Brothers Behind Bars Newsletter… August 2016 – Issue 1…
Transcription
Brothers Behind Bars Newsletter… August 2016 – Issue 1…
Sponsored by NCOM… Brothers Behind Bars Newsletter… August 2016 – Issue 1… The Law Offices of Richard M. Lester is the only motorcycle accident lawyer network that gives back to the motorcycle community! And this is one of the ways… Thank You… NCOM – National Coalition Of Motorcyclists / AIM - Aid for Injured Motorcyclists AIM / NCOM - Free Legal And Legislative Consultation Free All Brothers Behind Bars… Editor: Mike Davis… Be Silent And Safe - Silence Never Betrays You… NCOM Sponsors this Newsletter with a donation of $300.00 per month. NCOM; Richard And Joseph Lester; Attorneys At Law… CoC Of . . . . . . . . North Dakota donates $ 25.00 a month… Bandidos MC Finland donates $ 50.00 a month. CoC Of . . . . . . . . . . . . . Oregon donates $ 30.00 a month… Bandidos MC 1Wire Texas donates $ 25.00 a month. CoC Of . . . . . . . . . . . . Alabama donates $ 50.00 a month… Bandidos MC Galveston, TX Chapter donates $ 10.00 a month. In Country Vietnam MC USA donates $ 50.00 a month… AOA Nation USA donates $ 50.00 a month. Warlocks MC Nation USA donates $ 40.00 a month. Outlaws MC Connecticut donates $ 15.00 a month. Vagos MC Nation USA donates $ 50.00 a month… Outlaws MC Georgia donates $ 20.00 a month. SteelHorse Riders Michigan donates $ 25.00 a month… Flash Productions Michigan donates $ 10.00 a month. Vigilante Cash Michigan donates $ 20.00 a month… Devils Diciple Tatu Alabama donates $ 25.00 a month. IHMC Crooked Nose Mike - prison donates $ 5.00 a month… Devils Diciple SA FCI Milan, MI donates $ 25.00 a month. Jimbo Lafayette LA donates $ 20.00 a month… Valkyrie MC Houston, Texas donates $ 10.00 a month. Solid Brotherhood MC Minnesota donates $ 25.00 a month… El Forastero MC Nation USA donates $ 17.00 a month. Sons Of Silence MC North Dakota donates $ 100.00 a month… El Forastero MC Okoboji, Iowa donates $ regularly. SOS MC Western North Dakota donates $ 25.00 a month. VNV/LV MC, Dirty Chapter, Houston donates $ 5.00 a month. SOS Supporter Wildman PA donates $ 20.00 a month. Prairie Rattlers MC North Dakota donates $ 25.00 a month. SOS Supporter Knucklehead Fred donates $ 20.00 a month… Rough-Riders MC North Dakota donates $ 40.00 a month. SOS Nomad Skunk FMC Springfield donates $ 25.00 a month…. Solid Brotherhood MC North Dakota donates $ 25.00 a month. Tramp in prison El Dorado, Kansas donates $ 5.00 a month… Silent Thunder MC North Dakota donates $ regularly. TX COC&I Region 3 Texas donates $ 10.00 a month… Important Editor’s Note: I’ve got a LOTS of Sponsor’s Thank You’s to get caught up on, they will be in the Issue 2 for August 2016… Happy Birthday Pagan Izzo on Sept 1st… Happy Birthday Iron Coffin Hooky on Sept 15th… Happy Birthday Outlaw Richie on Sept 22nd… Happy Birthday Breed Panhead Fred on Sept 26th… Happy Birthday Pagan Moose on Sept 4th… Happy Birthday Outlaw Crazy Joe on Sept 19th… Happy Birthday Mongol Deano on Sept 25th… Editor’s Note: For June there was 1 Issue; For July there were 2 Issues; For August this is the 1st Issue… Editor’s Note: Currently we are sending over 350 copies of this newsletter to members of 84 Motorcycle Clubs… Editor’s Note: I would like to Thank my Wife “Kari” for getting these Newsletters ready to be mail… Editor’s Note: This is a benefit for those arrested in Waco. Here is a list of the Items So Far… The 1st & 2nd Items for the Waco Benefit was painted & donated by Satans Soldier Angelo… Great Paintings… Thank You Angelo… The 3rd Item for this Benefit was made by Pagan Supporter Opie... He did some Great tooling in this wallet… Thank You Opie…. The 4th Item for this Benefit was donated by Sons Of Silence Supporter Kolby & by John H. Wilson Sr (who actually made it) ... Page 1 The 5rd, 6th, & 7th Items for this Benefit was made by Bandido Cowboy... Great wallets… Thank You Cowboy…. The 8th Item for this Benefit was made by & donated by Avenger Pork Chop… Leather Belt - Size 38 - “COC” on the Belt Buckle – WACO on the back - GBNF on both sides. Thank you Pork Chop… The 9th Item for this Benefit was donated by Sons Of Silence Supporter Kolby… Lyon oil painting… Thank You Kolby…. The 10th Item for this Benefit was donated by Iron Horsemen Crooked Nose Mike… Support Waco Bikers… Thank You Mike…. The 11th Item for this Benefit was donated by Ghost Rider White Boy… Skull & Cross Bones… I’ll Frame. Thank You White Boy… The 12th Item for this Benefit was donated by Friend Kevin… Little Biker Bear… I’ll Frame. Thank You Kevin… The 13th & 14th Items for this Benefit was donated by Painted Tree; Dot Art (H-D 372,830 Dots & Devil 167,000 Dots ). Thank You! The 15th Item for this Benefit was donated by Filthy White Boy Travis; 1%ER Knit Stocking Cap. Thank You Travis... The 16th Item for this Benefit was donated by Kari & Ciera Davis; H-D Smokin Hot Sign & H-D Parts & Service Sign… Thanks… The 17th & 18th Items for this Benefit was made by Bandido T-Black... Leather Gauntlet & Great Leather Belt.. Thank You T-Black…. The 19th, 20th, & 21st Items for this Benefit was made by Bandido Gorilla... Leather Koozies… Thank You Gorilla…. The 22nd Items for this Benefit was made by Jimmy Fisher @ Gatesville, Texas... Leather Gun Case… Thank You Jimmy… Disclaimer: The News Media does NOT always tell the Whole Truth… It tends to sensationalize the News to Sell Newspapers. In Fact, Many Times the News Media gets the Facts Wrong!!! Page 2 The 23rd Items for this Benefit was made by Outlaw Milwaukee Jack... Leather H-D Wallet… Thank You Milwaukee Jack… The 24th Items for this Benefit was made by Outlaw Milwaukee Jack... Leather Clutch… Thank You Milwaukee Jack… The 25th Items for this Benefit was made by Jimmy Fisher @ Gatesville, Texas... Leather Key Holder… Thank You Jimmy… The 26th Items for this Benefit was made by Jimmy Fisher @ Gatesville, Texas... Leather Koozie… Thank You Jimmy… Page 3 Editor’s Note : It is too hard to keep up with counts, But for your info here are the Clubs that are getting the Brothers Behind Bars Newsletter (84 Clubs) in Prison: Avengers, Bandidos, Banshees, Barons, Black Pistons, Boozefighters, BPM, Breed, Brother Speed, Brothers 8, Brotherhood Nomads, Brothers Of Wheels, Cloven Hoofs, Damned Deacon, D.C. Eagles, Death Squad, Derelicts, Devils Diciples, Diablos, El Forastero, Finks, Fly-InWheels, Forsaken Few, Free Souls, Estedes, Galloping Goose, Ghost Riders, Grim Reapers, Gypsy Joker, Hellions, Hells Angels, Hells Lovers, Hells Outcasts, Hermanos, Hessians, Hidalgo’s, Highwaymen, In Country Vietnam, Iron Coffins, Iron Horsemen, Invaders, Iron Wings, Iron Mustangs, Legion Of Doom, Liberty Riders, Long Riders, Marauder’s, Misfits, Mohawk Valley Riders, Moloch, Mongols, Motopsychoz, Nomads, Outlaws, Pagan’s, Peckerwood, Phantom’s, Pharoahs, Reapers, Red Devils, Renegades, Sadistic, Salty Dogs, Satans Soldiers, Scorpions, Set Free Soldiers, Sin City Deciples, Sons Of Silence, Sovereign, Sundowners, Thunderbirds, Thunderguards, Unforegiven, Unforgiven, Vagos, Vietnam Vets / Legacy Vets, Y-Rohirrin, Warlocks Pa, Warlocks, Winos Crew And Wheels Of Soul… With newsletters going to Australia, Canada, England, France, Finland, Germany, Norway, Scotland, Sweden, & Wales. -------------------------------------------------------- Editor’s Note (For BBB Only): Being a Patch holder in Good Standings does have it privileges… And this is one of them… If you are a Patch Holder in Good Standings & contact me, include your Chapter too… If you are Not a patch holder of a MC in Good Standings, Don’t write me & request that I add you to the mailing list. You will only get rejected, as I only make very few special exceptions. -------------------------------------------------------- Editor’s Note: I would like to Thank all of the contacts from all of the MCs that verify if requesting member is in Good Standing with their Club; & all of the other assistance that you give me, such as address changes, being released, & soliciting donations… -------------------------------------------------------- Editor’s Note: I produce this National Coalition of Motorcyclists Brothers Behind Bars Newsletter which is a non-partisan newsletter for Bikers by Bikers. Information from the Newsletter contains News Articles & other information that may be of interest to a biker behind bars. Financial support for this Newsletter comes mainly from NCOM, Motorcycle Clubs, And Confederations Of Clubs… -------------------------------------------------------- Updated News Article Sources: All News Articles contained in this NCOM Brothers Behind Bars Newsletter, unless source is specified, are obtained from the following 7 (Seven) Web Sites: Motorcycle Profiling Project (David “Double D” Devereaux), FreeRoadBlock (Outlaw RoadBlock 1%er), The Aging Rebel, Road Scholars (Wolf From Atlanta), Outlaw Biker World, White Trash News & Becky Cakes… -------------------------------------------------------- Editor’s Note: In the interest of Cost Savings, If you can share One copy of this Newsletter where I am sending multiple copies to the same institution, please let me know… Thanks, Mike -------------------------------------------------------- Live Each Day Like It’s Your Last. One Day, You’ll Get It Right… Live Free Or Die... Guy Trains Computers to Find Future Criminals - July 18, 2016 - Wisconsin - By Joshua Brustein; www.Bloomberg.com When historians look back at the turmoil over prejudice & policing in the U.S. over the past few years, they’re unlikely to dwell on the case of Eric Loomis. Police in La Crosse, Wis., arrested Loomis in Feb 2013 for driving a car that was used in a drive-by shooting. He had been arrested a dozen times before. Loomis took a plea, & was sentenced to 6 years in prison plus 5 years of probation. The episode was unremarkable compared with the deaths of Philando Castile & Alton Sterling at the hands of police, which were captured on camera & distributed widely online. But Loomis’s story marks an important point in a quieter debate over the role of fairness & technology in policing. Before his sentence, the judge in the case received an automatically generated risk score that determined Loomis was likely to commit violent crimes in the future. Risk scores, generated by algorithms, are an increasingly common factor in sentencing. Computers crunch data—arrests, type of crime committed, & demographic information—and a risk rating is generated. The idea is to create a guide that’s less likely to be subject to unconscious biases, the mood of a judge, or other human shortcomings. Similar tools are used to decide which blocks police officers should patrol, where to put inmates in prison, & who to let out on parole. Supporters of these tools claim they’ll help solve historical inequities, but their critics say they have the potential to aggravate them, by hiding old prejudices under the veneer of computerized precision. Some people see them as a sterilized version of what brought protesters into the streets at Black Lives Matter rallies. Loomis is a surprising fulcrum in this controversy: He’s a white man. But when Loomis challenged the state’s use of a risk score in his sentence, he cited many of the fundamental criticisms of the tools: that they’re too mysterious to be used in court, that they punish people for the crimes of others, & that they hold your demographics against you. Last week the Wisconsin Supreme Court ruled against Loomis, but the decision validated some of his core claims. The case, say legal experts, could serve as a jumpingoff point for legal challenges questioning the constitutionality of these kinds of techniques. To understand the algorithms being used all over the country, it’s good to talk to Richard Berk. He’s been writing them for decades (though he didn’t