Vagos Motorcycle Club

Vagos MC

The Vagos Motorcycle Club (Vagos) has hundreds of members in the U.S. and Mexico and poses a serious criminal threat to those areas in which its chapters are located. U.S. law enforcement authorities report that the Vagos have approximately 300 members among 24 chapters located in the states of California, Hawaii, Nevada, Oregon and three chapters located in Mexico. The Vagos produce, transport and distribute methamphetamine and are also involved in the distribution of marijuana. The Vagos have also been implicated in other criminal activities including assault, extortion, insurance fraud, money laundering, murder, vehicle theft, witness intimidation and weapons violations. In the U.S., the Vagos are mainly active in the Southwest and Pacific regions.

Vagos MC

Established: 1965 in San Bernardino, California, United States
Years active: 1965-present
Territory: Southwestern United States and Northern Mexico
Ethnicity: Hispanic and White
Membership: 300 full-patch members, many more prospects and hang-arounds
Criminal activities: Arms dealing, Assault, Auto theft, Drug trafficking, extortion, insurance fraud, kidnapping, money laundering, murder, rape, witness intimidation, and weapons violations
Allies: Bandidos, Mongols, Sureños and the Mexican Mafia
Rivals: Brother Speed, Free Souls, Hells Angels and Norteños


See also: Biker Gangs


Gypsy Joker Motorcycle Club

Gypsy Joker MC


The Gypsy Joker Motorcycle Club is an Outlaw Motorcycle Club started in 1956, that's based in Oregon and Washington. Cops, homosexuals, drug users (specifically needle users), and African Americans are not permitted membership.

Ethnicity:
- Mostly white

Criminal Activity:
- Drug Dealing
- Firearms Violations
- Kidnapping
- Rape
- Murder
- Assault

Rivals/Enemies:
- Mongols Motorcycle Club

Colors:
- Black
- White

See also: Biker Gangs

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Members of the Gypsy Joker Motorcycle Club arrested at compound

Thursday, 10 April 2008
Arrestees: Ronald B. Campbell, Andrea G. Reeder, Dylan C. Grose, William C. Casteel.

Four people were arrested on suspected drug charges, including the group's leader.Methamphetamine was found at the Gypsy Joker Motorcycle Club compound at West 19th Avenue and South Gum Street. Benton County Undersheriff Paul Hart said they needed so many officers as a "precautionary" step because the Gypsy Jokers are known to be connected to drugs and other criminal activities."It is an outlaw motorcycle gang with convicted felons who reside there," Hart said. "We gear up to meet that threat."Some stolen property and a couple of weapons also were seized, he said.
The Violent Crimes Task Force, made up of federal agents and local police detectives, raided the club house and two homes at 5 a.m.The Benton County Regional SWAT team and the Yakima SWAT team were used to help search all the buildings."Because of the large site ... it makes it difficult to secure and make sure everybody is safe," Hart said. "The Violent Crimes Task Force ... developed enough information to believe there was stolen property on this property. They don't have the manpower to effect a safe search warrant so they came to us to help."
SWAT members used loud explosives called "flash bangs" to disorient the people inside the buildings before they entered and made the arrests.Ronald B. Campbell, 57; Andrea G. Reeder, 43; Dylan C. Grose, 52; and William C. Casteel, 39, were booked into the Benton County jail on suspicion of possessing meth.Campbell is the founder and president of the Tri-City chapter of the Gypsy Jokers.Jokers say they're a fraternal club, essentially just motorcycle enthusiasts, but police say otherwise.
Officers were at the club compound about two weeks ago, and Casteel also was arrested then on a warrant for failing to comply with court orders.Wednesday's raid was connected to the March 27 arrest, but no additional details were released because the joint investigation, which involves the FBI, is still ongoing, said Robbie Burroughs, an FBI spokeswoman in Seattle.The club was started in San Francisco on April Fools' Day 1956, but moved to Washington and Oregon after losing a sometimes bloody turf dispute with the Hells Angels in 1967.Police consider the club an outlaw motorcycle gang, like the Hells Angels, because members say Jokers swear allegiance to a lifestyle often at odds with society.

Outlaw Motorcycle Gangs in the United States

Outlaw Motorcycle Gangs (OMGs) are organizations whose members use their motorcycle clubs as conduits for criminal enterprises. There are more than 300 active OMGs in the United States (U.S.), ranging in size from single chapters with five or six members to hundreds of chapters with thousands of members worldwide. The Hells Angels Motorcycle Club (Hells Angels), the Bandidos Motorcycle Club (Bandidos) and the Outlaws Motorcycle Club (Outlaws) conduct the majority of criminal activity linked to OMGs, especially activity relating to drug-trafficking and, more specifically, to cross-border drug smuggling. Because of their transnational scope, these OMGs are able to coordinate drug smuggling operations in partnership with major international drug-trafficking organizations (DTOs).





The birth of the 1%er patch dates back to 1961 when the AMA started their “Put Your Best Wheel Forward” campaign into effect which asked cycle riders to keep a clean public appearance. The cycle riders that scoffed at the AMA started wearing American Outlaws Association (AOA) patches which eventually became the 1%er patch in response to the AMA comment about 99% of the riders attending motorcycle races as being good law abiding citizens.


Bandidos MC
The Bandidos Motorcycle Club (Bandidos) is an OMG with a membership of 2,000 to 2,500 persons in the U.S. and in 13 other countries. The Bandidos constitute a growing criminal threat to the U.S. Law enforcement authorities estimate that the Bandidos are one of the two largest OMGs operating in the U.S., with approximately 900 members belonging to 93 chapters. The Bandidos are involved in transporting and distributing cocaine and marijuana and are involved in the production, transportation and distribution of methamphetamine. The Bandidos are most active in the Pacific, Southeastern, Southwestern and the West Central regions of the U.S. The Bandidos are expanding in each of these regions by forming additional chapters and allowing members of supporting clubs, known as “puppet” or “duck” club members who have sworn allegiance to another club but who support and do the “dirty work” of a mother club–to form new or join existing Bandidos chapters.

Black Pistons MC
The Black Pistons Motorcycle Club (Black Pistons) is the official support club for the Outlaws Motorcycle Club (Outlaws). Established in 2002 with the backing of the Outlaws, the Black Pistons have expanded rapidly throughout the U.S., Canada and Europe. The Black Pistons have an estimated 70 domestic chapters in 20 states and an unknown number of foreign chapters in Belgium, Canada, Germany, Great Britain, Norway and Poland. The exact number of Black Pistons members is unknown but the figure is estimated to be more than 200 in the U.S. The Outlaws use the Black Pistons chapters as a recruitment source for prospective Outlaws members. The Outlaws also use the Black Pistons chapters to conduct criminal activity, especially for the transportation and distribution of drugs. Members of the Black Pistons are also known to engage in assault, extortion, fraud, intimidation and theft.

