Quantcast
Channel: White Trash Networks : News
Viewing all 1213 articles
Browse latest View live

(USA) Do you Feel Safe With Motorcycle Gxxgs In Town?

$
0
0
FARGO, ND -
Recent motorcycle gang activity has local law enforcement speaking up.

The outlaw motorcycle gang, Sons of Silence has been in Fargo for some time, but more may be on their way.

The American Motorcycle Association reports that 99 percent of motorcyclists are law abiding citizens, but then there's the 1 percent like those in the shoot–out in Waco Texas this month that are deviant.

An American Eagle, adorned with the motto until death separates us.

It's one way to spot out a Sons of Silence member. Fargo's law enforcement has run–ins with this group that aren't major but the Cass County Detective says these gangs are capable of anything.

Cass County Detective Joe Gress said,"Theft to running an illegal business, prostitution, embezzlement, right up through rape, attempted murder, murder.

To keep tragedies like this from happening, police say there are key factors to look for in your neighborhood.

The number of bikes and any colors associated with them.

There may also be what is called a crash truck that travels in front or behind that includes money, weapons and space for broken bikes. But officials say don't take the situation into your own hands.

"It might be something that's nothing. Let use come out and deal with it, Don't take justice into your own hands," said Gress.

A recent Craigslist article shows a Fargo police officer on a kid's bike. The writer vulgarly attempts to belittle the PD and says Hells Angels is coming. Some people believe they're underestimating the PD.

Molly Kalein said, "Just because you see them playing basketball and touching base with the community doesn't mean they don't know what they're doing in the community and they're not going to be able to handle things when the time is right."

Detective Gress says he doesn't want to worry anyone but wants to provide knowledge to the public. Because knowledge is power.

http://www.kvrr.com/news/local-news/do-you-feel-safe-with-motorcycle-gangs-in-town/33277680

(CAN) No happy trails for paroled Hamilton Hells Angel Walter Stadnick

$
0
0


Former Hells Angels boss Walter Stadnick of Hamilton won't be legally riding a motorcycle any time soon.

Newly-released parole board records show Stadnick lost a parole board appeal earlier this month that means he remains blocked from owning or operating a motorcycle.

In September 2004, Stadnick was sentenced to 14 years, seven months after being convicted of a variety of offenses, including conspiracy to commit murder, conspiracy to traffic drugs and involvement in gang activities.

He was paroled a week before Christmas, after having his parole revoked midway through 2014 for associating with people with a criminal record.

Strict parole conditions included a ban on riding or owning motorcycles and a ban on owning more than one cellphone.

He also must live in a halfway house in an undisclosed location and he must respect a curfew from 9 p.m. to 6 a.m.

Unless he wins an appeal in the future, those conditions remain in effect until his parole expires in April 2019.

Stadnick had unsuccessfully argued that he needed to ride motorcycles to be gainfully employed.

"You state that, as a motorcycle mechanic, you would be required to ride the motorcycles once they have been repaired," his parole decision states. "You contend that the Parole Board is denying you the opportunity to make a living, and that to suggest you look into another career at this time in your life is not realistic."

Regarding his strict curfew, Stadnick unsuccessfully argued that his wife does not have a criminal record and that he should be allowed to stay with her.

The Appeal Division of the parole board argued to Stadnick that "you are a high profile offender and spent decades in a criminally entrenched, high-risk lifestyle which has contributed to significant violence in a number of communities."

The appeal decision continues: "it was not unreasonable for the Board to conclude that forbidding your ownership or operation of a motorcycle was reasonable and necessary given the link between motorcycles, your associates and attitudes, and your crimes. You were a high ranking member of an Outlaw Motorcycle Club . . . it was not unreasonable for the Board to draw the link between ownership of a motorcycle, association with those who do and your risk of returning to criminal behaviour."

Stadnick's parole file shows he was polite and respectful to guards while in prison, although he continued to break the law.

He was transferred from medium to maximum security prisons in 2006 and 2009 "for illegal trafficking activities and large-scale loan-sharking within the institution."

His file notes he has been a member of the Hells Angels since 1982 and helped found the elite Nomads chapter in Montreal in 1995.

http://www.thespec.com/news-story/5647284-no-happy-trails-for-paroled-hamilton-hells-angel-walter-stadnick/

(USA) Outlaw motorcycle clubs operating under the radar in Linn County

$
0
0
Outlaw motorcycle club members sometimes can be seen riding in the mid-Willamette Valley, wearing their organization’s patches, but they’ve generally stayed under the radar, causing law enforcement few problems, said local police supervisors.

“We’ve been fairly fortunate. … We haven’t had a lot of motorcycle gang issues,” said Lt. Marv Hammersley of the Albany Police Department.

Sgt. Melinda Poirier of the Linn County Sheriff’s Office, a board member of the Northwest Gang Investigators Association, said that clubs don’t want to make waves here, since Linn County is ideally situated on the crossroads of Interstate 5 and Highway 20 or Highway 34.

Bikers can make a relatively quick jaunt from Albany to anywhere in Oregon, not to mention California, Washington, Nevada or Idaho.

Still, police supervisors worry about the possibility of violence, much like the shootout on May 17 in Texas between rival gangs that left at least nine people dead. Authorities in the Lone Star State are preparing for retaliatory crimes between various gangs.

Local police said a simple incident between two people can spark a larger feud among clubs.

“Motorcycle gangs are potentially a problem anywhere they exist,” Hammersley said.

And Oregon might be a tinderbox.

Poirier said that for decades, the state has had one dominant motorcycle club. However, other clubs have moved into Oregon, and that could cause territorial disputes.

“We have more motorcycle gangs coming through Oregon than ever before,” Poirier said.

Arguments between groups over territory were a factor in the Texas shootout, according to The Associated Press.

Poirier also was concerned about the possibility of violence as street gangs from California, with outposts in Salem and Eugene, could eventually make their way to Linn County.

“It’s just a matter of time before something happens,” she said.

The Albany area has at least two outlaw motorcycle clubhouses, and some of the major organizations have affiliate clubs in Linn County, according to police.

Occasionally, a club member will get busted for a relatively minor crime, such as driving under the influence of intoxicants, said Sgt. Jerry Drum.

“It’s not like it’s a gang problem. It’s a one-biker problem,” he added.