write the tool that created Loomis’s risk score). Berk, a professor at the Univ of Pennsylvania, is a shortish, bald guy, whose solid stature & I-dare-you-to-disagree-with-me demeanor might lead people to mistake him for an ex-cop. In fact, he’s a career statistician. His tools have been used by prisons to determine which inmates to place in restrictive settings; parole Depts to choose how closely to supervise people being released from prison; & police officers to predict whether people arrested for domestic violence will re-offend. He once created an algorithm that would tell the Occupational Safety & Health Administration which workplaces were likely to commit safety violations, but says the agency never used it for anything. Starting this fall, the state of Penn plans to run a pilot program using Berk’s system in sentencing decisions. As his work has been put into use across the country, Berk’s academic pursuits have become progressively fantastical. He’s currently working on an algorithm that he says will be able to predict at the time of someone’s birth how likely she is to commit a crime by the time she turns 18. The only limit to applications like this, in Berk’s mind, is the data he can find to feed into them. Page 4 “The policy position that is taken is that it’s much more dangerous to release Darth Vader than it is to incarcerate Luke Skywalker” This kind of talk makes people uncomfortable, something Berk was clearly aware of on a sunny Thu morning in May as he headed into a conference in the basement of a campus building at Penn to play the role of least popular man in the room. He was scheduled to participate in the 1st panel of the day, which was essentially a referendum on his work. Berk settled into his chair & prepared for a spirited debate about whether what he does all day is good for society. The moderator, a researcher named Sandra Mayson, took the podium. “This panel is the Minority Report panel,” she said, referring to the Tom Cruise movie where the Gov’t employs a trio of psychic mutants to identify future murderers, then arrests these “pre-criminals” before their offenses occur. The comparison is so common it’s become a kind of joke. “I use it too, occasionally, because there’s no way to avoid it,” Berk said later. For the next hour, the other members of the panel took turns questioning the scientific integrity, utility, & basic fairness of predictive techniques such as Berk’s. As it went on, he began to fidget in frustration. Berk leaned all the way back in his chair & crossed his hands over his stomach. He leaned all the way forward & flexed his fingers. He scribbled a few notes. He rested his chin in one hand like a bored teenager & stared off into space. Eventually, the debate was too much for him: “Here’s what I, maybe hyperbolically, get out of this,” Berk said. “No data are any good, the criminal justice system sucks, & all the actors in the criminal justice system are biased by race & gender. If that’s the takeaway message, we might as well all go home. There’s nothing more to do.” The room tittered with awkward laughter. Berk’s work on crime started in the late 1960s, when he was splitting his time between grad school & a social work job in Baltimore. The city exploded in violence following the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. Berk’s graduate school thesis examined the looting patterns during the riots. “You couldn’t really be alive & sentient at that moment in time & not be concerned about what was going on in crime & justice,” he said. “Very much like today with the Ferguson stuff.” In the mid-1990s, Berk began focusing on machine learning, where computers look for patterns in data sets too large for humans to sift through manually. To make a model, Berk inputs tens of thousands of profiles into a computer. Each one includes the data of someone who has been arrested, including how old they were when first arrested, what neighborhood they’re from, how long they’ve spent in jail, & so on. The data also contain information about who was re-arrested. The computer finds patterns, & those serve as the basis for predictions about which arrestees will re-offend. To Berk, a big advantage of machine learning is that it eliminates the need to understand what causes someone to be violent. “For these problems, we don’t have good theory,” he said. Feed the computer enough data & it can figure it out on its own, without deciding on a philosophy of the origins of criminal proclivity. This is a seductive idea. But it’s also one that comes under criticism each time a supposedly neutral algorithm in any field produces worryingly non-neutral results. In one widely cited study, researchers showed that Google’s automated ad-serving software was more likely to show ads for high-paying jobs to men than to women. Another found that ads for arrest records show up more often when searching the web for distinctly black names than for white ones. Computer scientists have a maxim, “Garbage in, garbage out.” In this case, the garbage would be decades of racial & socioeconomic disparities in the criminal justice system. Predictions about future crimes based on data about historical crime statistics have the potential to equate past patterns of policing with the predisposition of people in certain groups— mostly poor & nonwhite—to commit crimes. Berk readily acknowledges this as a concern, then quickly dismisses it. Race isn’t an input in any of his systems, & he says his own research has shown his algorithms produce similar risk scores regardless of race. He also argues that the tools he creates aren’t used for punishment—more often they’re used, he said, to reverse longrunning patterns of overly harsh sentencing, by identifying people whom judges & probation officers shouldn’t worry about. Berk began working with Philadelphia’s Adult Probation & Parole Dept in 2006. At the time, the city had a big murder problem & a small budget. There were a lot of people in the city’s probation & parole programs. City Hall wanted to know which people it truly needed to watch. Berk & a small team of researchers from the Univ of Pennsylvania wrote a model to identify which people were most likely to commit murder or attempted murder while on probation or parole. Berk generally works for free, & was never on Philadelphia’s payroll. A common question, of course, is how accurate risk scores are. Berk says that in his own work, between 29% & 38% of predictions about whether someone is low-risk end up being wrong. But focusing on accuracy misses the point, he says. When it comes to crime, sometimes the best answers aren’t the most statistically precise ones. Just like weathermen err on the side of predicting rain because no one wants to get caught without an umbrella, court systems want technology that intentionally over predicts the risk that any individual is a crime risk. The same person could end up being described as either high-risk or not depending on where the Gov’t decides to set that line. “The policy position that is taken is that it’s much more dangerous to release Darth Vader than it is to incarcerate Luke Skywalker,” Berk said. “Every mark of poverty serves as a risk factor” Philadelphia’s plan was to offer cognitive behavioral therapy to the highest-risk people, & offset the costs by spending less money supervising everyone else. When Berk posed the Darth Vader question, the parole Dept initially determined it’d be 10 times worse, according to Geoffrey Barnes, who worked on the project. Berk figured that at that threshold the algorithm would name 8,000 to 9,000 people as potential pre-murderers. Officials realized they couldn’t afford to pay for that much therapy, & asked for a model that was less harsh. Berk’s team twisted the dials accordingly. “We’re intentionally making the model less accurate, but trying to make sure it produces the right kind of error when it does,” Barnes said. The program later expanded to group everyone into high-, medium-, & low-risk populations, & the city significantly reduced how closely it watched parolees Berk’s system identified as low-risk. In a 2010 study, Berk & city officials reported that people who were given more lenient treatment were less likely to be arrested for violent crimes than people with similar risk scores who stayed with traditional parole or probation. People classified as high-risk were almost 4 times more likely to be charged with violent crimes. Page 5 Since then, Berk has created similar programs in Maryland’s & Pennsylvania’s statewide parole systems. In Pennsylvania, an internal analysis showed that between 2011 & 2014 about 15% of people who came up for parole received different decisions because of their risk scores. Those who were released during that period were significantly less likely to be re-arrested than those who had been released in years past. The conclusion: Berk’s software was helping the state make smarter decisions. Laura Treaster, a spokeswoman for the state’s Board of Probation & Parole, says Pennsylvania isn’t sure how its risk scores are impacted by race. “This has not been analyzed yet,” she said. “However, it needs to be noted that parole is very different than sentencing. The board is not determining guilt or innocence. We are looking at risk.” Sentencing, though, is the next frontier for Berk’s risk scores. And using algorithms to decide how long someone goes to jail is proving more controversial than using them to decide when to let people out early. Wisconsin courts use Compas, a popular commercial tool made by a Michigan-based company called Northpointe. By the company’s account, the people it deems high-risk are re-arrested within 2 years in about 70% of cases. Part of Loomis’s challenge was specific to Northpointe’s practice of declining to share specific information about how its tool generates scores, citing competitive reasons. Not allowing a defendant to assess the evidence against him violated due process, he argued. (Berk shares the code for his systems, & criticizes commercial products such as Northpointe’s for not doing the same.) As the court was considering Loomis’s appeal, the journalism website ProPublica published an investigation looking at 7,000 Compas risk scores in a single county in Florida over the course of 2013 & 2014. It found that black people were almost twice as likely as white people to be labeled high-risk, then not commit a crime, while it was much more common for white people who were labeled low-risk to reoffend than black people who received a low-risk score. Northpointe challenged the findings, saying ProPublica had miscategorized many risk scores & ignored results that didn’t support its thesis. Its analysis of the same data found no racial disparities. Even as it upheld Loomis’s sentence, the Wisconsin Supreme Court cited the research on race to raise concerns about the use of tools like Compas. Going forward, it requires risk scores to be accompanied by disclaimers about their nontransparent nature & various caveats about their conclusions. It also says they can’t be used as the determining factor in a sentencing decision. The decision was the first time that such a high court had signaled ambivalence about the use of risk scores in sentencing. Sonja Starr, a professor at the Univ of Michigan’s law school & a prominent critic of risk assessment, thinks that Loomis’s case foreshadows stronger legal arguments to come. Loomis made a demographic argument, saying that Compas rated him as riskier because of his gender, reflecting the historical patterns of men being arrested at higher rates than women. But he didn’t frame it as an argument that Compas violated the Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment, which allowed the court to sidestep the core issue. Loomis