Hells Angels MC
The Hells Angels Motorcycle Club (Hells Angels) is an OMG with between 2,000 and 2,500 members who belong to over 230 chapters in the U.S. and in 26 foreign countries. The Hells Angels pose a criminal threat on six continents. U.S. law enforcement authorities estimate that the Hells Angels have more than 92 chapters in 27 states with a membership in excess of 800 persons. The Hells Angels are involved in the production, transportation and distribution of marijuana and methamphetamine. Additionally, the Hells Angels are involved in the transportation and distribution of cocaine, hashish, heroin, LSD (lysergic acid diethylamide), ecstasy, PCP (phencyclidine) and diverted pharmaceuticals. The Hells Angels are also involved in other criminal activity including assault, extortion, homicide, money laundering and motorcycle theft.

Mongols MC
The Mongols Motorcycle Club (Mongols) is an extremely violent OMG that poses a serious criminal threat to the Pacific and Southwestern regions of the U.S. The Mongols are engaged in the transportation and distribution of cocaine, marijuana and methamphetamine. The Mongols are also known to frequently commit violent crime including assault, intimidation and murder in defense of their territory, and to uphold the reputation of the club. A majority of the Mongols membership consists of Hispanic males who live in the Los Angeles area, and many are former street gang members with a long history of using violence to settle grievances. Agents with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms (ATF) have called the Mongols the most violent and dangerous OMG in the nation. In the 1980’s the Mongols seized control of Southern California from the Hells Angels, and today, the Mongols are allied with the Bandidos, the Outlaws, the Sons of Silence and the Pagan’s against the Hells Angels. The Mongols have also maintained their ties with Hispanic street gangs in Los Angeles.

Outlaws MC
The Outlaws Motorcycle Club (Outlaws) have more than 1,700 members who belong to 176 chapters in the U.S. and in 12 foreign countries. U.S. law enforcement authorities estimate that the Outlaws have more than 86 chapters in 20 states with over 700 members. The Outlaws also identify themselves as the A.O.A. (American Outlaws Association) and the Outlaws Nation. The Outlaws are the dominant OMG in the Great Lakes region. The Outlaws are involved in the production, transportation and distribution of methamphetamine, the transportation and distribution of cocaine, marijuana and, to a lesser extent, ecstasy. The Outlaws engage in various criminal activities including arson, assault, explosives, extortion, fraud, homicide, intimidation, kidnapping, money laundering, prostitution, robbery, theft and weapons violations. The Outlaws compete with the Hells Angels for both members and territory.

Pagans MC
The Pagans Motorcycle Club (Pagans) is a violent OMG whose membership distribute cocaine, methamphetamine, marijuana and PCP (phencyclidine). The Pagan’s are one of the most prominent OMGs in the Mid-Atlantic region. The Pagan’s have an estimated 200 to 250 members among 41 chapters in 11 states. The Pagan’s have been tied to traditional organized crime groups in Philadelphia, Pittsburgh and New York and have engaged in criminal activities such as arson, assault, bombing, extortion and murder.

Vagos MC
The Vagos Motorcycle Club (Vagos) has hundreds of members in the U.S. and Mexico and poses a serious criminal threat to those areas in which its chapters are located. U.S. law enforcement authorities report that the Vagos have approximately 300 members among 24 chapters located in the states of California, Hawaii, Nevada, Oregon and three chapters located in Mexico. The Vagos produce, transport and distribute methamphetamine and are also involved in the distribution of marijuana. The Vagos have also been implicated in other criminal activities including assault, extortion, insurance fraud, money laundering, murder, vehicle theft, witness intimidation and weapons violations. In the U.S., the Vagos are mainly active in the Southwest and Pacific regions.




Pagans Motorcycle Club


The Pagans Motorcycle Club is a "one-percenter" motorcycle gang formed by Lou Dobkins in 1959 in Prince George's County, Maryland. Known simply The Pagans colloquially, the club rapidly expanded and by 1965, the Pagans, originally clad in blue denim jackets and riding Triumphs, began to evolve along the lines of the stereotypical one percenter motorcycle club.

The Pagans are categorized as an Outlaw Motorcycle Gang by the Federal Bureau of Investigation. They are known to fight over territory with the Hells Angels and other motorcycle clubs, such as Fates Assembly MC, who have since merged with the HAMC.

Insignia

The Pagans MC patch depicts the Norse fire-giant Surtr sitting on the sun, wielding a sword, plus the word Pagan's [sic] in red, white and blue. Unlike most one percenter motorcycle clubs, the Pagans do not include on their club insignia a bottom rocker indicating the geographical chapter of the member wearing the club's full patch. It is believed the club declines to follow this one percenter tradition because they do not want law enforcement to know what state chapters individual Pagans belong to. Members wear blue denim vests called cuts or cutoffs with club patches, known as colors. Patches are common on the front of the cuts, as are tattoos reading "ARGO" (Ar Go Fuck Yourself) and "NUNYA" (Nun'Ya Fuckin' Business).

Keith "Conan" Richter [former National Sergeant-At-Arms of the Pagan's MC] was convicted in 1998 of conspiracy and attempted murder in aid of racketeering and assault with a dangerous weapon. He is currently in federal prison, and is scheduled to be released in 2012.

A "Diamond Back" wears the 1% logo on his back

Pagans are known for using axe handles & baseball bats as weapons





Membership
Recently, the Pagans' membership has begun to decline as their rival Hells Angels’ membership has grown. Pagans have approximately 350 to 400 members and 44 chapters and are active along the East Coast of the United States. Chapters are common in Florida, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware and Maryland. The Pagans have a Mother Club or ruling council which ultimately rules the gang. The Pagans headquarters is currently in Delaware County, Pennsylvania.

Members must be at least 21 years old and owners of Harley-Davidson or Triumph motorcycles with engines larger than 900cc. The national sergeant-at-arms' responsibility is to hand-pick 13 chapter members to serve as the "enforcers" or "regulators". This body uses violence and intimidation to prevent any and all opposition to the Mother Club.

Members join for a variety of reasons. First, bikers often consider themselves as loners and join gangs for mutual protection. The bonds with other motorcyclists are strengthened by the subscription to non-conventional norms and the rejection of mainstream society. Secondly, they use MCs as mechanisms of power. Oftentimes, MC membership brings them legitimate and illegitimate job opportunities and financial prospects. Additionally, members feel a sense of control while intimidating less powerful, defenseless citizens. Generally, the values of this MC subculture lie in the value of brotherhood, the interest in motorcycling, and respect for mechanical skills. Although many motorcycle gang members are loners, many have families, are gainfully employed, and have much to lose despite their risk-taking.

