Look it up. Report it. Map it.
Spot a symbol on a wall? Search the dictionary, take a photo, geotag it. Civilian map shows neighborhood-level clustering for community cleanup. Verified law-enforcement partners can request precise pin access.
Spot a symbol you've identified in the dictionary? Submit it here. Reports are held for moderator review before they appear on the public map.
Request law-enforcement access
Verified US law-enforcement partners get the unblurred map, precise pin data, time-series, and territory-spread analysis. Submissions are reviewed manually by ETL.
Many cities and counties have graffiti abatement programs (often run by public works or code enforcement) that paint over reported graffiti at no cost. Some neighborhoods and faith-based communities also organize volunteer paint-out crews. Check with your local public-works office or community group before attempting cleanup yourself.
If your area does not have an existing program and you want to start one, work with your municipality, get property-owner consent before painting, wear safety equipment, and never approach active vandalism in progress. Call 911 if you witness vandalism in progress or feel unsafe.
ETL provides this card as awareness and community-coordination support. ETL is not a coordinator of cleanup activity. ETL is not liable for any injury, property damage, legal action, or other consequence incurred by users acting on information published here.