also didn’t argue that the risk scores serve to discriminate against poor people. “That’s the part that seems to concern judges, that every mark of poverty serves as a risk factor,” Starr said. “We should very easily see more successful challenges in other cases.” Officials in Pennsylvania, which has been slowly preparing to use risk assessment in sentencing for the past six years, are sensitive to these potential pitfalls. The state’s experience shows how tricky it is to create an algorithm through the public policy process. To come up with a politically palatable risk tool, Pennsylvania established a sentencing commission. It quickly rejected commercial products like Compas, saying they were too expensive & too mysterious, so the commission began creating its own system. “If you want me to do a totally race-neutral forecast, you’ve got to tell me what variables you’re going to allow me to use, & nobody can, because everything is confounded with race & gender” Race was discarded immediately as an input. But every other factor became a matter of debate. When the state initially wanted to include location, which it determined to be statistically useful in predicting who would re-offend, the Pennsylvania Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers argued that it was a proxy for race, given patterns of housing segregation. The commission eventually dropped the use of location. Also in question: the system’s use of arrests, instead of convictions, since it seems to punish people who live in communities that are policed more aggressively. Berk argues that eliminating sensitive factors weakens the predictive power of the algorithms. “If you want me to do a totally raceneutral forecast, you’ve got to tell me what variables you’re going to allow me to use, & nobody can, because everything is confounded with race & gender,” he said. Starr says this argument confuses the differing standards in academic research & the legal system. In social science, it can be useful to calculate the relative likelihood that members of certain groups will do certain things. But that doesn’t mean a specific person’s future should be calculated based on an analysis of population wide crime stats, especially when the data set being used reflects decades of racial & socioeconomic disparities. It amounts to a computerized version of racial profiling, Starr argued. “If the variables aren’t appropriate, you shouldn’t be relying on them,” she said. Late this spring, Berk traveled to Norway to meet with a group of researchers from the Univ of Oslo. The Norwegian Gov’t gathers an immense amount of information about the country’s citizens & connects each of them to a single identification file, presenting a tantalizing set of potential inputs. Torbjørn Skardhamar, a professor at the Univ, was interested in exploring how he could use machine learning to make long-term predictions. He helped set up Berk’s visit. Norway has lagged behind the U.S. in using predictive analytics in criminal justice, & the men threw around a few ideas. Berk wants to predict at the moment of birth whether people will commit a crime by their 18th birthday, based on factors such as environment & the history of a new child’s parents. This would be almost impossible in the U.S., given that much of a person’s biographical information is spread out across many agencies & subject to many restrictions. He’s not sure if it’s possible in Norway, either, & he acknowledges he also hasn’t completely thought through how best to use such information. Caveats aside, this has the potential to be a capstone project of Berk’s career. It also takes all of the ethical & political questions & extends them to their logical conclusion. Even in the movie Minority Report, the Gov’t peered only hours into the future—not years. Skardhamar, who is new to these techniques, said he’s not afraid of making mistakes: They’re talking about them now, he said, so they can avoid future errors. “These are tricky questions,” he said, mulling all the ways the project could go wrong. “Making them explicit—that’s a good thing.” Page 6 Big Win: QuikTrip Fires KC Police Officer For Threatening 1%’ers – July 17, 2016 - Missouri - By David "Double D" Devereaux; www.MotorcycleProfilingProject.com - A recent incident involving an off duty police officer captured on video threatening members of 1% clubs with false arrest for trespassing, while working as a security guard at a QuikTrip gas station in Kansas City, mobilized the Nat’l Council of Clubs membership in Missouri & Kansas resulting in a significant victory for clubs in the region. Following a press release & official inquiries to the corporation & the KCPD, QuikTrip has renounced the actions of this off duty officer, released him from employment as a security guard, & clarified its policy of inclusion to all security guard personnel. This success in Kansas City is a recent example of how effective a mobilized grassroots movement like the Nat’l Council of Clubs can be & how to develop a pattern of evidence necessary for legislative relief. Mobilized Grassroots Response: A member of the Sons Of Silence MC was cognizant enough to videotape the prejudicial actions of off duty officer Marchant the night of June 25th. This member immediately forwarded the video to the NCOC for review & action. The NCOC coordinated with its membership in Kansas & Missouri & quickly formulated a plan of action. 1st, a statement describing the incident & released along with the video was published on motorcycleprofilingproject.com & forwarded to local media outlets, the QuikTrip corporation, & the KCPD. Second, the Region II NCOC spokesperson then drafted a letter of inquiry to QuikTrip corporate & formally requested QuikTrip’s official policy regarding customers that are members of 1% MCs & a request to clarify that policy to security personnel. July 1, 2016 - Chet Cadieux, CEO; QuikTrip Coporation 4705 South 129th Street; Tulsa, Oklahoma 74134 Sir: I’m writing today to report multiple occurrences of a disturbing nature happening at your location at I-435 & Front St in Kansas City, Missouri. On at least 2 recent occasions, individuals who happen to be members of 1%er MCs have visited this location to purchase fuel & other sundries from your convenience store. These individuals have visited this particular store on a regular basis for this purpose in the past. In fact, one of them reports that he stops by this store every night on his way to work to purchase a cold soda pop to take to work with him. On the 2 occasions that have been reported to me, an off-duty Kansas City, Missouri P.D. officer, named Officer [Marchant] (Badge Nbr 1706), who was apparently working as a security guard approached these individuals as soon as they arrived & ordered them off the property, saying that 1%ers weren’t allowed to patronize the store. The officer gave no reason for ordering them from the property except to say that they were on private property and, as long as KCMOPD officers were present, were trespassing. I am not aware that QuikTrip Corporation has announced a policy of refusing the business of 1%er MC members. Certainly, there was no indication that 1%ers weren’t welcome at your Front St location on the occasions I mentioned above; there were no signs that stated as such or even that MC colors weren’t allowed. When questioned, the clerks who were on duty at the store stated they had no problem with these individuals’ presence on the property. The only indication of any problem was Officer [Marchant’s] insistence that they were trespassing. Over the past several years, various federal district & appellate courts have ruled that by identifying with particular groups & wearing clothing that identifies the wearer as a member, citizens are exercising rights of free speech & assembly guaranteed by the US Constitution. By employing individuals in security positions who profile MC members & single them out for special treatment, QuikTrip Corporation is complicit in violations of their Constitutional rights. Please help me out here: Does QuikTrip have a policy that members of 1%er MCs aren’t allowed to patronize QT locations? If that is the case, I’ll be sure to publicize this policy so as to insure motorcycle club members know they aren’t welcome on QT property. This includes a significant number of big truck drivers within our community—not just within the Kansas City area but across the Midwest & Southern states—who regularly purchase fuel at QT locations. Several who I have personally spoken with stated that, if this is the policy of your company, they will be sure to avoid any QT location going forward. We only seek to be allowed to exercise our Constitutionally guaranteed rights as any other American can. Of course, we respect the right of QuikTrip to put in place whatever policies are legal & the company believes are appropriate on its private property. I respectfully ask that, if a prohibition on motorcycle club members is in fact in effect at your locations, you clarify this policy so we may be sure to comply. On the other hand, if Officer [Marchant] is mistaken & is acting outside of QT policy & procedures, I’d ask that you review security policies & make appropriate adjustments. Respectfully, Brian P. Cohoon; Spokesperson Region II, Nat’l Council of Motorcycle of Clubs cc: Terry Williams, Division Sales Manager, Kansas City Area Finally, a member of the Mongols MC who owns a trucking company informally reached out to another QuikTrip location in Missouri that his company regularly does business with. A member of the Mongols MC was also threatened with false arrest for trespassing by officer Marchant on June 12th. The amount of fuel sold to motorcyclists involved in the trucking industry in the Kansas City area is significant. This member’s informal inquiries were intended to determine whether this incident was isolated to one location or prevalent at other QuikTrip. The results of the NCOC’s coordinated efforts generated near immediate results. A Win For Motorcyclists, Club Members & 1%’ers. Initially, the manager of the other location writes to the Mongols MC member that informally inquired: “Wanted you to know that this officer is no longer working security for any QT stores – so sorry for the mistreatment of your friends & family – we highly value your business & respect.” Although not an official policy statement, this was the 1st result of mobilized action. On July 8th, the 1st official communication from QuikTrip corporate was received & strongly echoed the informal response. Page 7 Motorcycle Profiling at the State & Fed level becomes selfevident. July 6, 2016 – Mr. Brian P. Cohoon, Thank you for contacting QuikTrip. The direct answer to your question, “Does QuikTrip have a policy that members of the 1%er MCs aren’t allowed to patronize QT location”? The answer is QT does not have such a policy. The other request you referenced in your letter, was to clarify our policies & procedures with the various L.E. agencies that from time to time, we contract with to provide security officers. We have done so. QT, appreciates you taking time to contact us. QT, also appreciates that many of your members from Region II, Nat’l Council of Motorcycle Club, choose QT for their fuel & various sundries purchases. Mike Thornbrugh; Manager of Public & Gov’t Affairs A True 1%’er: Although LE falsely describes a 1%’er as an individual proudly displaying criminality, the individual that took the video of officer Marchant’s threats truly demonstrates what a 1%’er is really all about. A 1%’er stands his ground. A 1%’er is not afraid of being arrested based on idiotic & unconstitutional threats. A 1%’er is absolutely committed to the idea that we should all be free from abusive authority & social