Criminal activities
The Pagans have been linked to the production and smuggling of drugs such as methamphetamine, marijuana, cocaine, heroin, and PCP. The Pagans also have had strong ties to organized crime, especially in New Jersey and Pennsylvania. Pagans often use puppet clubs, smaller affiliated motorcycle clubs, or small street drug trafficking organizations that support larger Outlaw Motorcycle Gangs (OMGs) for distributing drugs. Pagans have also engaged in assault, arson, extortion, motorcycle/car theft, and weapons trafficking. Most of the violence carried out by the Pagans is directed to rival OMGs such as Hells Angels.

New York/Pennsylvania

On February 23, 2002, 73 Pagans were arrested in Long Island, New York after appearing at an indoor motorcycle and tattoo expo called the Hellraiser Ball. The Pagans had shown up to the event to confront Hells Angels who were at the Ball. Dozens of Pagans rushed the doors of the event and were met with violence by the Hells Angels. Fighting ensued, ten people were wounded, and a Hells Angel allegedly shot and killed a Pagan member. Two weeks later, a Pagans owned tattoo parlor located in South Philadelphia, Pennsylvania was firebombed.

In 2005, Pagans allegedly opened fire on and killed the Vice-President of the Hells Angel's Philadelphia chapter as he was driving his truck on the Schuylkill Expressway. Later that year, the Hells Angels closed their Philadelphia chapter.

Maryland

A Pagans MC leader, Jay Carl Wagner, 66, was arrested in Washington County, Maryland, by 60 plus officers from state, local and federal officials with a bomb disposal robot on May 9, 2007, and later charged with possession of a regulated firearm after conviction of a violent crime. Police and agents recovered seven handguns, two alleged explosive devices and 13 long rifles. On March 5th, 2008, Wagner pleaded guilty to being a felon in possession of a firearm. On August 8, 2008, U.S. District Chief Judge Benson E. Legg sentenced Wagner to 30 months in prison followed by three years of supervised release.

Pagans MC

Established: 1959 in Prince George's County, Maryland, United States
Founder: Lou Dobkins
Years active: 1959-present
Territory: East Coast of the United States
Ethnicity: Predominantly White
Membership: 350-400 full-patch members, many more prospects and hang-arounds
Criminal activities: Drug dealing, arms dealing, extortion, prostitution, trafficking in stolen goods
Allies: Sons of Silence MC, the Aryan Brotherhood and the Pittsburgh crime family
Rivals: The Breed, Hells Angels MC, Outlaws, Warlocks and the Philadelphia crime family




See also: Biker Gangs




Pagan's MC President, "Bart" Barbeito

The national president of the Pagans Motorcycle Club will remain in custody while awaiting trial, a federal judge decided Thursday.

David K. "Bart" Barbeito, 49, of Myersville, Md., is one of 55 members and associates of the gang named in a sweeping, 44-count indictment unsealed last week. Prosecutors say Barbeito and other members of the group's ruling Mother Club led a criminal organization that controlled territory from New Jersey to Florida through violence and intimidation. ...[read]




N.J. Pagans Motorcycle Club members are indicted in W.Va. bust
By Rudy Larini
October 06, 2009


CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- An indictment charging 55 members of the Pagans motorcycle gang with violent crimes ranging from robbery and extortion to conspiracy to commit murder was unsealed today by federal officials.

The 44-count indictment names Pagan gang members from eight states, including eight from New Jersey. The others are West Virginia, Kentucky, Virginia, Pennsylvania, New York, Delaware and Florida.

Five Pagan officers, including the national president, David Keith Barbeito, also known as "Bart," of Myersville, Md., and the national vice president, Floyd B. Moore, also known as "Jesse" and "Diamond Jesse," of St. Albans, W.Va. were charged with Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations ("RICO") violations, conspiracy to commit RICO, and other charges.

The indictment, handed up Thursday, alleges that Pagan members and associates have engaged in racketeering activities since March 2003. That month, Pagan gang members, at the direction of Moore, traveled to Huntington, W.Va., and restrained and beat a member of a rival motorcycle gang, the Road Disciples, in an attempt to extract information from the victim in order to find the gang’s president, according to the indictment.

Moore ordered the Pagan members to find the Road Disciples president to collect money and to threaten to shut the gang down if the president failed to comply with Moore’s orders.

The indictment also alleges that in September 2005, Moore and other Pagan members and associates conspired with a prison guard to kill an inmate suspected of cooperating with law enforcement. Moore also ordered another Pagan member to commit a murder to help out the president of a local chapter of the Avengers motorcycle club, according to the indictment.

"As alleged in the indictment, members and associates of this motorcycle gang have engaged in numerous violent crimes in an attempt to maintain control over other motorcycle gangs and clubs throughout the country," Charles T. Miller, the U.S. attorney for the southern district of West Virginia, said in a statement. "Collaboration between the federal, state and local agencies that resulted in today’s indictment signals our shared, unrelenting commitment to combat organized crime."

The indictment was the result of a multi-jurisdictional effort that included the U.S. Attorneys Offices in West Virginia and Pittsburgh, the FBI, and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives in Louisville, Ky.

The suspects range from 29 to 69 years old. Eight of the 55 have New Jersey addresses. They are Rocco J. Boyd, 48, of Little Ferry; Sergio Velez Cuevas, 69, of Linden; Christopher T. Brunner, 42, of Manahawkin; Joseph Frank Cotton, 59, of Pemberton; Thomas William Connolly, 60, of Matawan; Stephen G. Dunn Jr., 33, of Camden; Stephen G. Hoffmann, 58, of Landing, and Daniel J. Reilly, 57, of Egg Harbor Township.

If convicted, the suspects face prison terms ranging from three to 20 years and fines of up to $1 million.




Pagans under surveillance in 2006

Undercover state police investigators used informants to set up surveillance at the party in a rented picnic pavilion for several hundred Pagans in Yukon, PA. That was June 2006 and the Pagans, who reportedly have as many as 450 members nationally, were very much a part of the local criminal scene, according to court documents.

Prosecutors showed surveillance tapes of the revelers to the grand jury, which heard from 18 witnesses who offered sometimes gruesome stories of violence and drug operations, sometimes run from behind prison walls, according to the presentment.

The witnesses told jurors about rites of passage to full membership in the gang, according to the presentment. They told of attending monthly chapter meetings, referred to as "going to church." And they told of raising money by selling drugs, stealing and rebuilding motorcycles. They said Overly [Raymond "Pete" Overly, former head of the Greensburg chapter, who ran the chapter from his PRA Racing motorcycle shop] often rewarded members who stole bikes with custom-built motorcycles.

Those who were being groomed to be potential members were known as "prospects," they said.

