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Chief Keef Asked If He’s A Blood, Confirms Gang Affiliation

Since Chief Keef moved to Los Angeles, some fans have been confused about his gang affiliation. Sosa has replaced his “C-words” with “B,” with “Boolin” being his favorite term.

Bhris Breezy Swag

A photo posted by Chief Keef (@chieffkeeffsossa) on

A fan asked Sosa if he was blood, which he quickly shut down.

Sosa wrote, “No im Black disciple Nation!”

Sosa was made BD in his old stomping grounds of OBlock.

The Black Gangster Disciple Nation was founded by Larry Hoover and David Barksdale in 1969. Hoover and friends formed “The Supreme Gangsters” in the early 1960s and used to hang out on 68th and Green streets. Hoover and his crew controlled a small strip of Halstead Street in the Englewood neighborhood.

The gang grew and spread East to 79th street and East to the Dan Ryan expressway.

Hoover possessed a charismatic personality and was seen as the crew’s leader.

David Barksdale was the leader of the rival Black Disciples gang and controlled the area between 59th and 68th streets. Barksdale suggested he and Hoover merge their gangs to form Gangster Disciples.

Hoover and the Supreme Gangsters met with Barksdale and the BDs on the corner of 68th and Green Street to make their pact official.

“I told them that today that we had become the strongest, most powerful organization in the city… What we have put together here today was the start of something great. That from this beginning, we would one day control the city,” Hoover was quoted as saying.

Barksdale went under the name “King David” and adopted Judaism’s six-point star for the gang.

Barksdale died from kidney failure in 1974 as a result of a shooting in 1967, thus making Hoover the president of the organization.

The Black Disciples later disbanded from the Gangster Disciples following a disagreement with the direction of the organization.

Hoover ran the gang’s criminal empire until he was charged and convicted in the murder of drug dealer William Young. He was sentenced to 150 to 200 years in prison.

While in prison, Hoover changed the name of his street gang to “Growth and Development.”

Despite professing change for the urban community, Hoover was linked to running an elaborate criminal empire behind bars. He was later indicted and sentenced to serve six life sentences at the United States Penitentiary Administrative Maximum Facility.

The GDs and BDs can now be found active nationwide in many major metropolitan cities.

Both gangs remain under the six-point star umbrella to this day, essentially making members of the GDs and BDs a part of the same gang.

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