control. A 1%’er epitomizes a freedom fighter & the struggle against an emerging police state that operates by imposing fear & intimidation on innocent people. A 1%’er stands up for the basic liberties embodied in the 1st Amendment & the right to express this commitment to his brotherhood even when confronted by an authority figure attempting to illegally & unjustly discriminate. A 1%’er will be the 1st one to say “fuck off” when it needs to be said. A 1%’er commits to a life of loyalty, honor, respect for oneself & ones Brotherhood & will not back down from that commitment. Most people are too mentally weak & ethically compromised to be a true 1%’er. Most people would not risk their freedom or their lives to stand up for themselves or their community in the face of abusive police action. This 1%’er has integrity, intelligence, & foresight. And this 1%’er acted like a real man with confidence. as opposed to the intellectually & morally bankrupt officer Marchant. Conclusions: These results should be considered a significant victory. Although the KCPD has not officially responded, officer Marchant being relieved of his position as a security guard at all QuikTrip locations is a win for motorcyclists & MCs in the Midwest region. Moreover, an official statement from QuikTrip welcoming all motorcyclists, including 1%’ers, cuts against an inaccurate & vilified stereotype that motivated officer Marchant’s discriminatory mindset in the 1st place. As the pattern of evidence continues to build, the necessity for legislation addressing US House of Representatives Introduces Nat’l AntiMotorcycle Profiling Resolution – July 17, 2016 – U.S.A. – By David "Double D" Devereaux; www.MotorcycleProfilingProject.com - The 1st step towards a law prohibiting motorcycle profiling at the Nat’l level was introduced in the US House of Representatives on July 13, 2016 & referred to the House Committee on the Judiciary the same day. House Resolution 831 promotes public awareness of motorcycle profiling at a Nat’l level & urges state law enforcement officials [in all 50 states] to condemn “motorcycle profiling in written policies & training materials.” Although resolutions are nonbinding, H. Res. 831 makes motorcycle profiling a Nat’l discussion & directs states to condemn the practice. This policy directive to all 50 states will greatly assist the efforts in any state pursuing anti-motorcycle profiling & discrimination legislation. Res. 831 is a direct result of the collaborative efforts of the Motorcycle Riders Foundation, the Nat’l Council of Clubs, the Motorcycle Profiling Project, & the Nat’l Coalition of Motorcyclists. The MRF has taken the lead with feet on the ground in DC demonstrating the value of an established lobbying infrastructure in our nation’s Capital. The Motorcycle Profiling Project is primarily responsible for policy research, consultation, & substantive analysis. The NCOC is focused on media & public relations at the grassroots & Nat’l level. Finally, NCOM has endorsed the unified effort to pass legislation addressing motorcycle profiling at the Nat’l level. Res. 831 represents the first time that these organizations have explicitly collaborated on a Fed initiative. In terms of discrimination, motorcyclists, motorcycle rights organizations & motorcycle clubs have far more in common than differences. Every motorcyclist concerned about the issue should contact their US House of Representatives urging them to co-sponsor & or support H. Res. 831. Shooter gets resentencing for 2013 slaying outside Philly biker gang club – July 20, 2016 – Pennsylvania – By Daniel Craig; www.PhillyVoice.com - he man convicted of fatally shooting a member of a Philadelphia biker gang outside the group's West Philadelphia clubhouse will have his sentence revised, according to a Tuesday court ruling. The Superior Court of Pennsylvania has ruled that part of Daniel Tucker's sentence will be vacated & his case remanded to Common Pleas Court for resentencing for the incident that played out in the early morning hours of Jan. 6, 2013. But since Tucker's legal win only affects one of the many charges for which he was convicted, he will likely still spend at least 35 years in prison for the bloody scene that occurred outside the 61st & Market street clubhouse of the Philadelphia Chapter of the Wheels of Soul MC. The request for resentencing was one of five appeals made by Tucker, who raised issues with how witness testimony was presented & with the state's case that Tucker had "intent to kill" the 2 others shot outside the club that morning. The other 4 appeals were squashed by the Superior Court ruling. The Case: According to a trial court summary of the case facts, members of the gang were returning to the clubhouse around 5:40 a.m. after attending a funeral for a fellow member in Chicago. There, they were greeted by Tucker, a regular at the club despite not being a member of the gang. Tucker reportedly greeted them & opened fire, striking 3 members: Richard Motes Jr., Nezzer Pankey & Rodney Turner. Tucker fled down Dewey Street. Motes was struck in the thigh, while Turner was hit 2 times in the neck, once in the buttocks & another bullet grazed his left chest. Pankey was shot in the left side of the head, & the bullet traveled into his brain. He was pronounced dead later that evening. Mahogany Livingston had been at the club earlier & left at about 5 a.m., only to realize that she had left her cellphone there upon returning home. When she went back to get her phone, she said she noticed a man, who had been kicked out of the club earlier, waiting outside with his hands in the pocket of his sweatshirt, where there appeared to be the imprint of a gun. Aaron Burnett, who had been working security at the door, said he kicked Tucker out that morning for being unruly. When Tucker left, he said, “I will be right back," according to Burnett's testimony. Livingston said she told those in the club she had seen someone outside with a gun, & shortly after that, heard gunfire. An arrest warrant was issued for Tucker, & he was taken into custody in April 2013. The appeals: Tucker was originally sentenced in the Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas in April 2015 after a jury convicted him of 3rd-degree murder, 2 counts of attempted murder, aggravated assault, possession of an instrument of crime & 2 counts of violation of the Uniform Firearms Act. It is one of those counts of violating the Uniform Firearms Act for which Tucker will receive a resentencing. According to the Superior Court's ruling, Tucker was originally given a 5-to-10-year sentence for one of the violations, despite the fact that it was a 3rddegree felony, for which the statutory maximum sentence is seven years. Yet that will only alter a fraction of the totality of Tucker's continuous sentences, which amounted to 35 to 70 years in prison. In court, the prosecutor included a part of Poole's interview that referenced previous time Tucker had spent in jail, despite the court reminding the prosecutor to avoid making mentions of past time Tucker spent incarcerated. Yet because Tucker's legal counsel didn’t immediately file an objection following the reading of Poole's testimony, the Superior Court ruled that Tucker failed to raise the issue in a "timely & specific" manner. Another appeal from Tucker said that the verdicts of third-degree murder, which means no prior intent to kill, & attempted murder of Turner & Motes proved inconsistent. Tucker was acquitted on first-degree murder charges for Pankey's death. But because the attempted murder verdicts stand-alone based on the evidence to support them specifically, & not in relation to the acquittal of 1st-degree murder, Tucker's argument was "misdirected," the court ruled. Two other appeals regarding the admission of a previous statement made by Motes to police & denied continuance for DNA testing of a knife found at the scene were also shot down in the ruling. Tucker also called for a mistrial because of testimony from his ex-girlfriend, Brianna Poole, that was read in court by a prosecutor. Tucker was at her home at the time of his arrest. Mongol Mark Graham loses final appeal over attempted murder of Bandido Jacques Teamo - July 20, 2016 - Australia – By Kim Stephens; www.News.com.au - A Mongols bikie who claims he acted in self-defense when he gunned down a Bandido rival at a busy Gold Coast shopping centre in 2012 has lost his final bid to have his attempted murder charge quashed. An innocent passer-by was injured in the crossfire & shoppers were sent fleeing when, on a busy Sat afternoon in late April 2012, Mark James Graham strode into the Robina shopping centre & opened fire on rival gang member Jacques Teamo. Graham, who sports the facial tattoos “carnage”, “revenge” & the bikie tag “1%” was visiting family members on the Gold Coast from his Victorian base, when in what was described as a “chance encounter” he spotted Bandidos member Teamo in a store. CCTV footage then captured the entire incident, in which the Gold Coast’s simmering bikie war was thrust jarringly into the public realm. As Graham & Teamo became engaged in a tense standoff, shoppers continued to walk past them. A man pushing a baby in a pram can be seen passing the pair just moments before gunfire erupted, while a good Samaritan sporting boardshorts & a t-shirt stopped to return a $10 note to Graham, that, unbeknown to the man, fell from the bikie’s bag when he removed his gun. Within seconds of the good Samaritan moving away, Graham opened fire on Teamo, hitting him in the arm. As Teamo ran away, Graham pursued him, firing a second time but missing his target & hitting passer-by Kathy Devitt in the hip. As the sounds of gunshots ring out, the busy crowd of lunch time shoppers are then running for safety. Graham returned to Victoria, where he was arrested 2 days later. In the intervening 4 years, Graham argued, unsuccessfully, across 3 legal jurisdictions he acted in self-defence, arguing Teamo had pulled a knife on him. On Wed morning, the country’s highest court, the High Court of Australia, became the third criminal realm to reject his claim, after a Queensland Supreme Court jury found him guilty of attempted murder & the Court of Appeal later upheld the conviction. It was his final avenue of appeal. Graham will now serve the remainder of the 12-year sentence the Queensland Supreme Court handed him in late 2014. The shooting was a defining moment in the-then Campbell Newman-led Govt’s subsequent war on outlaw motorcycle gangs. While bikie turf wars had long been part of the fabric of southeast Queensland, & in particular, the so-called Glitter Strip of the Gold Coast, where their criminal activities flourished, when Graham opened fire on the crowded second floor of Robina Shopping Centre that day, the war spilled jarringly into the public realm. Teamo, now a former Bandido, survived the shooting & went on to gain notoriety about 18 months later as the ringleader of the infamous Broadbeach restaurant brawl, the largest public bikie brawl in Queensland history, in which 18 gang members were charged. It was that brawl that sparked the Newman Government’s strict anti-bikie laws, which made it a crime for patched gang members to associate publicly in groups. With Wed’s High Court ruling marking the final chapter in Graham’s legal fight, he will remain in the jail cell he has resided in since the jury in his Supreme Court trial returned a guilty verdict to both the attempted murder of Teamo & the unlawful wounding of Ms. Devitt on Oct 1, 2014. He will remain there for at least another decade. -------------------------------------------------------- Motorcycle Clubs Are Not Street Gangs; Support the Right to Fly… Motorcycle Clubs are NOT Street Gangs! MC Not MG: Got it Dickhead? Theirs is a Difference. I’m a Biker not your next Road Kill Open Your Eyes… Free Road, Full Tank, & Full Throttle…!!! Bikers are never alone… Page 9 Proposed anti-consorting laws for bikies dropped over human rights concerns - July 22, 2016 - Australia - By Markus Mannheim; www.CanberraTimes.com.au - The ACT Gov’t has ditched its proposal to prevent bikies from consorting, saying it has struggled to draft laws that satisfy police while respecting human rights. Atty-General Simon Corbell, who will not recontest his seat at the Oct election, said he had too little time left as minister to strike a satisfactory balance between the competing priorities. However, he said the Gov’t would revisit the issue if it was re-elected & he would announce new funding soon to help police crackdown on outlaw gangs. It is understood the controversial plan – which is opposed by Greens minister Shane Rattenbury & much of Labor's Left faction – was set to spark a divisive debate at Sat's ACT Labor conference. Corbell's decision coincides with the release of a damning Ombudsman's report on similar laws in NSW, which found police in that state repeatedly misused the powers – designed to dismantle organised crime & motorcycle gangs – against children, the homeless & Aborigines. The ACT Gov’t had released a discussion paper on its proposed legislation just last month, which foreshadowed 2-year jail terms for people who breached warnings not to associate with known criminals. Anti-consorting laws, used in NSW & Queensland, aim to disrupt bikie & crime groups by preventing their members from meeting or speaking. ACT Policing had urged the Gov’t to grant it similar powers & Mr. Corbell first mooted legislation 18 months ago, saying: "We need to keep ahead of outlaw motorcycle gangs." However, he told Fairfax Media on Fri it had been "difficult to reconcile the operational needs of police with the concerns of human rights protection agencies" & lawyers' groups. "I've always said very clearly that anti-consorting legislation will only be brought forward if the ACT can achieve human rightscompliant legislation," he said. "To achieve that will take a longer period of time than is available to me ... Therefore, this work will continue & it will be for another minister to take it forward." “I've always said very clearly that anti-consorting legislation will only be brought forward if the ACT can achieve human rights-compliant legislation.” - Atty-General Simon Corbell The territory's Humans Rights Commissioner, Helen Watchirs, told the Gov’t last month she opposed the laws, saying criminalising "the act of associating with a particular class of individual should have no place in a modern democratic society". "It is disappointing that the ACT Gov’t is actively proposing to enact consorting laws from other jurisdictions, after having maintained a principled position previously that it would 'tackle [organized crime] based on the offending behavior, based on the offence, [and] based on the criminality'." However, Opposition Leader Jeremy Hanson, who has backed anti-consorting laws for seven years, said on Fri the Liberals would introduce their own legislation if they won office in Oct. "It's very disappointing that the Gov’t has thrown such critical legislation in the too-hard basket," he said. "This is needed to prevent increased bike gang activity. Since NSW introduced laws, police advice is that bikies use weaker laws as an opportunity to conduct activity in the ACT." The ACT has far fewer bikies than NSW or QLD: The Gov’t estimates the 3 outlaw groups in Canberra have just 45 members. However, police fear the rival gangs – the Rebels, Nomads & Comancheros – are becoming more active as they vie for control. Corbell acknowledged police desires for greater powers against these groups but said that "ultimately, this is a matter of the elected Gov’t to decide". "It's clear to me that police do need further tools but they need to be human rights-compliant, & there is a need for further work to be done to achieve that outcome." Questions abound in recent arrest for 1979 murder of Bandidos leader’s son - July 24, 2016 – Texas - By Dane Schiller; www.HoustonChronicle.com - Don “Mother” Chambers, founder of the Bandidos MC, lived long enough to make peace with the death of his son near the Astrodome 36 years ago, but not long enough to see the recent arrest in the decades-old case. The booking of an elderly Ohio man for the fatal 1979 shooting, however, is sparking more questions than answers. Do authorities have the right man? And what prompted interest in the case more than a generation later? The Chambers family waits to see if after all these years they’ll have answers. “I’d like to look at him personally & say, ‘Why did you do that?’” Donna Chambers said this week, after learning about the arrest in her brother’s death. Defense Attys, however, are adamant the wrong man was arrested & are pushing for the charges to be dropped. “This is someone that has unfortunately been arrested for something he truly didn’t do,” lawyer Catherine Samaan said. “He has been misidentified.” Leon Dudley, 69, of Ohio, was arrested in June on a decades-old warrant, shackled & shipped in chains by bus to Houston. After 12 days in transit & a week in a Harris County jail, a state district judge here released him on minimal bond - $30,000 for a murder charge. He was allowed to return to Ohio on the condition he check in regularly by phone. Dudley has no criminal record aside from traffic violations, according to police. He is married & has lived in Ohio for decades. Samaan said when Dudley heard that police had been to his door looking for him, he went to the station to ask what they wanted. The Harris County District Atty’s Office declined to comment on the arrest but said it is reviewing evidence. Stephen Chambers was killed in the early morning hours of Nov. 3, 1979, outside the Dome Shadows night club, where his wife worked as a waitress. Chambers & his brother-inlaw, Charles Philleo, were outside the night club when Chambers’ wife reportedly got into an argument in the parking lot. It ended with shots fired by a man with a handgun in a 1973 Mercury sedan. Chambers was in shot in the head & died later at Ben Taub Hospital. Philleo was shot in the jaw but survived; he died years later of natural causes. The shooter fled the scene. Investigators said that the shooter did not appear to have a specific target. Suspect ‘subdued’: Police said Dudley was identified in a photo line-up & was fingered by his roommate, who said he was in the car with Dudley & saw him open fire, police said. Dudley was believed to have left the city shortly after the shooting. An aging Harris County court file contains indictments for murder & attempted murder issued Nov. 15, 1979, & the original warrant for the arrest of Leon “Stash” Dudley. A typed “Defendant Description” sheet describes him as having a “heavy” build on his 6-foot-1-inch frame but notes that authorities were unable to make an arrest because of “insufficient defendant descriptors.” Samaan said her client didn’t do it. She indicated the problem is rooted in the original case investigation but declined to be specific & declined to let Dudley speak to the Chronicle. “My duty at this point is to my client, & I’m going to take care of him,” Samaan said. “I’m sure people can understand the horror right now. He’s a good man with a good family.” Houston Police Detective Darcus Shorten said Cold Case Unit investigators were not actively searching for a suspect in the case when the Gulf Coast Violent Offenders Task Force found an address for a Leon Dudley near Cincinnati, Ohio. Shorten described Dudley as “subdued” when questioned by police, saying he had limited conversation & did not discuss the shooting. Chambers said her father - who founded the Bandidos in Houston in 1966 & died in 1999 - said there was no tie between the Bandidos & her brother’s death. At the time of his son’s death, Don Chambers was in prison for a double murder near El Paso over a drug deal but was temporarily allowed out to attend the funeral. Chambers said she’d heard about the argument outside the Dome Shadows & that her former sister-in-law, who is white, may have fired off some racial epithets. Wait & see: Chambers said she has lost contact with the woman long ago & has nothing to do with her. She said she long struggled with her brother’s death but that her mother, who died in 2013, took it hardest. “The person I don’t think was ever at peace with my brother’s murder was my mom,” Chambers said. “She used to say, ‘You don’t know what it is like to lose a child.’” Chambers said she’ll wait & see what happens in court regarding Dudley or whoever killed her brother. “One thing I have learned from this, (the killer) has to live with what he did, not me,” she said. “I have to live without my brother.” Jeff Pike, a recent Pres of the Bandidos who lives in Conroe, said the club has no issue with Dudley. “We have no animosity toward this guy,” Pike said. “I didn’t even know Don had a son.” Cripple Creek & Teller County Braces for Hells Angels Rally – July 26, 2016 – Colorado – By www.MountainJackpot.com Cripple Creek is biker country, with southern Teller bustling with armies of Harleys on any weekend in the summer due to the ideal climate & scenery, coupled with the added perks of 24/7 gambling & cocktails. After all, this is the home for the Salute to American Veterans Rally & motorcycle ride that attracts tens of thousands of riders every Aug. Other biker groups often congregate in the Creek & Victor area & aren’t afraid to display their tattoos & club patches. This biker-friendly trend will roar into high gear this week, as 200 to 250 members of the HAs, one of the most notorious & often controversial outlaw motorcycle organizations, with actual military ties dating back to 1948, rolls into the area for a Nat’l run. Members of the group from across the country this week will frequent local casinos/restaurants & shops, tour the region & play recreational softball. At the same time, they will have meetings & will occupy lodging rooms & campsites in the area. Even with the image associated with HAs name, local leaders, LE authorities & business operators are welcoming members of the club with mostly open arms. Many rooms in the area are booked, & some business folks see the run, which officially kicked off July 25, as a boon for the region. “We don’t have any problem with it. They probably just want to be left alone & have a good time,” said one local long-time resident & member of the Two-Mile-High Club. But some locals are a little apprehensive about the group’s past image & history, & say it just takes 1 bad incident to create a disaster. Plus, recent memories of the melee that occurred at the Colo Motorcycle Expo last Jan in Denver still linger in the minds of Coloradoans. This incident, capped by a fight between rivaling gangs, left 1-person dead & caused many injuries. However, local LE officials say the community is more than equipped to handle the HAs Nat’l run, which often occurs in mountain locales in the Rocky Mountain region. “We are treating this like any large event,” said Cripple Creek Police Chief Mike Rulo “We don’t expect any trouble, but we are prepared. Our main concern is for the safety of the citizens. There will be an increased LE presence in the area.” In many ways, Rulo compares the preparation for the HAs Nat’l run to what occurs for the Salute to American Veterans rally & even the state-wide USA cycling competition. “We share a lot of resources,” said the police chief. He said the Cripple Creek PD will be working closely with the Teller County Sheriff’s Dept & other agencies in the region. “We have a good plan in place.” Rulo