gang affiliations.
“It’s not easy for young people trying to go
straight to get the jobs and respect they want if they’re still wearing
the marks of a gang,” said Voy, who began the program last year.
One juvenile, who has been incarcerated on assault
and battery charges, said his restaurant employer told him he had to
wear Band-Aids on his tattooed fingers until he had his gang markings
removed.
“It really hurts having the tattoos removed, but it
will be worth it when I get them all done,” said the 16-year-old waiter,
whose tattoos are coming off via laser treatments in the offices of Dr.
Julio Garcia, a plastic surgeon, “I wont have a future if the tattoos
can be seen.”
Laser treatment breaks up ink particles into tiny
fragments with highly concentrated light beams, a multistep process that
can cause pain and blister formation as the fragments are cleared up by
the body’s scavenging cells.
The technique used by Arnold-Ronish is different.
It involves the same instrument that creates the
tattoo. Instead of releasing ink or pigment, however, Arnold-Ronish
inputs anesthetic. Sea salt paste is then added, which draws out the
ink. Though the salt is largely cleaned out, it still draws ink into a
scab, which is then removed.
“No matter which technique is used, more than one
treatment is usually necessary,” Arnold-Ronish said.
Though each procedure takes just a few minutes,
Arnold-Ronish said the danger of scarring is always there.
Alvarez said many of her job searches have ended in
frustration because of tattoos.
“I’ll apply all over the Internet and everything
will be fine; but when they see me in person with my tattoos, they ask
me what I’m doing here,” Alvarez said.
Alvarez is thankful that a retirement home for the
elderly has hired her to cook.
“They were willing to look past my tattoos,” she
said.
Arnold-Ronish, who has worked with 25 former gang
members since offering her free service, is working to remove “white
power” tattoos from a young man.
“He heated a table knife and tried to burn them
off, and that caused a lot of scarring,” she said.
“I had to get rid of the white supremacist
tattoos,” the man explained, suggesting he could lose access to his
child in a custody dispute if they remain.
Voy wishes more juveniles would take advantage of
the tattoo removal program he worked out through Clark county Medical
Society. Upon a request from the society’s leaders, several doctors
offered to participate.
To date, about half the 16 teens who began the
program have decided to stay with it.
“I think the pain and peer pressure are problems,”
Voy said.
Garcia said he is happy to offer his services
gratis.
“Kids have to know that they’re not going to get
jobs with casinos if they’re wearing tattoos that can be seen,” he
said.
Alvarez knows it could be many months before
Arnold-Ronish finishes removing all her tattoos.
“I just want to be like everybody else,” she said.
“These tattoos have been holding me back. All people are seeing is the
front page of me, and that’s not fair. But you have to expect that in
Las Vegas. This city is based on looks, not intelligence.”
###
|