A Pagan-in-training was given a denim or leather jacket with the sleeves cut off and bearing a patch reading "prospect."

"After an undefined period of prospecting, or after the completion of a certain particularly challenging (and often criminal) task such as an assault, the prospect would receive his 'colors,' which entails the addition of the Pagan symbol and other patches to an individual's cut-off and is therefore considered a full-fledged member of the Pagan's OMG (Outlaw Motorcycle Gang)," the presentment said.

The presentment alleges bikers often traveled to Atlanta to pick up illegal drugs during buys Overly set up.

Overly did not know some of the "prospects" hauling drugs back to Pennsylvania were informants who would contact police to photograph and test the contraband, the grand jury said.

Some prospects told authorities they were beaten by Overly if they refused to participate in the drug deals or other assignments -- ranging from assaulting enemies with baseball bats to performing household chores.

When investigators discovered in late 2006 that Overly wanted to buy four, specially built 9 mm machine guns, undercover officers moved in and bought the guns from Snyder so they wouldn't fall into Overly's hands, the grand jury reported.

The Pagans, long associated with drugs and violence, were founded in 1959 in Maryland. They expanded into Pennsylvania during the 1960s.

State police Trooper Matthew Baumgard fielded the undercover investigation with former trooper Lyle Graber, who works as an investigator for the Allegheny County District Attorney's Office. Baumgard said police would not comment on the case.

Pagan symbols

The primary Pagan symbol, which looks like a devil, is known as a "fire god," according to a state grand jury.

Pagan patches frequently include the expression: "GFPD: God Forgives, Pagans Don't."

"Tattoos are similarly used by Pagans to signify club membership and as tools of intimidation. The wearing of 'colors' is used as both a symbol of club membership, and as a means of intimidating rival gang members and the general public," a grand jury says in a presentment issued against seven men who allegedly belong to the Westmoreland County chapter.

Bikers' leather jackets often are attached to their clothes with numerous pins so the colors are not left behind during fights.

Anyone who leaves the Pagans must turn in their colors, remove their tattoos, pay an "exit fee" of up to $2,000, forfeit ownership of their motorcycles and "sometimes is expected to leave town," according to the presentment.

Hells Angels Motorcycle Club


The Hells Angels Motorcycle Club (Hells Angels) is a worldwide "one-percenter" motorcycle gang with between 2,000 and 2,500 members who belong to over 230 chapters in the U.S. and in 26 foreign countries. The Hells Angels pose a criminal threat on six continents. U.S. law enforcement authorities estimate that the Hells Angels have more than 92 chapters in 27 states with a membership in excess of 800 persons. The Hells Angels are involved in the production, transportation and distribution of marijuana and methamphetamine. Additionally, the Hells Angels are involved in the transportation and distribution of cocaine, hashish, heroin, LSD, ecstasy, PCP and diverted pharmaceuticals. The Hells Angels are also involved in other criminal activity including assault, extortion, homicide, money laundering and motorcycle theft. Both the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Criminal Intelligence Service Canada classify the Angels as one of the "big four" outlaw motorcycle clubs. Members of the organization itself assert that this is a mischaracterization, and state that they are a group of motorcycle enthusiasts who organize social events such as group road trips, fundraisers, parties, and motorcycle rallies.


Insignia


The Hells Angels official web site attributes the official "death's head" insignia design to Frank Sadilek, past president of the San Francisco Chapter. The colors and shape of the early-style jacket emblem (prior to 1953) were copied from the insignias of the 85th Fighter Squadron and the 552nd Medium Bomber Squadron.

The Hells Angels utilize a system of patches, similar to military medals. Although the specific meaning of each patch is not publicly known, the patches identify specific or significant actions or beliefs of each biker. The official colors of the Hells Angels are red lettering displayed on a white background -- hence the club's nickname "The Red and White". These patches are worn on leather or denim jackets and vests.

Red and white are also used to display the number 81 on many patches, as in "Support 81, Route 81". The 8 and 1 stand for the respective positions in the alphabet of H and A. These are used by friends and supporters of the club, as only full members can wear any Hells Angels imagery.

The rhombus-shaped 'one-percenter' patch is also used, displaying '1%', in red on a white background with a red merrowed border. The term "one-percenter" is a response to the American Motorcyclist Association (AMA) comment on the Hollister incident, in which the AMA stated that 99% of motorcyclists were law-abiding citizens and the last 1% were outlaws.

Most members wear a rectangular patch (again, white background with red letters and a red marrowed border) identifying their respective chapter locations. Another similarly designed patch reads "Hells Angels".

When applicable, members of the club wear a patch denoting their position or rank within the organization. The patch is rectangular, and, similarly to the patches described above, displays a white background with red letters and a red merrowed border. Some examples of the titles used are President, Vice President, Secretary, Treasurer, and Sergeant at Arms. This patch is usually worn above the 'club location' patch.

Some members also wear a patch with the initials "AFFA", which stands for "Angels Forever; Forever Angels", referring to their lifelong membership in the biker club (i.e., "once a member, always a member").

The book Gangs, written by Tony Thompson (a crime correspondent for The Observer newspaper), states that Stephen Cunningham, a member of the Angels, sported a new patch after he recovered from attempting to set a bomb: two Nazi-style SS lightning bolts below the words 'Filthy Few'. Some law enforcement officials claim that the patch is only awarded to those who have committed, or are prepared to commit, murder on behalf of the club. According to a report from the R. v. Bonner and Lindsay case in 2005 (see related section below), another patch, similar to the 'Filthy Few' patch, is the 'Dequiallo' patch. This patch "signifies that the wearer has fought law enforcement on arrest". There is no common convention as to where the patches are located on the members' jacket/vest.



Hells Angels MC


Established: March 17, 1948 in Fontana, California, United States
Founder: Otto Friedli
Years active: 1948-present
Territory: Chapters in North America, South America, Europe, Russia, South Africa, New Zealand and Australia
Ethnicity: Predominantly White
Membership: 3,600 full-patch members worldwide
Criminal activities: Drug dealing, arms dealing, extortion, prostitution, trafficking in stolen goods
Allies: Aryan Brotherhood, Cali Cartel, Indian Posse, Warlocks and various other biker gangs
Rivals: Bandidos, Mongols, Outlaws and Pagans

See also: Biker Gangs, Operation Black Biscuit




Hells Angels MC is labeled a Street Gang
Wednesday, Sep. 23 2009

According to a jury and Maricopa County Attorney Andrew Thomas, the Hells Angels Motorcycle Club are officially a "street gang."

The gang's new label comes as the result of the conviction of one of its members in a Maricopa County Superior Court last week, where jurors were specifically asked if they deemed the Hells Angels a "street gang." Well, they did and convicted 32-year-old Nathaniel Sample of aggravated assault and of acting for the benefit of a criminal street gang.