Drum and Hammersley worried about law-abiding motorcycle clubs being tainted by the violence in Texas, especially those that wear leather vests with multiple patches on the back — a style worn by outlaw groups.

http://democratherald.com/news/local/outlaw-motorcycle-clubs-operating-under-the-radar-in-linn-county/article_6bc1be43-fda0-5a80-8517-77cd747a7d37.html

(USA) Biker arrested in Waco shooting files federal lawsuit

$
0
0
HEWITT, Texas -- A 30-year old father and former firefighter who is also a member of a motorcycle club has filed a federal civil rights lawsuit alleging he was illegally swept up in the police dragnet following this month's Twin Peaks biker shootout in Waco.

Matthew Clendennen of Hewitt is a member of the Scimitars motorcycle club and was at Twin Peaks on May 17.

He was one of approximately 170 people arrested after the melee, which left nine dead, and charged with engaging in organized crime. Bail for each of those arrested was set at $1 million each.

In his lawsuit, filed in federal court in Waco Friday, Clendennen said he "did not encourage or solicit any criminal activity at Twin Peaks that day."

It states he was arrested "without probable cause and his motorcycle was illegally seized."

His lawsuit names the city of Waco and the McLennen County sheriff's as well as individual officers working the Twin Peaks case.

"It was the policy of the City of Waco, as decided and approved by their policymakers, to cause the arrest and detention of numerous individuals belonging to motorcycle clubs who were in or around the Twin Peaks restaurant at the time of the incident, regardless of whether or not there was individualized probable cause to arrest and detain a particular individual and to do so based on "fill in the name" complaints without individualized facts," the lawsuit states.

It makes no specified claim of damages, but says Clendennen's constitutional rights were violated.

http://www.kvue.com/story/news/state/2015/05/29/biker-arrested-in-waco-shooting-files-federal-lawsuit/28152685/

(USA) Austin men arrested in Waco biker shooting released

$
0
0
WACO, Texas -- Three Austin men who were arrested in connection to the deadly shooting at Twin Peaks have been released from jail after having their bonds lowered Thursday.

Jonathan Lopez, Ryan Craft, and Theron Rhoten had their bonds reduced from $1,000,000 to $25,000, according to their bondsman.

The trio out of Travis County posted bond Thursday, then were later released.

All three were taken to the McLennan County Courthouse where they signed-off on bond conditions then left town.

According to KVUE's partners at the Austin American-Statesman, the three are members of the Vice Grip Motorcycle Club, an Austin group that builds and rides antique Harley-Davidson motorcycles.

http://www.kvue.com/story/news/state/2015/05/29/austin-men-arrested-in-waco-biker-shooting-released/28144085/

(USA) POLICE SNIPERS SPOTTED AT TWO TEXAS HARLEY DEALERSHIPS IN WAKE OF TWIN PEAKS SHOOTING

$
0
0


hotos on the Facebook page of a group called Free All The Waco Bikers appears to show police snipers on an apartment building rooftop, across the street from a Harley-Davidson dealership that was a hosting a memorial service for one of the bikers shot and killed outside a Twin Peaks restaurant in Waco on May 17.

This is the second time in less than a week that snipers have been posted outside a Texas Harley Davidson dealership after the Waco incident.

The most recent sniper sighting occurred at the “fundraiser and celebration of life” for Jesse Rodriquez, a decorated Vietnam vet who was known to fellow bikers as “Mohawk,” and frequently did charity rides with his wife. The fundraiser was held at Geuene Harley Davidson in New Braunfels, south of Austin.

It’s unclear why snipers were in place. Many who knew Rodriguez—a father of 7 and grandfather of 19—have disputed that he was a criminal. According to the New Braunfels Heralnd-Zeitung:

Vincent Ramirez said media outlets have portrayed his father, Jesus “Jesse” Delgado Rodriguez, 65, as a bad person, and that’s not just inconsiderate — but wrong. And he insisted his father was not involved with any biker gang.

“I don’t want people to be categorizing my dad. That’s not the kind of man he was,” Ramirez said. “He was a veteran. He fought for his country. He was a family man. He loved to ride his motorcycle. He rode with all kind of groups.”

The article also quotes Carlos Casillo, a friend who knew Rodriguez for 40 years, as saying:

…reports about Rodriguez being a member of the Bandidos motorcycle gang are false. Rodriguez knew some Bandidos, sometimes rode with some and bought patches in support of some of their benefits, Castillo said.

“He wasn’t a violent person at all; he was a loving person,” Castillo said. “He never carried any weapons. He just happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time. He was an innocent bystander.”

Rodriguez will be buried on Friday.

Judging by the photos posted on Facebook Wednesday night, it appears snipers were posted on two rooftops across from the Harley dealer-hosted event, which included a raffle, food and music.

Breitbart Texas used Google Maps to confirm that the apartment building shown in the photos is indeed directly across from the Harley dealership.

The second sniper incident was reported this past Saturday at Longhorn Harley Davidson in the southern Dallas suburb of Gran Prairie. CBSDFW.com reported that police positioned snipers outside the dealership during a motorcycle event. No incidents were reported.

The use of military-style weaponry by law enforcement is one of the puzzling aspects of the Waco incident, which police have referred to as a “biker shootout.”

Photos and video from the Waco shooting show police armed with assault M-16 rifles.

The Waco police have not yet explained why a SWAT team, and other law enforcement with heavy weapons, were in the parking lot of the Twin Peaks restaurant that was hosting a Confederation of Clubs and Independents (CoC&I) meeting. As Breitbart Texas has reported, those meetings have never previously been the scene of violence.

The Waco police have not yet revealed how many of 9 dead were shot by law enforcement, versus how many were shot by bikers.

http://www.breitbart.com/texas/2015/05/29/police-snipers-spotted-at-two-texas-harley-dealerships-in-wake-of-twin-peaks-shooting/

(AUS) Nomad bikies threatened to cut out eyes of former South Australian club member, Adelaide court hears

$
0
0
Nomad bikie members threatened to "slit the throat" and "cut out the eyes" of a former South Australian club member when they travelled to the state from New South Wales, an Adelaide court has head.

Seven members of the Nomad outlaw motorcycle gang have faced court in Adelaide after being charged with a string of offences, including solicit to murder, kidnapping and blackmail.

Police allege the offences occurred in SA between November 2014 and March 2015.

Three members were extradited to SA from NSW on Friday.

During a bail application for one of the accused, the court heard four members of the gang arrived at Adelaide Airport from NSW in November and met with a former local member of the Nomads gang.

Prosecutor Sandi McDonald said the former member was taken to an Adelaide High School oval where demands were made for $30,000, a motor vehicle and a motor bike.

She said threats were made to kill him if he did not comply.

Ms McDonald said the former member was later brought to a motel at Medindie where he was detained, threatened and assaulted.

"He was told he was going to die ... the defendant and others threatened to slit his throat," she said.