said the Nat’l run has occurred in past years without any glitches, & expects the same scenario for Cripple Creek. The HAs run has been held in the past in Gunnison, CO, Cody, WY & in MT. Last year, it was held in Clarksburg, VA, a community of about 1,100 residents. Rulo described it as a gathering for members of the group & a mini-vacation, as they prepare to head to Sturgis, SD, the site of the biggest biker gathering in the country. The police chief said he hasn’t received that many concerns about the rally from local residents & business operators. According to local business owner & Cripple Creek/Victor RE1 District School Board member Tim Braun, many locals & business operators are supportive of the run. “We don’t see any problem with it,” said Braun. “There haven’t been any problems in the other towns where this was held. It is really a non-issue.” Some business operators, in fact, are hoping for an increase in commerce during the run. Similar sentiments are echoed by Cripple Creek City Admin Ray DuBois. He said that the goodwill between biker members & residents, which occurs at many of these events, is often overlooked. “People just remember the bad incidents,” admitted DuBois. To date, he said he has been quite impressed with the professionalism displayed by the HAs’ Nat’l run coordinators. “They have been very cooperative. So far, everything has been extremely positive,” said the city administrator. DuBois said HAs representatives have mostly inquired about facilities in the area & the availability of local services. Officials are mum, though, about specific meeting locations. A recreational softball game, involving many members of the HAs, is scheduled for the afternoon of July 28 at the Cresson baseball diamond. In recent years, the HAs organization, which now operates as a corporation, has tried to improve its image through charity events, recreational activities in the host communities & toys for tots drives... Past image still a subject of concern: But still, the past ruffian image of Hells Angels, highlighted in Hunter Thompson’s famous 1966 nonfiction book, “HAs: The Strange & Terrible Saga of the Outlaw Motorcycle Gang,” haunts the organization. Thompson rode with the outlaw gang for an extended period & nearly got stomped to death at the end of his journalistic stint with the club. Many also remember the Altamont rock festival in Calif, when members of the HAs, acting as security guards, beat up many concert-goers & even the lead male singer of the Jefferson Airplane, Marty Balin. Mick Jagger, lead singer, of the Rolling Stones band, pleaded with the club members to ease up on their security tactics, which authorities claim led to a fatal stabbing & a bevy of injuries & other deaths. Around that time, the HAs were strongly involved in the hippie counter-culture movement & often a hung out with such psychedelic icons as Ken Kesey, Timothy Leary, Allen Ginsberg & Jerry Garcia. Since then, their image has mellowed quite a bit & many of their famous members & leaders have gotten older. However, the Dept of Justice still regards the HAs as an organized crime syndicate, contending the organization is involved with drugs, prostitution, domestic violence, intimidation & violence. Angels’ leaders, however, say this perception is false, saying they are just motorcycle enthusiasts who are more known now for organizing charity events & social gatherings. Many members claim they are persecuted by police & Fed agencies because they opt to live unorthodox lifestyles. Page 11 The Hells Angels MC was actually founded in San Bernadino in 1948. The name stems from a military squadron in China In World War II. Today, the club has charters throughout the United States totaling more than 2,500 members, & on every continent except Antarctica. Rulo declined to comment on whether the organization has improved its standing with law officers. “Our job is not to pass judgement on the HAs, but to make sure that our citizens are safe,” said Rulo. According to inquiries his agency has conducted, the police chief has concluded that the Nat’l Hells Angels’ runs have occurred without any problems. And in reality, Cripple Creek is a prime spot for motorcycle & sports-car enthusiasts in the summer. “Who wouldn’t want to come up here for a motorcycle ride,” noted DuBois. Rulo said that the club members will probably spend a good portion of their time touring the area & enjoying the sites. “They want to come up here for a lot of the same reasons that you or I & many people like coming up here for,” said the police chief. Supreme Court Guts the 4th Amendment - Aug 5, 2016 - USA - By David “Double D” Devereaux; www.Motorcycle ProfilingProject.com - Incriminating evidence found during an illegal stop should be considered fruit from the poisonous tree. The Supreme Court has long excluded incriminating evidence found as a result of an illegal stop conducted without reasonable suspicion or probable cause. Over time the court has embraced exceptions to this rule. But recently the court created an expansive exception which gives law enforcement much more authority to search persons stopped for no reason at all. In the words of Justice Sonia Sotomayor, this decision “says that your body is subject to invasion while courts excuse the violation of your rights. It implies that you are not a citizen of a democracy.” This new exception means that anyone can be stopped at any time, regardless of guilt or innocence. What can be done? State legislation is one of the only mechanisms available to provide civil liberty protection beyond limited federal minimums. The Court’s Decision: The U.S. Supreme Court ruled on June 20th that courts need not suppress evidence of a crime obtained through an illegal stop if an outstanding warrant is discovered after the seizure. The facts of the case: A man named Edward Strieff was seen leaving a location under surveillance for drug dealing based on a tip from an anonymous source. Narcotics detective Douglas Fackrell admitted he had no reason to believe Strieff had done anything wrong. But he still illegally stopped Streiff & detained him while radioing in to check for outstanding warrants. A warrant for a minor traffic offense came back so the detective searched Streiff & discovered a small amount of illegal drugs. The Utah Supreme Court threw out the conviction because it stemmed from an illegal stop. But in a 5-3 decision the majority said that “officer Fackrell’s discovery of the outstanding warrant broke the connection to the unconstitutional stop.” As a result, the evidence found in the search could be used in court. Why The Courts Decision Impacts All Americans, Including Motorcyclists: Justice Sotomayor’s dissent explains the dangerous precedent. Police will be able to stop anyone on a “whim or a hunch”. That illegal stop can then be extended to search for a minor outstanding warrant, a warrant that the police officer didn’t know existed before the illegal seizure. A warrant obtained as a direct result of an illegal stop which can then be used to conduct a search & obtain incriminating evidence. Previous to June 20th, evidence obtained in this way could not be used in court. The impact of the court’s decision is staggering & impacts Many Americans. Justice Sotomayor noted that state & federal databases say “there are more than 7.8 million outstanding warrants, the vast majority of which are for minor offenses. In New Orleans, a third of the 60,000 arrests in 2011 were of people with outstanding traffic or misdemeanor warrants for infractions such as unpaid tickets.” In some communities the vast majority of people have outstanding warrants. NPR reported on June 20, 2016 that “in Ferguson, MO., a town with a population of 21,000, 16,000 people had outstanding warrants — in one case for failure to feed the meter with enough quarters, according to the Justice Dept.” “We must not pretend that the countless people who are routinely targeted by police,” are, as the majority maintains, “isolated” cases, says Sotomayor. “They are the canaries in the coal mine” who warn us that “unlawful police stops corrode all our civil liberties. Until their voices matter too, our justice system will continue to be anything but.” What Can Be Done To Preserve Eroding Liberties? The answer to an expansive rights base resides in state legislatures & state constitutions. State lawmakers have the power to pass legislation that provides more protection than federal minimums as interpreted by the Supreme Court. State laws prohibiting illegal stops & providing exclusion of illegally obtained evidence, including relief for victims, would provide protection now unavailable at the federal level. Laws prohibiting motorcycle profiling are an example of such state protections. Supporting motorcycle rights organizations & events is one of the best ways motorcyclists can have a direct impact on state legislation. -------------------------------------------------------- Stress Management... Just in case you are having a rough day, here is a stress management technique recommended in all the latest psychological journals. The funny thing is that it really does work & will make you smile. 1. Picture yourself lying on your stomach on a warm rock that hangs out over a crystal clear stream. 2. Picture yourself with both your hands dangling in the cool running water. 3. Birds are sweetly singing in the cool mountain air. 4. No one knows your secret place. 5. You are in total seclusion from that hectic place called the world. 6. The soothing sound of a gentle waterfall fills the air with a cascade of serenity. 7. The water is so crystal clear that you can easily make out the face of the person you are holding underwater... An American Biker Ironhorse writer; American Biker Poet I tend to push the limits; I ride against the wind. I look upon my vices; Without the guilt of sin. I dig the smell of leather; I like the look of chrome. I prefer the feel of a woman; Without the silicone. I am all for getting even; I settle every debt. I have faced many a demon; Without a thought of regret. I believe in God And country; I know sacrifice. I honor those who’ve given; Without regard of price. I am an American Biker; I don’t subscribe to hype. I ask only that you see me; Without the stereotype. Page 12 Statistics Prove Outlaw MCs Not A Public Threat – Aug 10, 2016 – U.S.A. – By David “Double D” Devereaux; www.MotorcycleProfilingProject.com - Authorities openly target MCs, particularly 1% clubs, selectively enforcing the law, in order to harass or investigate individuals based on the belief that they are definitionally criminals. This perspective is based on an outdated stereotype that is ignorant of statistical reality & foundational constitutional principles that have been consistently confirmed by the Supreme Court & other Fed courts. Many Fed & state authorities insist that what they call “outlaw motorcycle gangs/OMG’s” are a significant organized crime threat in America, despite the statistical data that proves criminal activity involving these clubs is negligible at best. (Note: the OMG tag is universally rejected by the clubs labeled gangs by LE.) Tens of millions of dollars are spent targeting & prosecuting MCs based on a fallacy of composition. The regurgitated actions of the few are used to create a generalized assumption about thousands of people, regardless of statistical reality. Crimes committed by individual members of MCs are highly sensationalized & presented to be representative of the entire community. In fact, the statistical data that does exist, including the data generated by these same agencies, proves definitively that clubs labeled OMG’s represent a myopic percentage of criminal activity in this country. Indeed, data suggests that LE