Leo's path out wasn't easy—most believe you can never leave, but many do once the disillusionment sets in. He sought help through a local community program that focused on the root causes of why kids join in the first place: the need for belonging and resources. Today, he works with youth to show them that a gang is a "bill of goods" that only leads to trauma or a cell.
But the "kingly status" came at a dark cost. Leo soon realized the gang wasn't a family; it was a business built on fear. He saw his friends used as tools for extortion and watched as social media was used to flaunt violence to intimidate rivals. The "protection" he was promised was actually a target on his back. Leo's path out wasn't easy—most believe you can
Leo was fifteen when he first started looking up to the "generals" of his neighborhood. To an insecure kid, they seemed like kings. They offered what his fractured home life couldn't: a sense of power, protection, and a family that claimed they would never break their bond. But the "kingly status" came at a dark cost