Ms McDonald said a threat was made to cut the victim's eyes out and he was held down while a gun was pointed at him.

She described the crime as "the most serious example of this type of offending".

A lawyer for the accused man applying for bail said the victim's allegations were unreliable.

"These allegations are denied," he said.

"There is a real question in this case about the reliability of the complainant."

A total of 12 men ranging in age from 24 to 50 were last week arrested after joint raids between the SA and NSW police forces carried out in both states.

Police said the men were either full members, nominees, prospects or associates of the Nomads.

More people are expected to face court this afternoon.

A publication ban is in place on the identity of each defendant and the alleged victim.

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2015-06-01/nomad-bikies-threatened-to-cut-out-the-eyes-of-sa-member/6512328

(USA) Feds Take Aim at Biker Gxxg’s ‘Colors’

$
0
0


Federal prosecutors are trying a novel legal tactic to strike at the heart of what they consider a notorious outlaw motorcycle gang: using trademark law to take away its treasured logo.

In a pending racketeering trial in Los Angeles, the Justice Department will attempt to legally seize the black-and-white emblem worn on leather jackets by members of the Mongols Motorcycle Club, which depicts a muscled, ponytailed warrior with a Fu Manchu mustache speeding on a chopper. The trial was to begin in early June but was delayed last week after the case was assigned to a new judge.

For years, federal authorities have claimed that the Mongols name and logo, which the club has registered as trademarks with the federal government, serve as a source of intimidation and a banner under which members have committed crimes. By taking over the trademarks, which would make it illegal to display the Mongols “colors,” the Justice Department believes it can essentially neuter the club.

Leaders of the Mongols—which started as a group of primarily Hispanic bikers in California and, according to prosecutors, grew to more than 60 chapters including branches in Sweden and Germany—dispute the characterization of the club as criminal. They say they are a band of loyal motorcycle enthusiasts who are being unfairly persecuted by authorities because of the actions of a few.

“Law enforcement is going out there trying to demonize and vilify us. But we are just like everyone else,” said David “Lil Dave” Santillan, the Mongols’ international president. “We are a motorcycle club. We just want to ride and be free.”

The case is playing out in the wake of a bloody shootout among rival bikers in Waco, Texas, in May that left nine dead and 18 wounded, an event that drew national attention to the subculture of outlaw motorcycle gangs.

That turf-war incident—which didn’t involve the Mongols—exploded into violence after members of one gang began wearing a patch that signified its dominance in Texas, infuriating a rival group.

Motorcycle clubs around the nation are watching the Los Angeles trial closely. “They are worried that if they can do this to the Mongols, they can do it to anybody,” said Donald Charles Davis, an expert on motorcycle clubs who chronicles biker news on his blog, the Aging Rebel. “The idea seems to be that you can ban motorcycle clubs by stripping them of their insignia.”

The case against the Mongols dates to 2008, when federal prosecutors charged dozens of members with crimes ranging from murder to weapons trafficking to money laundering, after undercover agents with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives infiltrated the group. Prosecutors won convictions against members including former president Ruben “Doc” Cavazos.

But they went a step further and formally sought to take possession of the club’s trademarked name and logo. That is an unusual use of federal forfeiture law, which empowers the government to seize assets from convicted criminals.

In a statement announcing the 2008 indictment, Thomas O’Brien, then U.S. attorney in Los Angeles, said a forfeiture would allow police officers to stop any member wearing the gang’s patch “and literally take the jacket right off his back.”

But lawyers for the Mongols have won preliminary court rulings in recent years that found the government can’t seize the group’s name and insignia because the club, itself, hadn’t been charged with criminal conduct.

In an attempt to sidestep that argument and appropriate the logo, federal prosecutors in 2013 indicted the entire Mongol Nation, charging the group with a racketeering conspiracy. The government is expected to argue that displaying Mongols paraphernalia is tantamount to making a threat and that the club remains steeped in violence and criminal activity.

In court filings, prosecutors alleged that prospective Mongols had to show their willingness to commit crimes on behalf of the gang before being accepted and permitted to wear its patch. They also said that Mongols, acting under the authority conveyed by the gang’s name and logo, “murdered, attempted to murder, assaulted, and threatened those who posed a threat to the Mongols Gang.”

A lawyer for the Mongols said the club has modified its code of conduct to bar substance abuse and criminal activity, noting that the government’s allegations are based on the actions of members who have since made deals with prosecutors.

The Mongols have said a minority of its members have been charged with crimes. They say the asset seizure would violate the First Amendment rights of members to proclaim their association with a group by wearing its distinctive logo.

“Any organization—whether it’s a motorcycle club or law enforcement—is made up of individuals,” said their lawyer, Joe Yanny, noting that the group had banished members who committed crimes. “There are people in here that have made mistakes. But most of these clubs have cleaned up their act.”

A number of organizations have sided with the Mongols in criticizing the case, including the libertarian Cato Institute, which has long condemned government use of forfeiture powers. Tim Lynch, a lawyer for the group, said prosecutors should focus on addressing the alleged illegal conduct of Mongols members rather than “going after the very lifestyle” of the club.

“Motorcycles are also a vital part of the organization,” Mr. Lynch said. “Can the government pressure them into giving up their motorcycles and force them to ride in mini cars?”

Biker experts say that if the government succeeded in seizing the Mongols’ logo, it could have a chilling effect on other motorcycle organizations.

“If anyone from another motorcycle club commits an illegal act, then the precedent is there,” said William Dulaney, a professor at Air University in Alabama and an expert on biker culture. “That organization’s colors could conceivably be confiscated.”

http://www.wsj.com/articles/feds-take-aim-at-biker-gangs-colors-1433107921

(USA) TEXAS TYRANNY: WACO JUDGE AGREES TO LET MOST BIKERS GO – IF THEY SIGN A CONTRACT VOWING NOT TO SUE FOR WRONGFUL ARREST Read more: The Gilmer Mirror - TEXAS TYRANNY WACO JUDGE AGREES TO LET MO

$
0
0
“It appears the public defenders office in McLennan County is involved in this scurrilous activity,” said Paul Looney, a Houston attorney with Looney & Conrad, P.C. “I’ve never seen anything like the lawlessness that the authorities have perpetrated on these people and now to add insult to injury they are trying to cover their own tracks in exchange for bond.”

BOND REDUCTIONS OFFERED ONLY IN EXCHANGE FOR WAIVING POTENTIAL LAWSUITS IN WACO SHOOTOUT.

