Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Sons of Silence biker Ron Bemis was shot to death in his driveway by Invaders member Alfred H. "Crazy Al" Mills, who was subsequently convicted of murder. [24] Sons of Silence member Paul Robert "P.K." Klein was shot and killed by Eugene Herbert Baylis at Jim and I's Star Bar in Colorado Springs, where Klein was the bar manager, on April 17, 1993.
Sons of Aesir 2005 Arizona, US An independent outlaw motorcycle club based out of Arizona. They have been described as a neo-Nazi white supremacist biker gang by the Anti Defamation League. [178] [179] [180] Sons of Satan: 1949 Lancaster, Pennsylvania, US A brother club for the Pagan's MC. [181] Sons of Silence: 1966 Niwot, Colorado, US
Lost Boys Motorcycle Club [5] Men of Liberty MC (Windsor, Maine) Merciless Souls [88] Mercenaries MC [14] Midgard Serpents [95] Misguided Brotherhood MC; Mortal Skulls Motorcycle Club [59] Native Syndicate Motorcycle Club (Penobscot Maine) North Coast Motorcycle Club, in Akron, Ohio (patched over in 2015) [96] [97] Northwoods Riders Motorcycle ...
A federal indictment unsealed Thursday charges 18 members of the Pagan’s Motorcycle Club - including 16 Missouri men - in various violent assaults on rival gang members in 2022 and 2023.
An entire chapter of the Hells Angels Motorcycle Club was arrested on various violent charges, police say.. Six members of the Hells Angels biker gang were arrested in Bakersfield, California, on ...
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
Motorcycle club members meet at a run in Australia in 2009. An outlaw motorcycle club is a motorcycle subculture. It is generally centered on the use of cruiser motorcycles, particularly Harley-Davidsons and choppers, and a set of ideals that purport to celebrate freedom, nonconformity to mainstream culture, and loyalty to the biker group.
Amidst growing membership and increasingly sophisticated criminal activity, federal law enforcement agencies within the United States Department of Justice began classifying outlaw motorcycle gangs as "non-traditional organized crime" beginning in 1981, identifying four of the gangs—the Hells Angels, the Outlaws, the Pagan's and the Bandidos—as the largest and most powerful.