The Justice Department has identified clubs as highly structured criminal enterprises, many of them allied against the best-known gang, the Hells Angels.
Since the 1966 epochal book “Hell’s Angels: The Strange and Terrible Saga of the Outlaw Motorcycle Gangs” helped cement the image of motorcycle clubs as a drug-addled danger to postwar society, the biker-gang image has been largely defanged.
Sunday’s bloody confrontation in Waco, Texas, is a jolting reminder that some motorcycle gangs are still a violent force in some parts of the country.
The Justice Department has identified seven motorcycle clubs that it believes are highly structured criminal enterprises, many of them allied in one form or another against the best-known gang, the Hells Angels Motorcycle Club.
A Justice Department report classifies such organizations as outlaw-motorcycle gangs, and federal law-enforcement authorities are focused on their alleged drug activity and possible connections to Mexican cartels.
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The Mongols: The Southern California-centered Mongols Motorcycle Club has earned a reputation for violence since taking Los Angeles-area turf from the Hells Angels, according to the Justice Department.
“A majority of the Mongols membership consists of Hispanic males who live in the Los Angeles area, and many are former street-gang members with a long history of using violence to settle grievances,” according to the report.
The Mongols have allied themselves with the Bandidos, Outlaws, Sons of Silence and Pagans to compete for territory and members with the Hells Angels, the report says.
The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives says it considers the Mongols the most violent motorcycle club.
The Bandidos: The Bandidos Motorcycle Club, with about 900 members in the U.S., is one of the two largest in the country, according to the Justice Department. The Bandidos are centered in the West and South.
“The Bandidos are expanding in each of these regions by forming additional chapters and allowing members from supporting clubs, known as ‘puppet’ or ‘duck’ club members, to join,” according to the Justice Department report.
Such members wear the colors and patches of a small local club but do the “dirty work” of the larger “mother club,” the government says. The smaller clubs can eventually become a new chapter of the larger club.
The Outlaws: The Outlaws Motorcycle Club has 700 members in 86 chapters and is centered in the upper Midwest, where they compete with Hells Angels for members. Some Outlaws chapter members have been accused of murder and kidnapping, and federal authorities say they believe much of the club’s money is generated through the manufacture and distribution of methamphetamine.
A “support club” called the Black Pistons MC was established as recently as 2002 but quickly expanded across the U.S. and into Europe. “The Outlaws also use the Black Pistons chapters to conduct criminal activity, especially for the transportation and distribution of drugs,” according to the federal report.
The Hells Angels: The best-known motorcycle club may no longer be the largest. The Hells Angels has 800 members, and the Justice Department says it suspects that some members are leading extortion rings, committing murders and moving drugs.
The Pagans: The Pagans Motorcycle Club has 200 to 250 members, who operate in 11 mid-Atlantic states, and is primarily concerned with trafficking cocaine, methamphetamine and PCP, according to the Justice Department.
The Pagans are tied to criminal enterprises in Pittsburgh and Philadelphia and are connected to extortion rings, arson and murder, the government says.
The Sons of Silence: The Sons of Silence, centered in the Midwest, are small but have a reputation for violence, according to the Justice Department. Numbering fewer than 250, the Sons of Silence have chapters in 30 states and are dangerous enough that the Justice Department named them to its four motorcycle clubs of greatest concern.
The Sons of Silence have been “implicated in numerous criminal activities, including murder, assault, drug trafficking, intimidation, extortion, prostitution operations, money laundering, weapons trafficking, and motorcycle and motorcycle-parts theft,” according to the Justice Department.
The Vagos: Operating on both sides of the U.S.-Mexico border, the Vagos Motorcycle Club is active in the West and Southwest. Primarily concerned with the production and distribution of methamphetamine, Vagos members have also been charged with money laundering and insurance fraud, as well as violent crimes, the Justice Department says.
The Cossacks: Less is known about the Cossacks, which were not cited in the Justice Department report. They, along with the Bandidos, were among the gangs connected with Sunday’s violence in Waco. The Cossacks and Bandidos have a violent history dating to at least 2013.
On Nov. 2, 2013, a fight broke out between the two clubs outside the Logan’s Roadhouse restaurant in Abilene, Texas. Five men were injured. A grand jury later indicted two men on aggravated-assault charges. One of them was the leader of the Bandidos.
The nine people killed Sunday were either Cossacks or Bandidos.