Waco, Texas – Earlier today, detainees in the Jack Harwell Detention Center in Waco were told that in exchange for bond reductions, they must sign a document stating the Waco police “had the right to arrest the inmate and that he/she will not file a lawsuit against McLennan County and/or the City of Waco.”

On the two-week anniversary of the “shootout at high noon” at the Twin Peaks restaurant between motorcyclists and law enforcement officers, at least 170 people remain detained on $1 million bonds.

This latest information was reported to an attorney representing at least one of the detainees. “It appears the public defenders office in McLennan County is involved in this scurrilous activity,” said Paul Looney, a Houston attorney with Looney & Conrad, P.C. “I’ve never seen anything like the lawlessness that the authorities have perpetrated on these people and now to add insult to injury they are trying to cover their own tracks in exchange for bond. I will be in the reception area of the McLennan County D.A.’s office tomorrow morning at 8:30 with the intention of not leaving until we have the issue of bond resolved.”

“They know these people aren’t dangerous or they wouldn’t be offering the bond reductions and they know the police and the D.A.’s office have violated the law and now they are trying to hold people hostage until they agree to waive their rights. It’s unconscionable,” said Clay S. Conrad, Looney’s law partner.

One family member of a biker summed up the news like this:

In other words, the Waco PD is putting a gun to the head of the accused by holding their freedom for ransom. “If you want out, give us a pass.”

http://washingtonweeklynews.com/texas-tyranny-waco-judge-agrees-to-let-most-bikers-go-if-they-sign-a-contract-vowing-not-to-sue-for-wrongful-arrest/

(USA) California Is Close to Legalizing Lane-Splitting with Only Two Major Rules

$
0
0
Things may finally be set in motion in case the California Assembly bill 51 will make it into a law. Basically, California, which is the only American state that allows lane-splitting, is looking forward to adding a solid legal background to the wholes deal.

That is because the rules that govern this type of traffic are a bit nebulous and this is definitely not a helping hand when having to deal with the less pleasant results of in-traffic clashes.

Many of the rest of the states are coming up with all sorts of reasons to make lane-splitting illegal, from dumb claims of it "not being fair" to other unfounded subjective fears and a whole lot more. All this time, California has dedicated some resources and efforts, both from the Highway Patrol and the Berkeley University, and the studies that have been carried out revealed two main things.

Lane-splitting demystified

First off, lane-splitting is helping ease traffic and reduce congenstion because bikers will no longer be forced to wait in line with the very slow or stuck cars. By filtering ahead between the lanes, they free up the road.

The second result thing the Californian studies produced was that splitting lanes, when done in a responsible way, is not the ultra-dangerous type of riding its adversaries often said it was. If anything, splitting lanes at moderate speed is not significantly more dangerous than riding a bike in normal conditions.

It's true that a motorcyclist who is riding between the lanes in slow or stuck traffic may be exposed to more dangers, but that is because drivers fail to assess the traffic surrounding them. Even when riding in a single file on multi-lane highways, accidents often occur because drivers will decide to change lanes without checking their rear and most importantly, their side mirrors.

Common sense rules to rule lane-splitting

Like we stressed out in the editorial on lane-splitting, all it takes is common sense to keep things on the safe side. This is exactly what the California assembly says in the bill 51. There are two main rules for splitting lanes:

1. The motorcycle is not driven at a speed of more than 50 miles per hour.
2. The motorcycle is not driven more than 15 miles per hour faster than the speed of traffic moving in the same direction.

They are complemented by another guideline that warns that riders that they are not allowed to break any other existing road regulations when splitting lanes: " This section does not authorize a motorcycle to be driven in contravention of other laws relating to the safe operation of a vehicle."

Basically, the AB51 puts in few easy-to-understand words what most riders are doing even in places where lane-splitting is not allowed. From one rider to another, this would translate to "don't ride at high speed between the cars, and make sure your speed, relative to that of the traffic, is not exaggerated."

To any person in their right mind, this is a great layout for better, more fluid traffic. But of course, there is still some road ahead until AB51 turns into a law, and who knows what kind of opposition or other mindless amends it will face.

Either way, California is offering an awesome example. Wonder what will happen in other states if the Golden State does come up with a new, good and efficient law to allow lane-splitting...

http://www.autoevolution.com/news/california-is-close-to-legalizing-lane-splitting-with-only-two-major-rules-96096.html

(USA) Protest planned for Waco club members

$
0
0
Texas motorcycle clubs to ride in silent protest as tribute to those jailed following gang fight

Following on from the Waco biker-gang shootout, which left nine dead and 18 injured, an influx of accusations have been thrown at the Waco Police Department for their handling of the situation.

The Waco Police Department has subsequently come under fire in relation to the police force's handling of the incident, amidst further reports that members of the department have inside contact with Texas motorbike gangs,

as previously revealed

As a result, Texas biker groups have joined Facebook page, "All for 1 Rally & Protest", along with almost 800 other people, who will take part in a silent peaceful protest at the McLennan County Courthouse on Sunday 7 June.

"The Waco PD and other agencies involved has slandered every Biker in the state of Texas as gang members and criminals repeatedly," the event page said.

They also demand the release of those imprisoned following the shootout, the aftermath of which saw 172 people arrested, many of whom had no criminal record. Each is being held on a $1 million bond (£660,000).

According to the event page, biker groups will meet between Dallas and Fort Worth, then ride almost 100 miles to Waco to gather outside the courthouse in silent protest carrying signs opposing characterisation of all bikers as gang members.

Comments on the Facebook page indicate others will ride in from New Mexico and Kansas, as well as other parts of the Lone Star State.

The Waco Police Department has not yet confirmed how many bikers were shot and killed during the incident, however legal experts have predicted trouble for the Waco Police Department in the aftermath following on from the department's actions.

Watch this space for more news as and when we get it.

http://www.motorbiketimes.com/news/people/human-interest/protest-planned-for-waco-gang-members-$21385265.htm

(USA) DEVORE: Motorcycle-related festival ends calmly, peacefully

$
0
0
A motorcycle-related music festival ended calmly and peacefully in a county park near the base of Cajon Pass, say San Bernardino� County sheriff's officials.

The Lost Highway music festival on Saturday, May 30, at Glen Helen Regional Park prompted only four arrests, including three for alcohol-related offenses, � Lt. Robert O'Brine said in an email.

"There were no major crimes or issues reported with the over 16,000 in attendance," he wrote.

The park includes the San Manuel Amphitheater where singer Toby Keith was among the festival's performers.
"It would be difficult to compare this concert to others, because each concert is unique," O'Brine said. "Based on the number of arrests compared to the attendance, this was a great concert with very few problems."