Nathaniel Sample

The conviction stems from a 2008 incident at the Billet Bar in Scottsdale, when Sample and another man allegedly used a beer bottle to beat a man in the head. The beating started after the victim accidentally bumped into Sample and only ended when a woman jumped on the victim to prevent the men from beating him further.

Labeling the group a street gang provides law enforcement with precedent that allows it to more aggressively pursue and prosecute members of the Hells Angels. "This verdict sends a message to all street gangs that their acts of violence and terror will not be tolerated," Andrew Thomas says in a statement.

United Brotherhood Kindred

United Brotherhood Kindred is white prison gang in Michigan that publishes a 'zine (small newsletter) called "Strife". Like most prison 'zines, Strife comes under the scrutiny of Michigan corrections officials, who have the power to restrict literature that may in some way pose a security threat. As a result, Strife not only avoids making explicit calls to violence, but also asks those submitting articles to refrain from using ethnic/racial slurs and insults.


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Krieger Verwandt

A third Utah gang, Krieger Verwandt (intended to be translated as "Warrior Kindred"), uses its "Mission Manual" to inform members of gang policy and philosophy. The Manual, described as "instructional material concerning the indigenous religious, cultural and political beliefs, educates members on the gang's philosophies on spirituality, race and character as well as providing a grooming and hygiene regimen. It includes a runic alphabet, the "Reconstructed Krieger Verwandt," which gang members are required to learn. Runic alphabets, ancient Norse and Germanic alphabets of which several versions exist, are often used in written correspondence to thwart prison authorities.

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Brotherhood of Aryan Alliance



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Melvin Costa Interview

Q&A with Melvin Costa

I decided to contact Melvin Costa yesterday in order to get his side of the story in regarding to the recent distribution of pictures on the Internet that show Costa with a swastika on his chest.

After speaking with Costa, I briefly thought about whether I should give him a platform to express views that I think could be hurtful and offensive. However, while I didn't agree with very much of what he said, the one point where he and I are in agreement is when it comes to his assertion that he should be allowed to express his views. I called the man for comment and he gave it to me so what kind of journalist would I be if I censored it just because I don't agree with it?

Furthermore, since I spoke out against Costa, I felt it was only fair to give him equal time and allow him a chance to explain himself. I also wasn't sure whether to write a quote-driven feature or post a full Q&A transcript. I've elected to go with the transcript because since I've spoken out against him, I think he deserves to be able to express his opinions in the same uncensored formum that I've been afforded.

The below interview is one that contains an open discussion about race and could potentially offend people that are sensitive when it comes to such issues. If you fall into that category, I would recommend not reading this article any further.

Sam Caplan: In regard to the swastika that is tattooed to your chest, is that an accurate representation of your views?

Melvin Costa: Yeah.

Sam Caplan: So you're a neo-nazi supporter?

Melvin Costa: I'm a white nationalist. I wouldn't call myself a neo-nazi.

Sam Caplan: Can you go into detail about what some of your vews as a white nationalist are?

Melvin Costa: First and foremost I want the people out there not to mix up love for my own with hate for others. I don't hate any other race. I love my own. That's what I'm about pretty much; the advancement of my people, my culture, (and) my heritage.

Sam Caplan: There have been a few reports that you've had supporters from your shows come out who are also white nationalists. To your knowledge, are those reports accurate?

Melvin Costa: I couldn't say I've seen that, honestly, I really don't.

Sam Caplan: There have also been claims that some of your tattoos are jail tattoos. Is that correct?

Melvin Costa: Yep.

Sam Caplan: So you have served time?

Melvin Costa: Uh-huh.

Sam Caplan: How much time have you served?

Melvin Costa: I've pretty much been locked up since I was 15 up until 18 months ago.

Sam Caplan: What were you sentenced for?

Melvin Costa: A variety of things. Mostly fighting; bodily injuries, assaults, a couple of bulgaries. Mostly fighting though and that's why I'm in the cage now (I'm) trying to direct my energy in a positive path.

Sam Caplan: So your assertion by wearing a swastika is that you're not neccessarily against other races, you're just for the white race?

Melvin Costa: Yes, exactly. A swastika, as far as I hold it true to my own, it stands for the purity of my people's blood. It doesn't stand for hating jews or any other ethnic race. If you look into the meaning of a swastika from a nationalist's point of a view, it's for the purity of our own race. I do believe in the purity, security, and the survival of the white race. I don't believe in hate crimes or going about the cultural advancement of your people in that avenue, but I do believe in supporting your local white boy and being proud of your people and your past. It's a part of who you are. You deny that and you deny yourself.

Sam Caplan: So if a minority attended a show you were fighting on and saw the swastika on your chest and was offended by it, what would you tell them if you were going to talk to them?

Melvin Costa: It depends on what race they are. If you're a black man saying that I would say "Are you ashamed of Malcom X?" Because Malcolm X pretty much held the same views that I do, except for his own people. To the Mexicans, I would say there's a lot of Latinos out there that hold the same views that I do: the cultural advancement of their people. I'm not trying to downplay them or do anything to alter their way of living; I'm trying to advance my people's way of living. That's what I hold true.

Sam Caplan: If a jew came up to you and expressed concern about the swastika, what would you tell them?

Melvin Costa: I'd tell them to look at their own people. Be proud of who they are. Their people are doing a lot to advance their own people. What avenues do the whites have now a day to be proud of who they are? None. There ain't no people out there going "White power. White pride." But you have all sorts of other races that have their own month. Maybe I'll stop wearing a swastika on my chest when we have a white heritage month. Until then I'm proud to be white and that's pretty much all that needs to be said.

Sam Caplan: I know you are entitled to your views of believing in the advancement of the white race, but don't you feel that maybe there's another symbol you could have chosen to represent your views other than a swastika?

Melvin Costa: You've got to understand the way that I grew up. My past is through jail. What other tattoo could I have gotten to represent as strongly as it does how I feel: white power, pretty much in one symbol? When I come down that ramp and people see me when I go to fight they know I'm white power. What else could I have put that people would have said "Oh, he's white power?" It's pretty much putting out there who I am and what I'm about.

Sam Caplan: Has anyone ever approached you in the fight game about either getting the swastika covered up or removed?

Melvin Costa: No.

Sam Caplan: If someone did, what would your response be?

Melvin Costa: You know, it's America (laughs). Like I said, the reason why I don't hold myself to be a neo-nazi is because I do believe in a lot a things our forefathers believed in. I believe in freedom of speech (and) I believe in freedom of press. I believe in all of that. I don't believe in communism or none of that repressing our views and our way of living.

Sam Caplan: Can you talk more about the difference between a white nationalist and neo-nazi?