agencies commit & sanction many more major crimes than MCs. The Numbers: To begin to paint an accurate picture it is necessary to know how many members of these clubs & convicted felons there are in the US. Statistics say that there are 44,000 members of clubs labeled OMG’s, 24,000,000 convicted felons, & 6,851,000 whom are currently under correctional supervision. ◾The FBI’s Nat’l Gang Intelligence Center estimates that there are 44,000 members of so-called OMG’s in the U.S. According to the NGIC, “OMGs are organizations whose members use their MCs as conduits for criminal enterprises. Although some LE agencies regard only One Percenters as OMGs, the NGIC, for the purpose of this assessment, covers all OMG criminal organizations, including OMG support & puppet clubs.” ◾According to the Princeton Univ study, Growth in the U.S. Ex-Felon & Ex-Prisoner Population, 1948 TO 2010, 20 million people in 2010 had a felony conviction. Accounting for growth rates, there were approximately 24 million people in 2014 with a felony conviction. ◾According to the US Bureau of Justice Statistics, 6,851,000 adults were under correctional supervision (probation, parole, jail, or prison) in 2014. (see BJS, “Correctional Populations In The United States, 2014”) Statistical Reality- OMCs Members a very small fraction of convicted felons in the US.: Although there is no statistical data tracking the number of MC members who are convicted felons, LE would have you believe that all members of clubs they have labeled OMG’s are criminals. Despite the obvious inaccuracy of this claim, - most members of Clubs labeled OMG’s have no criminal record- let us assume for the sake of argument, & to demonstrate the absurdity of LE assumptions, that every member of every club that authorities label a criminal gang is a convicted felon. Even if all 44,000 members of clubs labeled OMG’s were convicted felons, the overall impact on felony convictions would be minuscule. Do the math. 44,000 members/24,000,000 convicted felons=0.00183333 or .183333%. The impact on those currently under correctional supervision would be similarly insignificant. 44,000 members/6,851,000 currently under supervision=0.00642242 or .64%. A fraction of 1% does not justify the stereotype of criminality. It’s that simple. The following Pie Chart graphically demonstrates the absurdity of focusing on MCs as a LE priority. Actual Number of Convicted Felons Among Clubs Labeled OMG’s: Although the NGIC estimates the number of members, no data on how many members are actually convicted felons is available. On Aug 2, 2016 the MPP conducted a short survey with a small Nat’l sampling to generate data on the issue. The survey data is derived solely from MCs labeled OMG’s by LE. The survey asked 2 questions; 1- number of members in your Chapter; & 2- number of convicted felons in your Chapter. Survey Results: # of Chapters included in Survey: 5 (States surveyed include Washington, Oregon, California, Texas, & Maryland.) Average Number of members: 15 Average number of Convicted Felons per Chapter: 3 or 20% 15/3 WA 16/4 OR 14/3 TX 14/1 MD 16/4 CA The survey results revealed that there was an average of 1 convicted felon in 5, or 20%. Although the above example, which counts every member of targeted clubs as convicted felons, demonstrates that clubs definitionally have a minimal crime print, 20% of members is a far more realistic projection than 100%. 20% of 44,000 = 8,800 club members that are convicted felons. 8,800 represents an almost non-existent 0.036% of the 24,000,0000 total convicted felons in the US. Page 13 Why Are There Felons In MCs? Options in society for most felons are extremely limited in terms of employment & some basic civil liberties & often felons feel rejected & stigmatized by society. MC culture was created by individuals that had been rejected by society after having returned home from war. MCs provide an opportunity for reintegration to those released from incarceration without the constraints of a judgmental mainstream. The MC world is a classless society in terms of mainstream establishment social hierarchy. It doesn’t matter whether you’re a common laborer or an executive. When you walk into the club world, status is dictated by respect & honor & not your education or job title. Club culture provides an alternative way of life free from the condemnations of the mainstream. Everyone has to live by the same legal schematic. But not everyone has to reinforce or acknowledge mainstream social hierarchies or elitist behavior. Note: Some crimes are definitionally despicable & individuals that have committed these crimes are not accepted, or they are ostracized, from the Club community. Crimes targeting children are an example of such an offense. Hypocrisy Defined: LE Authorizes Informants To Commit Thousands of Major Crimes Annually: For decades, LE agencies have authorized informants to commit major crimes. Labeled “otherwise illegal activity”, these sanctioned major crimes are considered to be necessary for undercover informant work. But, aside from the FBI, “otherwise illegal activity” has not been quantified by other state & Fed agencies. In 1997, according to the criminal defense firm O’Brien Hatfield, PA, “It came to light when reporters revealed the FBI had authorized mobster “Whitey” Bulger to continue his criminal enterprise long after he became an FBI informant in 1975. Since that revelation, the U.S. Atty General has required the FBI to keep reports on “otherwise illegal activity” by its “confidential human sources.” But obtaining these reports has proven difficult over the years. At least until members of the press were able to obtain some quantifiable numbers from the FBI. The Huffington Post Reported on Dec 27,2013: “In a Jan. 14, 2013, letter to Justice Dept officials, obtained by The Huffington Post through a Freedom of Information Act request, FBI officials disclosed that its 56 field offices authorized informants to break the law at least 5,939 times during the 2012 calendar year. USA Today reported earlier this year that the bureau allowed its informants to break the law 5,658 times in 2011.” O’Brien Hatfield explains that the reports “indicate the otherwise illegal activities were considered Tier I & Tier II violations. The Justice Dept defines a Tier I violation as activity that would be criminal if not for the authorization of a Fed prosecutor, & includes major crimes such as drug trafficking, public corruption & crimes of violence. Tier II violations aren’t necessarily less serious but can authorized by a senior FBI field manager.” “Unfortunately, other LE agencies are not required to keep such reports, although it is widely assumed that all levels of LE allow informants to commit crimes during investigations”, says O’Brien Hatfield. Annually, nearly 6,000 major crimes are being authorized by the FBI alone. Considering that all levels of LE authorize criminal acts, the actual numbers would be truly staggering. All levels of LE sanction informants to commit major crimes in order to arrest & convict other individuals for committing these same crimes. This hypocrisy overwhelms the amount of criminal activity in the club community many times over. Study Proves Police Commit More Felonies Than Outlaw Bikers: Police officers are arrested about 1,100 times a year, or roughly 3 officers charged every day, according to a new Nat’l study, thought to be the 1st-ever nationwide look at police crime, conducted by researchers at Bowling Green State Univ through a grant from the Justice Dept’s Nat’l Institute of Justice. The most common crimes were simple assault, aggravated assault, & significant numbers of sex crimes. About 72% of officers (825 annually) charged in cases with known outcomes are convicted, more than 40% of the crimes are committed on duty. The number of convicted felons in clubs labeled OMG’s, as explained above, is approximately 8,800 total. The number of convicted cops over the last 11 years, according to the only data that exists, is 9,075. (825 convicted cops per year x 11 years). More cops have been convicted of felonies in the last 11 years than the total number of felons in Clubs LE labels OMG’s. This is hypocrisy at the highest level. Statistically, without bias, police are more of a threat to public safety than outlaw MCs have ever been. Conclusions: MCs Are Not a Nat’l LE Issue.: Considered in context with data suggesting LE is a larger contributor to crime, the analysis leaves no doubt that clubs targeted by LE are targeted based on stereotype as opposed to statistical reality. The vastly expensive surveillance, investigations, harassment & profiling campaigns conducted by authorities are simply not justified based on the irrefutable statistical reality that MCs mathematically have a negligible to non-existent impact on the level & magnitude of felony crime in the United States. Outlaw Motorcycle Clubs Peacefully Assemble - Aug 14, 2016 - U.S.A. – By David “Double D” Devereaux; www.MotorcycleProfilingProject.com - Many in the mainstream media have missed the historic significance of who was standing together during the Nat’l Council of Clubs Press Conference held in Austin at Shamrock Cycles on May 17, 2016. The press event announced a Nat’l Protest Against Motorcycle Profiling & Discrimination. The story took a backseat to regurgitated sensationalism focused on Waco. Members of clubs that some media & LE have vilified were standing in unity behind the common ground issue of motorcycle profiling & discrimination. There were clubs from around the country in attendance, including representatives from the Outlaws MC, the Mongols MC, the Vagos MC, the Hells Angels MC, the Sons Of Silence MC, the Devils Diciples MC, the Hessians MC, the Valiants MC, the Infidels MC, the Outsiders MC, & many Clubs from Texas ranging from Christian Clubs to Veterans MC’s. To be clear, this does not represent any kind of peace treaty or end to historical rivalries among MCs. What the NCOC does represent is a decision by participants to stand together & project a unified voice on common ground issues that impact all MCs & their members. Issues like the 1st Amendment, discrimination & profiling. I suppose peaceful political protest is just not interesting enough to most mainstream media outlets, particularly events that disprove & dismantle their choice to perpetuate irresponsible sensationalism relating to MCs. -------------------------------------------------------- The children were lined up in the cafeteria of a local Catholic elementary school for lunch. At the head of the table was a large pile of apples. The nun made a note, & posted it on the apple tray: “Take only ONE. God is watching.” Moving further along the lunch line, at the other end of the table was a large pile of chocolate chip cookies. A child had written a note, “Take all you want. God is watching the apples.” Page 14 City of Rochester Says OK for Businesses to Ban People Wearing Motorcycle Gear - Nov 26, 2013 – Minnesota – By Edie Grossfield; www.AmericanBikerTalkRadio.com - Rochester bars & restaurants are not breaking the law when they deny access to people wearing jackets or other clothing that displays the names or symbols of the Rochester Chapter of the Sons Of Silence & Med City Crew MCs, said Rochester City Atty Terry Adkins in a letter to the clubs' lawyer. Atty Michael Bader, of St. Paul, who represents the Confederation Of Clubs of Minnesota, stated in an Oct. 31 letter to Adkins & Rochester Police Chief Roger Peterson that Rochester establishments discriminate against MC members & that the Rochester P.D. advises the bars & restaurants to do so. Bader did not return phone calls for this report. In a Post-Bulletin interview earlier this month, Bader threatened a lawsuit against