The event included a motorcycle show, a helmet art show and auction, and motorcycle stunt demonstrations.
A May 17 gun battle that killed nine in Waco, Texas, is among several recent shootouts involving outlaw motorcycle gangs that prompted increased concern and security at this weekend's event near Devore.

Campers had to show identification, and their license plates were recorded. Everyone was frisked at the gate, and bags and backpacks were searched for contraband and weapons.

The event website warned motorcycle club members that they weren't allowed to display their club "colors." And motorcycle saddlebags as each rider was admitted.

"We don't want to have the problem that they had in Texas," Sgt. Ray Mariedth said during the event. "I have no doubt that (outlaw bikers) are here. But they are incognito."

http://www.pe.com/articles/festival-768630-calmly-related.html

(USA) Sturgis Preperations

$
0
0
Sturgis, (KEVN-TV) Every summer the City of Sturgis transforms into the mecca for bikers everywhere.

This year is a monumental one for Rally Town, and with talk of a million people coming from all over the world, businesses have already begun preparation.

The Sturgis Motorcycle Rally preparations are already underway for a couple of local hot spots, that are sure to heat up this year's rally, just as they always do.
Local bar in downtown Sturgis, the Loud American, is already adding to their team, getting everyone trained and ready to rock–n'–roll.

Codi Jones, Loud American Supervisor said, "It just seems like our staff is tripled once Rally comes along and we make sure that everybody's taken care of and has a good experience here."

Tripling their staff puts the Loud American at nearly 100 to 150 workers on the floor every day throughout the Rally.

Jones said, "We have about, I would say, 20 people maybe if that, and during the winter time we have maybe 15 so you can see the big difference with what we need. Security guards, more bartenders, more servers, more cooks."

Just down the road sits another 'go–to' bar– The Knuckle Saloon.
While the owner says hiring more staff is a given, getting more cooks in the kitchen is one of his priorities.

Ken Mcnenny, Owner of The Knuckle Saloon said, "We're not really changing things that much, we are adding on to one of our kitchens to accommodate a lot more people so that's one thing we're doing but for us its kind of business as usual."

But, along with the Loud American, they're looking to hire quite a few more people within the next few weeks.

Mcnenny said, "During Rally we're looking at probably 150 to 180, somewhere right in that area."

With only weeks until people will start rolling into the hills for the 75th annual Sturgis Motorcycle Rally, being fully staffed is one thing, but being prepared is another.

Jones said, "We just take it with a grain of salt I guess and hope for the best and teamwork you know is key and it's pretty awesome."

Mcnenny says while the Rally is an exciting time, and of course, great for business, he's always excited when it's finally over.

Mcnenny said, "Oh yeah, I'm always excited about the rally I mean you're glad that it's coming and leading into it is pretty exciting, but when it's over you want it to be over so, you're pretty worn out after that."

The 75th Sturgis Motorcycle Rally officially starts on August 3rd and runs through the 9th.

http://www.blackhillsfox.com/home/headlines/Sturgis-businesses-begin-preperations-for-75th-annual-Motorcycle-Rally-305631181.html

(AUS) Bikie bosses may have had enough of local lads

$
0
0
THEY could well be called the bumbling bikies of the Hunter.

From trying to set up clubhouses next to gun shops and across the road from schools to allegedly being caught with drugs at home despite knowing they were under close surveillance, it could be said the boys of the Hunter chapter of the Comancheros may have erred from time to time.

But it appears the constant cock-ups have become such an embarrassment to their colours they have caused significant internal friction, including bashings and threats of even more violent reprisals.

Days after several Hunter chapter members were locked up over a drunken Coalfields pub brawl which brought unwanted attention to the bikie gang, came news their guard dog had been shot dead patrolling a pseudo-clubhouse on Cessnock’s outskirts.

Detectives spent much of Monday at the Congewai property with intelligence suggesting the Sunday night shooting may have been at the hand of another Comanchero.

It is understood the senior hierarchy within the Comancheros has continued to lose patience with the sometime Hunter chapter that has repeatedly broken one of the biggest rules in bikie culture – failing to fly under the law enforcement radar.

First came the very public raid on the chapter’s clubhouse at Tea Gardens in February last year, where police seized everything inside the warehouse as part of a high-visibility attack on a range of bikie clubhouses across the Hunter Region.

But instead of moving on, the gang tried to take the Great Lakes Council to the Land and Environment Court to reinstate the clubhouse, earning more headlines before an out of court settlement.

It is understood the council agreed to stopping the legal proceedings without pushing for costs.

By about August, the chapter began to rent a one-time restaurant and paint shop in Cessnock and started working on turning it into a clubhouse.

They spent several months working on the shop, having sporadic Friday night meetings where some members would even sleep inside.

Trouble was, they also got the attention of the local constabulary.

‘‘You can’t try and build a clubhouse next to a gun shop, across the road from a school, and not expect any attention,’’ one resident told the Newcastle Herald. ‘‘They were kidding themselves.’’

By Christmas they were out and again unpopular with the hierarchy.

In February, police were called to a Kurri Kurri pub after a huge brawl erupted.

Police quickly began investigating connections with the Comancheros and it culminated in raids on properties in Kearsley, Thornton, Weston and Morpeth last Friday.

During the searches, police allegedly seized two unregistered firearms, 46 cannabis plants, 355 grams of cannabis leaf, cash, two knuckle dusters, and two electronic stun guns.

But it was some photographs run by the Herald and other media organisations the following day which may have prompted more Comanchero wrath, with some cannabis plants sitting next to gang paraphernalia.

Although he would not comment specifically on the Comancheros on Monday, Northern Region commander Jeff Loy did reiterate his strong stance against bikie gangs.

‘‘We will not tolerate organised gangs who participate in criminal activities,’’ Assistant Commissioner Loy said. ‘‘We will continue to use the relevant legislation available to continue to disrupt the criminal activities of outlaw motorcycle gangs or any other criminal gangs.’’

http://www.theherald.com.au/story/3118207/bikie-bosses-may-have-had-enough-of-local-lads/

(CAN) The last true strip club in Saskatchewan

$
0
0


Codette (pronounced “Cadet”) is a small community in northern Saskatchewan, 10 km south of Nipawin. Driving down its main road—which in late April, truly the cruellest month here, is still sheathed in ice—you might conclude it’s the quietest place on Earth. That is, until you step into the Codette Hotel, a tiny bar at the end of the street.