Melvin Costa: A neo-nazi holds Hitler's beliefs to be true down to a T. I don't. I believe in Hitler's point of view as far as racial consonance but I don't believe a lot of things as far as controlling an economy. He wanted to control every single aspect of people's lives. He wanted to control the press. He wanted to control what people wore. I don't believe in none of that. I think that we should be allowed to live freely.

I think that today in our day and age I think the white race isn't able to have as many opportunities as other races have. Therefore I believe that we should start sticking up for ourselves to get the things that we need in society. I'll give one example. You've heard of (Barrack) Obama running for president?

Sam Caplan: Yes.

Melvin Costa: Well, why is it that he's gone on record as saying that "I'm for consonance in all my people, putting in civic duties for my people, and advancing my people" but he's not labled a racist? Why am I when I say the same thing labeled a racist?

Sam Caplan: Do you want me to answer that?

Melvin Costa: Yeah, go ahead.

Sam Caplan: I think some people feel that African-Americans are a minority and that the playing field is not equal for minority Americans in this country and that to help level the playing field there needs to be empowerment and that the white race is the majority and that they don't need some of the same advantages that African-Americans might be getting.

Melvin Costa: But as a president should those be the first on his list?

Sam Caplan: I'm just trying to give a different perspective here; it's not neccessarily one that I do or do not believe. But there's the belief that there isn't a level playing field when it comes to race in the United States and that minorities do need certain advantages in order to even the playing field with the majority.

Melvin Costa: I see what you're saying. I read a lot of articles in the press and I'm pretty mindful of what's going on in the world. But speaking solely for myself, I've never seen that. I grew up where I was a minority. I grew up getting picked on because I was white, okay? So I can't say what they've gone through but I know what I've gone through and the way it's portrayed to me through the media is we're the majority? I've never seen that. I've been beat up because I was white (and) I've been picked on because I was white. So for me solely when I tattoo a swastika on my chest it's saying that I'm against everything I've been through in life and that I'm trying to empower my people and I want the white kids to know that they can be proud to be white.

Sam Caplan: For the record, what area did you grow up in?

Melvin Costa: San Bernardino (Calif.).

Sam Caplan: There's also been speculation about another one of your tattoos. In the picture that's circulating, you're also shown with a spider web tatoo on one of your elbows. I'm not sure if this is true, so I wanted to ask you, but that's a prison tattoo that represents someone who has killed an African-American?

Melvin Costa: I don't know nothing about that. I got my tattoo when I got out. I got this tattooed last year. If that's true then it wasn't a part of my knowledge when I got it.

Sam Caplan:
Is there anything else that you wanted to say for the record?

Melvin Costa: As I said earlier, I'm not out there trying to hate other races. I'm for the advancement of my people; racial consonance amongst my people. Be proud to be white. That's all that it is.

--
Sam Caplan

Lead Writer/Editor - ProElite.com

Saxon Knights


Saxon Knights is a white prison gang started in 1995 at Pendleton Correctional Facility in Indiana. The gang was started by two friends from the same county. The gang's symbol is a medieval shield (coat of arms) divided into four parts, with a sword pointing down in the middle, along with a crossed battle-axe & hammer behind the shield. There's a ribbon above the shield with the words "Honor - Brotherhood - Loyalty." The four parts inside the shield are colored white, purple, red, and gold. White for their race, purple for their royalty, red for the blood their ancestors shed, and gold for their brotherhood. The letters "S" and "K" are in two sections that run diagonal, a knights helmet opposite of the "S," and the section next to the "K" is for whatever they choose to place there. If someone is removed as a member their patch (tattoo) must also be removed. SK's are primarily in the Indiana prisons, but have recently spread beyond prison walls, with chapters in the Midwest and Arizona.




Some SK's have Nazi swastikas and racist tattoos


1488 = 14 Words, 88 Precepts




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HIGHLAND POLICE DEPARTMENT
HIGHLAND, INDIANA

PRESS RELEASE
January, 2009

Highland Police ans releasing the following details of Friday nights shooting incident in the 2800 block of Highway Avenue The first victim is identified as 34 year old Chad Maxwell of Indianapolis, Indiana. The second victim is 28 year old Elijah Gard ot Blccmington, Indiana. Both victims are recovering. The owner of the weapon involved Is identified as Linda Harvey age 50 from Highland. The alleged shooter is John Stefanich, 52 years old from Highland. At this time police only have statements from Harvey and Stefanich as the alleged victims have been less than cooperative.

All Involved were acquaintances and had agreed to meet at a downtown bar for less than thirty minutes before the Incident. No one appeared to have been intoxicated. All subjects exited the bar and became involved in an argument outside in the parking lot. At which time the two shooting victims began battering Harvey and Stefanich. Harvey allegedly in fear for their well being displayed a firearm and fired a shot into the air. Harvey became disarmed only to have Stefanich allegedly retrieve the firearm from the ground and while being beaten and kicked, fired the weapon striking the victims. Highland Police believe the incident involved issues related to the "Saxon Knights' (an Indiana based prison gang). Police are looking for Charles Oliver, age 33 of Merrilrvllle, Indiana formerly from Marion County, Indiana for questioning in this Incident. Investigators are continuing to work with the Prosecutor's Office to identify and file the applicable charges.

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Anonymous testimony from a former prison guard

I am a former guard who worked for the Indiana Department of Corrections, and I would like to make a few comments regarding the Saxon Knights as I saw them. I know when you hear of a group of white men in prison you almost always think its about racism, white supremacy and/or hate groups. That is a stigma that primarily has been placed on these groups by gangs like the Aryan brotherhood. While these gangs do exist, Saxon Knights are not like that. In my opinion I wouldn't even call them a gang , they act more like a family of brothers who are well unified. Being a guard among prison inmates I have had individual conversations with many Saxon Knights (aka S.K.'s) and they all seem to be educated for the most part, and somewhat honorable. In fact, I'd say just about every S.K. that I've spoken to was either in college, a GED class, or some vocational trade, and they all say pretty much the same thing... that knowledge to them is the key to the future, and without it the past is destine to repeat itself. WOW, this comes from inmates!! Its my opinion to label them as a gang is unfair. Don't get me wrong I have seen several fights take place involving these guys and other inmates, so they are violent at times, however fighting is a common occurrence in prison, due to the hostile environment. In those altercations involving S.K. members, when its all said and done they are usually on the respectable side of those situations, and weren't the instigators. They are defiantly not a passive group of guys when it come to something they feel strongly about, or when it comes to one of their own being threatened. They are certainly a tight knit group. I personally have shook-down their cells and had to confiscate what they call their "bi-laws" and after reading them, they seem to have positive, moral values that most of them seem to uphold. The S.K. are a pretty good group of guys.