the city unless Peterson would try to stop bars & restaurants from denying access to Sons Of Silence & Med City Crew members who wear their club's names, symbols & signs in the establishments. Such discrimination violates Minnesota Statute 604.12, unless a person's behavior is endangering other people or property, or the person's clothing "is obscene or includes the name or symbol of a criminal gang," according to the statute. The point of disagreement between Bader & Adkins is whether the Rochester Chapter of the Sons Of Silence & the Med City Crew are criminal gangs. Bader contends that neither group has shown a "pattern of criminal activity," which is required by Minnesota Statute 609.229 before establishments can deny access to them. However, after talking with the Rochester P.D. & reviewing the information it provided, Adkins said he found a pattern of criminal activity for the Sons Of Silence & the Med City Crew, which supports the Sons Of Silence. "The Rochester P.D. tells me that the Sons Of Silence is a motorcycle criminal gang with a common name whose members wear clothing containing an identifying sign/symbol," Adkins stated in his Nov. 18 letter to Bader. Adkins provided the information upon which he based his conclusion, including five criminal incidents between 1999 & 2013 involving Sons Of Silence members in Rochester, St. Cloud, Iowa & Colorado. One of the incidents was a large fight at Whiskey Bones Roadhouse in Rochester in Jan 2011. The Organized Crime & Gang Section of the U.S. Dept of Justice has concluded that the Sons Of Silence is "an organization whose members use their MC as a conduit for criminal enterprises," Adkins wrote in the letter. "As such, I have concluded that the Sons Of Silence is a 'criminal gang' as that term is defined by Minn. Stat. 609.229, subd. 1," Adkins wrote. November 18, 2013 - Michael M. Bader, LLC; Atty at Law 1500 U.S. Bank Center; 101 East Fifth St; St. Paul, MN 55101 Dear Mr. Bader: Thank you for your Oct 31, 2013, letter regarding the Sons Of Silence MC, their clothing that identifies their affiliation, & the Rochester P.D.’s position that the Sons Of Silence is a criminal gang as that term is defined by state law. I have met with Chief of Police Roger Peterson to gather additional facts regarding your letter. With those facts in hand, I am now able to respond to you. Minn. Stat. §604.12 does indeed prohibit a place of public accommodation from restricting access to a person solely because the person operates a motorcycle or is wearing clothing that displays the name of an organization or association. However, as you indirectly conceded in your letter, there is a major exception to this statutory prohibition concerning clothing that “includes the name or symbol of a criminal gang.” Minn. Stat. §604.12, subd. 2(b)(2). To determines what constitutes a “criminal gang,” the Legislature directs us to Minn. Stat. §609.229, subd. 1. This statute defines “criminal gang” to mean the following: 1. Has, as one of its primary activities, the commission of 1 or more of the offenses listed in Minn. Stat. §609.11, subd. 9; 2. Has a common name or identifying sign/symbol; and 3. Includes members or individually or collectively engage in or have engaged in a pattern of criminal activity. The Rochester P.D. tells me that the Sons Of Silence is a motorcycle criminal gang with a common name whose members wear clothing containing an identifying sign/symbol. The Dept also provided me with the following information: 1. On April 4, 2001, agents of the ATF arrested 6 Sons Of Silence motorcycle gang members on charges of trafficking cocaine, cannabis, & methamphetamine as well as unlawful firearms possession. These arrests occurred in Iowa. 2. On Oct 9, 1999, 37 Sons Of Silence motorcycle gang members were arrested on drug trafficking & illegal weapons charges in Denver. As part of this undercover operation involving the Sons Of Silence, federal agents seized 20 pounds of methamphetamine, 35 guns, four hand grenades, 2 suppressors, cash, & motorcycles. 3. On Jan 15, 2011, a large fight occurred at the Whiskey Bones Bar in Rochester involving, among others, members of the Sons Of Silence & Med City Crew. 4. In May, 2013, a large fight occurred at the Roadkill Sports Grill in Greeley, Colorado involving rival gang members from Hell’s Angels, Sons Of Silence, & Silent Warriors. Two people were knifed during the fight & gun shots were fired. 5. On Nov 2, 2013, approximately 20 members of the Sons Of Silence & Iron Order gangs were involved in a fight at a St. Cloud, MN bar. One Sons Of Silence member, Scott Steele, was arrested for Second Degree Felony Assault. Many of the Sons Of Silence gang members were armed with handguns at the time of the fight. 6. The Organized Crime & Gang Section of the U.S. Dept of Justice has concluded that the Sons Of Silence (and other Outlaw Motorcycle Gangs), is an organization whose members use their motorcycle club as a conduit for criminal enterprises. This is a highly structured criminal organization “whose members engage in criminal activities such as violent crime, weapons trafficking, & drug trafficking.” The Justice Dept concluded that the Sons Of Silence members “have been implicated in numerous criminal activities, including murder, assault, drug trafficking, intimidation, extortion, prostitution operations money laundering, weapons trafficking, & motorcycle & motorcycle parts theft.” You can find this report at the following Internet location: http://www.justice.gov/criminal/ocgs/gangs/motorcycle.html ... 7. The Med City Crew’s website states “We Support Sons Of Silence MC.” Page 15 The above information clearly shows a pattern of criminal activity involving members of the Sons Of Silence motorcycle gang. As such, I have concluded that the Sons Of Silence is a “criminal gang” as that term is defined by Minn. Stat. 609.229, subd. 1. The City disagrees with your claim of a violation of the public accommodation law found at Minn. Stat. §604.12 as a result of the decision of various Rochester establishments to deny access by Sons of Silence members when they display Sons Of Silence names, symbols, or signs on their clothing. Sincerely, Terry L. Adkins; Rochester City Atty CC: Police Chief Roger Peterson City Administrator Stevan E. Kvenvold Comments: Noel Wenrich - Dec 5, 2013 - New Holland, Pennsylvania Under such a loose interpretation of those statutes. all clothing bearing, Christian Crosses, stars of David, rotary club, football team logos, & so on should be banned because we can find several members in those groups wearing those logos or patches, that have committed crimes, been in drunken brawls, robberies, white collar crimes & on & on. What Idiots. I mean come on I have seen Prostitutes on the street wearing Christian Cross necklaces & earnings. Pat Carr - Nov 28, 2013 - The City Atty's findings are somewhat inconsistent with the past. He had no problems with 2 felons on the Fire Dept., one being a unqualified ex-cop who drunkenly ran over 2 pedestrians, killing one, then sped through the city of Byron with his headlights off, & at excessive speeds. James Scott - Nov 26, 2013 - Ignorant people like you always seem to want to link everything to race...you have a problem Trevor Hamlen - Nov 26, 2013 - A few bad apples don't represent the entire club. I wonder if the City would take a different approach if they were called....ummm, lets say, the "New Black Panthers", or perhaps even Louis Farrakhans group "The Nation of Islam"? Just sayin.... -------------------------------------------------------- Confederation of Clubs Goals Bring the Patch holders Together: -- Communication between clubs. -- A judicial coming together (not legislative) to protect our rights through the courts. Fight Police Harassment & Discrimination: -- Introduce anti-discrimination legislation, similar to the Unruh Act in California, in Confederation States that presently leave bikers unprotected; A.I.M. attorney to work with state Motorcycle Rights Organization on new laws. -- Form delegation of patch holders & other affected bikers; that together with their local A.I.M. attorney, present police harassment grievances to the police chief and/or civic entity responsible. -- Discriminatory establishments notified by the A.I.M. attorney that suit will be filed if they don’t cease & desist. Proclamation of Intent: -- Working with local state MRO on legislative matters (ie. helmet issues, anti-biker discrimination, etc). -- Working with the National Coalition of Motorcyclists on Nat’l & Fed matters (ie. helmet issues, Fed Gang Bill, etc). -- Support Aid to Injured Motorcyclists by introducing the A.I.M. numbered card (special card only for patch holders) & program to the members & allowing A.I.M. to set up at events. Breaking the Silence: Nobody said SOS bikers are angels - Sept 25, 2011 – Minnesota – By www.PostBulletin.com - Dear Answer Man, what is the Sons Of Silence MC & are they on the up-andup? I'm not sure what you mean by "on the up-and-up," but I can confirm that it's a MC with all the usual baggage. They were in the news in the Rochester area last weekend as 100 bikers, apparently all or most of whom are members of SOS, as it's called, visited the St. Isidore Health Care Center in Plainview, where a biker friend with multiple sclerosis lives. He's in failing health & wanted to go to Sturgis for the big bike rally. That wasn't going to happen, but his biker friends brought him some Sturgis memorabilia instead.The get-together was organized by St. Isidore staff & the Benedictine Health System Foundation, so the nursing home had some comfort level with the Sons Of Silence. From all I can tell, it was a kind & warm gesture for an ailing friend. The club's website doesn't have much history or background, but it does call itself a 1-percenter group, which in motorcycle parlance means they're rowdies. According to Wikipedia, the club was founded in Colorado in 1966 & has chapters in about a dozen states & in Germany. There's apparently a chapter up & running in Faribault. I attempted to contact the club & didn't make much headway; if you're a member & want to talk, call me. On their website they have a badge that says "No Fed Fabricated Crimes." Though there's no explanation, it presumably refers to federal raids by the ATF about a decade ago in Colorado & Iowa, & just last month authorities arrested 8 men connected with the SOS chapter in Indianapolis. In that case, the charges involved meth trafficking, money laundering & firearms offenses. The U.S. Justice Dept's Nat’l Gang Assessment Center described the Sons Of Silence in 2009 as an "outlaw motorcycle gang" & said that "SOSMC members have been implicated in numerous criminal activities, including murder, assault, drug trafficking, intimidation, extortion, prostitution operations, money laundering, weapons trafficking, & motorcycle & motorcycle parts theft." Other outlaw motorcycle gangs, according to the 2009 Justice Dept report, are Hells Angels, Bandidos, Mongols & Outlaws, all of which were said to have more members. The Sons Of Silence motto is "Donec Mors Non Separat," which in Latin means something like, "Not separated until death," though I'm not certain the ancient Romans would recognize that phrasing. -------------------------------------------------------- Harley-Davidson: Turning Gas into Noise Since 1903… On a Harley happiness isn’t just around the corner… Happiness is the corner… -------------------------------------------------------- U.S. Defenders: - We don’t accept applications. We accept commitments… - If we all do a little bit, Then no one has to do a lot… - There can be no “I”, there has to be “We”... - One heart, One Voice… National Coalition of Motorcyclists… An Idea Whose Time Has Come… Page 16