Formerly the province’s best-known strip club, tonight it is virtually empty. (Contrary to what its name suggests, the hotel does not offer lodging, though its upstairs apartment once served as a guest room and dressing area for visiting dancers.) Its owner, a wiry man in his early 50s named Don Verstraeten, who looks a lot like Bryan Cranston of Breaking Bad, says that for a little more than a year, the Codette Hotel “was a gong show.” Two strippers danced on its small stage every week, packing the place with locals and out-of-towners alike; businessmen from nearby Melfort and Prince Albert.

Now the bar is more of a strip museum than a strip club. Its tables are unoccupied and its single stripper pole is unused. Autographed headshots of the club’s former entertainers—mostly women from cities in Saskatchewan and Alberta who came to Codette specifically to dance—decorate the wall beside the bar. Verstraeten, who goes almost exclusively by “Abner” (a childhood nickname) expounds on each photograph in detail; it’s clear he has a genuine fondness for the young women pinned to his wall. But it is unlikely he will be seeing them anytime soon.

The reason is simple: In March, Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall’s government announced a major change to the province’s liquor laws, one that has effectively outlawed stripping in bars. More specifically, Wall’s government waffled on a decision he made barely a year ago, in January 2014, in which he ended a decades-long prohibition on stripping in licensed establishments. Wall’s initial announcement legalized the practice, but pressure from groups who believe strip clubs promote human trafficking provoked a change of policy by the provincial government. Wall has reversed his original reversal at lightning speed; he hath giveth, then re-taken away.

“I believe that the government of Saskatchewan made a mistake last year when we allowed licensed strip clubs in the province,” Wall told the press in March. According to Jim Engel, vice-president of corporate services with the Saskatchewan Liquor and Gaming Authority, there is no definitive proof that the province saw an uptick in organized crime or human trafficking in the short period stripping was legal in its bars. But, he says, the government believed “the linkage between organized crime and this particular industry” was “well-established” enough to outlaw the practice.

The only nudity-friendly exception to the new legislation applies to once-a-year charity events, where stripping will be permitted in licensed venues as long as event organizers acquire a special permit and the night’s proceeds go to charity. Otherwise, stripping (which in Saskatchewan terms has always disallowed full-frontal nudity; strippers wore “pasties” or nipple tassels, and covered the bottom of their genitals) is relegated to non-licensed establishments. And a dry strip club, one can easily imagine, is not a sustainable one. The only known dry club in Saskatchewan—an establishment called Dancers 2000, in Regina—is no longer in operation.

Which means that Canada’s famously flat prairie province is also famously straight-laced. (In fact, if you are a resident of Saskatchewan, it is now officially easier to solicit birthday wishes from the premier than from an exotic dancer; the Saskatchewan government’s website offers instructions on how to “arrange greetings from Brad Wall for a birthday or anniversary.”) This new reality may not mean much in a province that doesn’t and never did offer a plethora of regulated adult entertainment. But it means a great deal to the Codette Hotel, whose business has dried up in a matter of weeks. In an effort to turn things around on a recent weekend, Verstraeten concocted an edited version of the bar’s usual striptease, one reminiscent of the 1983 film Flashdance—a movie set in an alternate universe where the coolest strip club in town offers no stripping at all. (Instead, the dancers do a lot of complicated aerobics in leotards.)

Verstraeten’s original plan was for Lexxi Lee, one of the bar’s more popular dancers, to serve drinks and perform in a bikini. Instead, he says, she came out in “a short pair of shorts and a racy looking top.” In other words, Flashdance apparel. But Flashdance, it turns out, does not fly in the Prairies, at least not in Codette. Only a handful of people showed up that Friday, on what would have been an exceedingly busy night in the nudity-friendly days. “Nobody cares about bikini girls,” says Verstraeten, with weary wisdom. “They want to see a stripper.”

Verstraeten, whose bar apron is adorned with his version of a teddy bear—a plush penis —feels strongly that the Wall government’s anti-stripping stance isn’t morally driven, but a cynical political move to curry favour with senior voters in the coming provincial election. The suggestion, for example, that his strip bar could be affiliated with organized crime confounds him. “I’m the only little club [in the province],” he says “and I’m sure as hell not run by the Hells Angels.” Without irony, he adds: “I’ve taken some of these girls to my mum and dad’s for supper.”

That said, no strip club is a monument to virtue. Verstraeten’s bar may have zero organized-crime affiliation, but gangs like the Hells Angels in Montreal have been known to operate strip clubs. Richard Lepp, a retired Saskatoon police officer who’s been vocal on the stripping issue in Saskatchewan, said that in his time on the force (1978-2006) he believed “the majority of booking agencies in Canada handling the contracts of exotic dancers had direct ties to organized crime.”

What’s more, Canadian men in general have a unique reputation for shady strip-club behaviour. In 2008, a Las Vegas stripper who had recently worked in Calgary penned a column in Las Vegas Weekly excoriating Calgarian strip-club patrons for allegedly participating in a ritual called the “loonie toss,” in which a stripper sticks a single loonie to her genitals and audience members fling their own loonies at the dancer in an attempt to knock the original off her body.

It’s this type of debasing image that seems to fuel a large part of the animosity toward stripping in Saskatchewan. When Rick Parkyn, a pastor to 1,500 parishioners, spoke out against a proposed strip club at a Regina city council meeting in January (the proposal was defeated), his objection to licensed strip clubs apparently had little to do with religion and everything to do with women’s rights. “I’m a father of three daughters and it would break my heart to think one of my daughters could be in a strip club being paid by men my age to take their clothes off,” he says.

But the state of Parkyn’s heart on these matters may not be relevant to strippers themselves, some of whom might be in danger under Wall’s new legislation. Lindsay Krestianson, one of the Codette Hotel’s main bartenders, says she has heard stories of strippers doing private bachelor parties without security since the change in the law. “We’ve got girls who say they were more comfortable coming here because it was a little bit more of a relaxed environment,” she says. “Nobody ever got out of line with the dancers; if they did they were kicked out immediately.”

“Without rules that allow an agency or club to supply these girls with bouncers—[the girls] might be putting themselves in a way riskier situation,” says Mikayla Korman, an exotic dancer based in Calgary who goes by the stage name Dallas. She so appreciated the Codette Hotel’s “small town feel” during the “nude” days that she used to make the nine-hour drive to dance there. “I never felt unsafe,” she says. “One time a customer threw a quarter at me [and] everybody, including the other patrons, spoke to him. No fight broke out.”

Krestianson, a slight woman with straight brown hair, used to operate heavy machinery—loaders and scrapers in the road-building industry—before she took up bartending. She says the sexism and lewdness she experienced in that job far surpassed any inappropriateness she witnessed at the strip bar. “I was getting poisoned by testosterone. It was like second-hand smoke.” Her point? Misogyny is not relegated to, or even necessarily more potent in the adult entertainment industry. If you think it is, you’re living in a world as divorced from reality as Flashdance. In the real world, most laws drafted to protect women have one thing in common: they seldom do.

