They were hanging out late last Tuesday when members had to scramble for cover.
Four people were injured when a gunman leaned out of a passing SUV and sprayed the area with what sounded like an automatic weapon — a theory confirmed by witness testimonies and the ShotSpotter.
The incident last Tuesday extended a string of shootings involving ordinary handguns and rifles that were modified into fully automatic weapons capable of firing up to 1,200 rounds per minute.
The conversion process involves illegal devices commonly referred to as "Glock switches" or "auto-sears," which are readily available to buy on the internet or can be made on 3-D printers. Police and crime prevention workers say that these converted guns are showing up at more and more crime scenes.
Quantrell Urman, founder of the street outreach group Turf Politics, said that not a night goes by that he doesn't hear automatic gunfire while making his rounds.
"They're out there a lot," he said. "They're everywhere."
The constant threat of gunfire also is making it harder to recruit people for the work of interrupting the cycles of violence that plague some parts of the city, he said.
"It deters a lot of people from going out there. A lot of those guys don't have life insurance, they don't have medical and we can't carry weapons," he said. "So we're in a lose-lose situation that do it."