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A female member talks about the SK prison gang

What is the Saxon Knight Organization? When I first noticed this on here my first impulse was to ignore it. I figured it’s not anyone’s concern who the Saxon Knights are. However after seeing how many ignorant people left comments about something they know absolutely nothing about. I figured I would tell the world exactly what the Saxon Knight Organization is. Its time we informed you rather than let those who know nothing try to sound informed.

In 1995 the Saxon Knight organization was founded in the Pendleton Correctional Facility; a maximum-security prison located in central Indiana. The Saxon Knights Organization is nearly 1000 men and women centered mainly in Indiana, but also reaching into other states such as Illinois Ohio Kentucky Alabama and Georgia. Though founded in prison the numbers in the free world are quickly surpassing those that are incarcerated. The Saxon Knights values and morals are the key to understanding us. Though many of us have made mistakes we refuse to allow those mistakes to define us as people. Instead we choose to make changes in our lives so that we may be better suited to contribute a positive law abiding manner to our society.

The majority of Saxon Knights are college educated men and women who have strong family ties and believe that getting back to positive family values is a key to a better future. The Saxon Knight Organization is active in community outreach and has contributed to a number of charities and outreach programs. They have aided those affected by storms and floods in Indiana. In December 2007 they donated several thousand dollars in toys clothing and money to the Children’s Guardian home in Marion county Indiana located in Indianapolis Indiana.

Though none of us are perfect we stress holistic wellness amongst our members. We encourage our membership to seek further education, to exercise daily, and to seek spiritual guidance in some form of positive religion or philosophy. No religion is looked down upon within this Organization so long that it teaches positive values and morals. While some of the ignorant uninformed who have left comments have called us a racist Organization. To that my response is no we are not a racist Organization. Do we have racist members? Yes we do. Unfortunately in the world we live in today any place where 10 or more are grouped together odds are you will have a racist in the midst. No matter what ethnic background or religion they come from there will be a racist. Racism is prevalent in all areas of our society such as the law enforcement field, judicial fields, medical fields; it is even prevalent in the United States Senate and Congress. The only difference between the Saxon Knights and these other organizations and fields is that we admit that we have members still holding to these outdated mindsets.

As an organization we encourage those with these values to seek education because we believe racism is outdated. Instead we consider ourselves ethno-preservationists. When we look at people we believe the differences we see is what makes life interesting. We encourage all ethnic background to be proud of who you are and how you look. We would like to applaud all those who work to preserve those values and traditions that define who you are you’re your ethnicity.

Very soon the Saxon Knight Organization will have an active website. Anyone who has questions will be able to log on and ask. Anyone who would like to be a member will be able to apply for membership. We will also have a great clothing line available online. This line will be rooted in European under tones but available to all those who are interested. The Saxon Knight Organization would like to assure the public that we are not a gang, thugs, or criminal syndicate. We are a group of like-minded men and women trying to make positive changes in our lives and communities. God Bless you all. The founding President of the Saxon Knight Organization authorizes this posting. - Lady Saxon

Interviewing Techniques

Ironically, skinheads, especially hate-motivated skinheads, talk to anyone who will listen, including law enforcement officers. One investigator who knew little about white-supremacist ideology simply asked skinheads why they hated, what their tattoos meant, and how skinhead groups were organized. Numerous interviews and observations substantiated the initial information obtained by the investigator. On the other hand, criminally motivated skinheads are less likely to talk because they act more like criminals. Investigators should determine the motivation of skinheads when planning interview strategies. Hate-motivated skinheads have well-rehearsed answers for questions, such as “Why do you hate?” “Can’t you see what you’re doing is wrong?” “How would you like it if someone picked on you because of your race?” Skinheads answer smugly; they feel secure as skinheads. Because hate masks personal insecurities, interviewers should temporarily forego questions about why skinheads hate and strive to identify the skinheads’ personal insecurities. Interviewers should begin this probe by asking skinheads about their family relationships, which probably represent the source of the skinhead’s insecurities because a sense of who people are and where they fit in society typically develops within the family structure. Interviewers also should explore skinheads’ future plans, educational goals, and desired employment. This forces skinheads to see themselves as they really are. If forced to look at themselves, skinheads become vulnerable, less resistant to rehabilitation, and, in law enforcement settings, more likely to confess. This process could take several hours or many months depending on the resistance level of the skinhead.

This strategy proves less effective when interviewing criminally motivated skinheads because they view themselves as criminals who hate, rather than haters who commit criminal acts. More traditional interviewing strategies have proven successful with criminally motivated skinheads.

American Front

American Front

The American Front (AF) was a white power skinhead organization started in the mid 1980s in San Francisco, California by Bob Heick. It began as a loose organization modeled after the British National Front, which attempted to merge the skinhead subculture with white nationalism. Heick began working with Tom Metzger's White Aryan Resistance (WAR) in 1988 after gaining notice for holding the Third Positionist "White Workers Day Parade" on May 1, 1988. Heick and artist Boyd Rice posed in American Front uniforms for an article on neo-Nazism in Sassy magazine. Rice claims he was never a member of the American Front, but that he liked Heick's dynamic character.

Boyd Rice with Bob Heick


Origins


In 1985, after years of associating with peers of all races, Bob Heick began writing and distributing leaflets, mostly from a nationalist anti-communist stance, in response to the increasing leftist influence in the local punk subculture. After a window-breaking incident at Bound Together Books, the anarchist collective that ran the store used the American Front flyer as part of a press release listing several alleged skinhead crimes committed in the Haight-Ashbury district. The press release triggered a week-long flurry of media attention on white power skinheads.

Originally intended as an umbrella organization for all American skinheads, regardless of local group, AF had no formal structure or membership. Some skinheads from Southern California began using the name in a gang context. That faction was completely independent of Heick after 1985, and spread to other cities, partly due to members who were in the Military of the United States. In San Francisco, Heick lost favor with the mostly apolitical skinheads. The media attention and constant vandalism brought increased attention from the local police. In addition, Heick's progression from patriotism to Nazism lost him many friends, and some people accused him of trying to take over the local skinhead scene. Heick changed direction, associating with heavy metal music fans and rednecks. He formed the short-lived group United White Brethren in the North and South Bay Areas.

Transformation into political group

Upon his return to San Francisco in 1987, Heick found the newer generation of local skinheads to be more receptive to Nazi ideology, and that Nazism had become fashionable in some circles. The American Front transformed into a political organization, and its membership was no longer exclusively skinheads. On May 1, 1988, AF held its first White Workers Day march on Haight Street in San Francisco, in which 65 participants marched unopposed. This was heralded by Tom Metzger of White Aryan Resistance on his telephone hotline, in the WAR newspaper, and on TV; due to the Third Positionist agenda that was favored by both the AF and WAR. The AF tabloid Aryan Warrior was published soon after. Metzger began presenting Heick to the media as a spokesman for white power skinheads, even over members of his own group.