The Codette Hotel, meanwhile, seems headed swiftly for extinction. Verstraeten is well aware of this circumstance, which is why he is considering bringing new, legal entertainment to the bar—maybe a karaoke machine, or a hypnotist. But without striptease, he acknowledges, things in Codette will never be the same. “It’s so sad,” he says, “because people would come from all over . . . I was the one and only.”

http://www.macleans.ca/news/canada/the-last-true-strip-club-in-saskatchewan/

(USA) Why 143 bikers are still in a Waco, Texas, jail nearly 3 weeks after deadly shootout

$
0
0
Reporting from Waco, Texas—
When her husband was arrested after a shootout at a biker club gathering at a Twin Peaks restaurant here May 17, Sheree Clendennen figured security camera video would soon clear him.

“At first I just thought they’re going to take all these guys, look at the video, see who’s innocent and let all these guys go,” said Clendennen, 29, of nearby Hewitt.

“Then Week 2 it was like, ‘Oh my gosh -- they’re not letting people go. They don’t care what’s on the video’,” she said of police, “With all of the security cameras and all of them out in the parking lot watching what went on, there is no reason all of these guys should have been held so long.”

But 17 days later, of the 177 people arrested in connection with the shooting that killed nine and wounded more than a dozen, 143 remain jailed this week, many on $1-million bond. Some face at least a monthlong wait for a bond-reduction hearing, and attorneys say it’s unlikely their clients will post bail. They have been arraigned but have not been formally charged.

Prosecutors have 90 days to present a case to indict to a grand jury before those in custody are entitled to reduced bonds.

The bikers were arrested on allegations of engaging in organized crime, but none have been specifically charged in the shootings and the investigation is ongoing this week, according to Waco Police Sgt. Patrick Swanton. Several police officers who fired their weapons at the scene have been placed on administrative leave pending a separate, ongoing investigation, Swanton said.

The delays in prosecuting those at the scene of the shooting in this conservative central Texas college town have triggered legal complaints and controversy, including a Thursday hearing about whether two state district judges should recuse themselves in the matter.

“It’s unprecedented, this wholesale roundup of people,” said F. Clinton Broden, a Dallas attorney who represents Matthew Clendennen, “It seems like something out of ‘Casablanca’ -- just round everybody up. You’re arresting people for being at the scene of a crime. It’s scary that this can happen in America.”

Amy Kuzniarek, a spokeswoman for the McLennan County district attorney’s office, said this week that “this is an open, active criminal case and an ongoing investigation, therefore, our office cannot and will not comment.”

Clendennen, who does not have a criminal record, is a landscaper, father of four, former firefighter and member of the Scimitars motorcycle club. He recently filed a complaint with the State Commission on Judicial Conduct against the justice of the peace who arraigned him, and a federal civil rights lawsuit against the city of Waco, McLennan County and prosecutors, alleging that he was wrongfully arrested and detained.

“He spent 17 days in jail, he’s likely to lose his business, he’s sole provider to his current family, a wife and two children, and he shares custody with his ex-wife, who is going back into court to get custody,” Broden said, adding that Clendennen’s motorcycle was seized by police.

In his complaints, Clendennen claims that McLennan County Justice of the Peace Walter “Pete” Peterson said at arraignment that he gave bikers a $1-million bond “to send a message,” and that Dist. Atty. Abelino Reyna created “fill-in-the-blank” arrest warrants without probable cause, alleging that the bikers were not cooperating and were therefore not victims.
Peterson and Reyna made similar comments to The Times in the wake of the shooting. Petersen declined comment this week.
Broden said his client did cooperate, but that even if he didn’t, “That’s his 5th Amendment right, he got Mirandized.”
As for Clendennen's arrest, Broden said that “there’s got to be individual probable cause. They’ve got the tapes of the scene, there’s no reason they can’t be reviewed to make determinations. You just can’t keep bystanders locked up because you don’t know who did the shooting.”

He noted that some bond-reduction hearings have not been scheduled until late July.
“My guess is the [u] Department of Justice is going to have to come in at some point. It does not seem the local people are competent to handle this in a constitutional matter,” Broden said.

Spokesmen for the Justice Department referred questions to local officials this week.

At least 47 of those arrested qualified as indigent based on their income and assets and have had attorneys appointed to represent them, according to the local indigent defense coordinator, Cathy Edwards.

Edwards said she planned to visit an additional dozen at the county jail Thursday to double-check whether they qualify as indigent.

http://www.tidewaterreview.com/news/national-world-news/la-na-texas-twin-peaks-bikers-20150604,0,7824064.story#sthash.ApH7FGyY.dpuf

(FIN) Police hit biker gang HQ in Helsinki

$
0
0


Police from Helsinki and Eastern Uusimaa raided the headquarters of the Cannonball Motorcycle Club in the Finnish capital on Tuesday. Simultaneously they carried out searches at four private homes. Five people were taken into custody and arrested.

Authorities found drugs and two unlicensed firearms among other items of interest. The amount of drugs found exceeded by tenfold the criteria for aggravated drug offenses. Police estimate that the illicit substances had a street value of more than 28,000 euros.

Besides gun and drug offences, police suspect that two of those detained were involved last autumn in the shady takeover of a construction company that was winding down its business. Officials believe the gang members used a front organisation to take over the firm and hide its assets from its creditors.

Legal know-how

According to Detective Inspector Juha Tuovinen says that those involved in the scheme seemed to have some legal know-how, as they filed for reorganisation in order to delay bankruptcy – and allow more time to siphon out the company’s funds. The preliminary investigation suggests that the same straw men were used to commandeer more than 40 companies.

Cannonball MC was set up in Finland in 1991, operating as a Hells Angels affiliate for the first five years. It claims 11 chapters around Finland.

http://yle.fi/uutiset/police_hit_biker_gang_hq_in_helsinki/8043344

(AUS) Proposed South Australian anti-bikie laws similar to anti-terrorism measures, attorney-general says

$
0
0
Proposed laws to declare 27 motorcycle gangs in South Australia as criminal organisations are similar to Commonwealth measures targeting terrorist groups like Al Qaeda and Jemaah Islamiyah, the state's Attorney-General says.

John Rau has defended the laws after they faced criticism by law experts, such as University of Adelaide Litigation Law Unit director David Caruso, who said they would end up being challenged in the High Court if they pass Parliament.

The laws propose to ban more than two gang members meeting in public or members entering licensed premises displaying club colours and logos.

They will directly affect 10 clubs based in SA and a further 17 interstate clubs whenever members cross the border into SA.

Mr Rau told 891 ABC Adelaide that said he was confident the laws would survive a legal challenge.

"The Commonwealth Parliament has used a similar method to this, to deal with groups like Al Qaeda, Jemaah Islamiyah and other groups," he said.

"It says in the legislation these groups are unsatisfactory groups, and people who are members of these groups have certain aspects of their liberty constrained."

Mr Rau admitted, however, that the laws would allow bikie members to enter licensed premises if they were not dressed in club colours and logos.

"If you turn up as a civilian, then that's not a problem. You can have drink like anybody else," he said.

Mr Rau said the laws aimed to stop bikies walking around in public and standing out as a member of a gang.

"The modus operandi for these people is, they know that the public identifies with certain symbols ... as demonstrating that these people are members of a particular group," he said.

"They use those symbols to intimidate and frighten people ... people are fearful of doing anything that might upset them, for fear of bringing the whole lot of their friends down on them as well."

Premier Jay Weatherill said he wanted Parliament to pass the laws quickly.

"We think it's not really in the interests of the Parliament to have this [proposed] legislation sitting out there for an extended period," he said.

"It's likely that we'll see a response from the outlaw motorcycle gangs. It may be a response that's directed at individual members of Parliament."

Parliament will receive a briefing from SA Police later this month to talk about personal and office security in response to the bill.

The state Opposition said it would consider the legislation carefully.

Amateur motorcycle club could be outlawed

An Adelaide motorcycle racing club which shares its name with an interstate bikie gang, is concerned it could be outlawed under the proposed laws.

Phoenix is one of 27 motorcycle clubs to be automatically declared illegal organised crime groups under the proposal, with penalties for associating with or recruiting members and wearing club "colours".

Police said the "Phoenix" club referred to in the legislation was a New South Wales-based group.

But the secretary of the Adelaide-based Phoenix Motorcycle Club, Glen Seidel, said that was not made clear in the legislation.

"I don't think the cops are going to be kicking our door in, but it does go to a certain level of reputation damage," he said.

"People may not be comfortable about entering our race meetings because they're not sure of whether we're being targeted or not. So it could have some financial impacts."

Police have said the Adelaide-based club has nothing to fear with a stringent test to ensure they are not caught by the proposed laws.

Proposed laws are 'ludicrous'

The proposal has been described as "ludicrous" by the FREE Australia Party, which is aligned with motorcycle gangs and was set up to to oppose tough anti-bikie measures spearheaded by former Labor premier Mike Rann in 2008.

It campaigned against similar anti-bikie laws in Queensland and is preparing to fight the latest proposal in SA.

State president Sarah McPherson said the laws would never work in a small city like Adelaide.

"If you happen to go to a friend's birthday party, and there might be two other members there with their families, well, then they're going to be charged," she said.

She said the laws were unjust and unnecessary.

"It shouldn't matter whether you're a part of a club or a group of people or a social club of riders," Ms McPherson said.

"If there are people committing criminal offences, then there are already laws in place to deal with that."

The previous laws, which involved the courts rubber stamping the declaration of a gang as "outlaws", were partially quashed in 2010 by a successful High Court challenge bankrolled by motorcycle gangs.

The affected section of the laws were amended in Parliament but police said they had remained difficult to use because motorcycle gangs dodged them by changing club names and membership.

Mr Caruso said he was concerned that judiciary would not be involved in making declarations about motorcycle gangs.

"It's easy to become concerned by the operations of what is labelled serious and organised crime within the community," Mr Caruso said.

"But the community is best protected by ensuring that our processes for the administration of justice are rigorous, fair and transparent, and that's achieved by ensuring the decision makers are members of the judiciary."

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2015-06-04/bikie-laws-similar-to-terror-laws-will-constrain-liberty/6520646

(USA) Visiting Judge Denies Motion To Recuse Local Judges In Biker Cases

$
0
0
WACO - A visiting judge from Houston denied a motion to force local district judges off the bench in all cases involving defendants in the motorcycle gang shooting cases.

Judges, lawyers and biker defendants packed a Waco courtroom Thursday morning while attorneys argued to have local district judges barred from hearing cases that involve those accused in the Twin Peaks shooting.

But about an hour-and-a-half after it started, Judge Doug Shaver denied the recusal motion and said that ruling applied to all nine defendants who were part of the issue.

After issuing his final ruling, Shaver suggested that the local judges make efforts to expedite bond reduction hearings to ease the burden on McLennan County taxpayers who are footing the cost of keeping those defendants in jail.

Testimony began at 9 a.m. in 54th District Court with visiting Shaver, of Houston, seated to hear the arguments.

Initially attorney Adam Reposa called Judge Ralph Strother to the stand but Shaver denied his testimony because Reposa had not properly notify the Texas Attorney General’s Office of the need for the judge to testify.

Three of the nine bikers who are part of the recusal motion were in the courtroom.

Local attorney David Deaconson was in the courtroom, along with District Attorney Abel Reyna, opposing the recusal motions.

District Judge Matt Johnson took the stand to testify and Reposa asked him if there was a problem with judges reducing bonds in McLennan County, to which Johnson replied “no”.

As a part of the state’s argument, Deaconson stated the issues filed in court on the recusal had not been properly filed and were moot.

At about 10:30 a.m. Judge Shaver announced his decision.

http://www.kwtx.com/home/headlines/Visiting-Judge-Denies-Motion-To-Recuse-Local-Judges-In-Biker-Cases-306142921.html

(AUS) Police swoop on bikie strongholds in Melbourne’s east

$
0
0
POLICE have raided three outlaw bikie addresses in the eastern suburbs this morning.

The Finks clubhouse in Ringwood was raided at 8am while officers executed simultaneous warrants at houses in Kent Avenue in Knoxfield and Hawthory Road, Kilsyth.

Victoria Police confirmed it was an operation to “disrupt bikies” and a 34-year-old Knoxfield man, with links to the Finks, was arrested at an address in Kyra Street, Lilydale.

“He is currently assisting police with their enquiries,” Victoria Police spokeswoman Belle Nolan said.

“The warrants relate to alleged drugs and firearms offences,” she added.


Police are still at the scene of all three raids and currently searching the properties.

http://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/law-order/police-swoop-on-bikie-strongholds-in-melbournes-east/story-fni0fee2-1227382613587
Viewing all 1213 articles
Browse latest View live


Latest Images