Heick appeared on the news magazine show The Reporters, which focused mainly on Heick and included news footage of the Mayday march. AF was featured in articles in publications such as Rolling Stone, Hustler, and Sassy. Of all media appearances, none gained as much attention as the "Young Hate Mongers" episode of Geraldo, in which Geraldo Rivera had his nose broken.

By 1989, there were AF units in 14 American states. Mayday 1989 saw an AF march at San Francisco City Hall. To avoid facing a strong counter-protest, the AF only alerted the media about the event at the last minute. This ploy backfired, giving the AF zero media coverage for the demonstration.

Aryan Woodstock

Heick tried to organize a concert of white power bands in a small town in Northern California. The venue canceled when they found out it was being sponsored by the American Front. Soon after, a local supporter informed Heick that he knew of a doctor who owned numerous acres of land. Heick began the initial planning of the event, but was pushed aside by Tom Metzger, and the concert became a White Aryan Resistance event instead of an AF event. Heick and Metzger disagreed on almost every facet of the planning of the festival, including the name, Aryan Woodstock. Heick disagreed with Metzger's promotion of the event on his Aryan Update phone hotline, because the hotline was monitored by anti-racist activists, and would give them time to organize against the event. A WAR activist with a legal background undertook the task of securing the required permits. After speaking with three different bureaucrats, he was told that no permit would be required to play live music at a private event on private land, as long as sanitation was provided for.

During the two weeks leading up to Aryan Woodstock, the event was a leading local news story. Both Heick and Metzger were seen attending city council meetings filled with community groups and protestors. The county sought an injunction to block the gathering, and Heick appeared before Judge William Snowden to defend AF and WAR's right to assemble. Judge Snowden ruled that the gathering may take place, but there could be no music. Roughly 300 people from across the United States made it onto the property before the landowner, Howard Londsale, caved to police pressure and allowed the authorities to close off the entrance. This stranded many would-be attendees, some who had traveled great distances to be there. Several hundred protesters were positioned outside the property.

Tension between AF and WAR increased soon after, when it was revealed that a longtime WAR financial contributor felt neglected by the Metzger organization, and switched his support to AF. The undercurrent of hostility toward Heick then extended to his girlfriend, who soon ended their relationship and her ties to the white power movement. Heick spent the next year visiting various AF units in California and across the United States before getting married and settling down in Portland Oregon.

1990s

While still in the Bay Area in 1990, Heick openly announced on the AF telephone hotline that the group would appear in San Francisco's Union Square on the first Saturday in May. The message ran for a month prior to the event, with the correct date time and place. Opponents of the AF held a Mayday demonstration three days prior, on May 1. On the day of the AF event, Heick arrived with 10 men and three women, and marched directly into 300 missile-throwing protesters. Police descended upon the AF contingent and confiscated their wooden shields. Police were hit from both sides and made no attempt to separate the two groups. After 20 minutes, injuries included a broken arm, a minor head injury, and in the case of Heick, a broken nose.

In October 1990, Tom Metzger was found liable in a Portland, Oregon civil court case involving the death of Mulegata Seraw, an Ethiopian who died during an altercation with local white power skinheads. During the same week of the court ruling, Heick relocated to that city. The Coalition for Human Dignity published fliers featuring Heick's home address, and distributed press releases announcing his arrival. Local TV news crews arrived at Heick's apartment just a few days after he moved in.

Heick still received regular invitations to appear on national television, but many of the new offers were to appear on trash TV shows. Heick refused those offers, restricting his interviews to genuine news programs. Press interest in Heick and the AF was waning, and Heick focused on local activism.

The American Front's 1991 May Day demonstration was held at Portland City Hall. There was a large counterprotest, but no violence. In 1992, Heick and AF associates were the first out-of-state activists to arrive at the Randy Weaver stand-off at Ruby Ridge. Heick was featured in a videotape of the event, blockading a fuel truck and lambasting the local contractor driving the truck for supporting the government.

Around this time, AF focused on demonstrations and literature distribution. The group's telephone hotline was revived in Portland and remained active until Heick left the group in 1995. In the 1990s, the Washington and California AF sections published The Voice of Revolution magazine, which had strong ties to the newly-formed Combat 18 in England. In New York, Jim Porazzo published Greystorm. In Portland, Heick published Revolutionary Nationalist

Much of the focus of AF activity was in protest of hate crime laws, which they claimed only targeted whites. AF was also known for harassing Portland city commissioner Mike Lindberg, who called the group "Gay Bashing Skinheads" in the press. The Albany, Oregon area unit of the AF held regular demonstrations at the state capital and other government offices in central Oregon.

AF briefly resurfaced under the leadership of James Porazzo, who moved the group to Harrison, Arkansas and began to push a Third Position philosophy. Porazzo targeted Jews as the major players in the capitalist system, and blamed Zionism for global turmoil.

2000s

In the 2000s, the American Front was no longer active, except for a few activists who functioned only on the Internet. All of the group's websites and contact addresses have since disappeared. David Lynch became the new leader in 2002, and the group dropped its third position rhetoric, returning to its earlier racist politics.

Since David Lynch became the leader of American Front in 2002, his greatest strength has been his connections, which stretch across the country and even into Canada. Lynch solidified relations with the prominent Pacific Northwest neo-Nazi group Volksfront; its leader, Randall Krager even donated money to an “Aryan POW” defense fund sponsored by Lynch in January 2007. But Lynch has also been supportive of the Vinlanders Social Club, a rival racist skinhead group, and its umbrella organization Blood and Honour Council 28. Lynch has ties to a number of racist skinhead groups, including the Hammerskins, Volksfront, TCB Hate Crew, PENI Skins (a branch of the PENI prison gang), CRW Skins, and UOAS (Universal Order of Aryan Skinheads).

See also: Neo-Nazis

TCB Hate Crew

TCB Hate Crew

The TCB (Taking Care of Business) Hate Crew was founded by Del O'Connor, a British racist that was second in command of Combat 18, a neo-Nazi group in the UK. His splinter group, the White Wolves, were initially believed to have been involved in masterminding the bombing of a gay nightclub and several other locations in London. O'Connor moved to Dallas and started the TCB (Taking Care of Business) Hate Crew, that's based in Texas with branches in Illinois, Missouri, Indiana, and California.



Allies: Hammerskins, Volksfront, American Front, Southern White Knights (KKK)

See also: Neo-Nazis

Gangland: Pagans MC "Devil's Fire" (video)



Part 1


Part 2


Part 3


Part 4


Part 5






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