10 Vagos motorcycle gang members arrested after wide-ranging raid

October 6, 2011 | 2:08pm

Attempting to behead the leadership of the notorious Vagos motorcycle gang, authorities arrested 10 members suspected of drug-trafficking and a rash of violence -- including the recent murder of a rival Hells Angel member in a Nevada casino -- in a series of raids Thursday across Southern California.

The crackdown comes after an 18-month investigation led by the state Department of Justice into one of the most violent criminal motorcycle gangs in the nation, authorities said. Members of the gang, which started in the Inland Empire in the 1960s, stand accused of suspicion of murder, rape, weapons violations, money-laundering and drug violations.

"It’s a dangerous organization ... that’s responsible for putting drugs into our communities and schools," said Senior Special Agent David King, head of bureau of narcotics enforcement in Riverside. “These individuals are armed to protect their criminal enterprise, and they’ve shown how quickly they are willing to use their guns in public.’’

State agents joined with local law enforcement agencies early Thursday to execute 52 search warrants in San Bernardino, Riverside, Los Angeles, Orange, San Diego, Santa Barbara and Imperial counties at 7 a.m. Arrest warrants also were issued for 12 high-ranking Vagos members, 10 of whom were in custody by late morning.

A team of officers from the San Bernardino Police Department and state Department of Justice took a battering ram to the door of the Vagos international president in Colton, busting into the house with weapons drawn.

The Vagos leader was gone, but officers handcuffed another man inside and escorted a woman and young child outside while they searched the house. The tiny stucco home, with its tot-sized basketball hoop in the driveway and towering palms outside, blended into others in the blue-collar neighborhood.

The only indication that a Vagos member lived inside was the black Harley Davidson emblem decorating the home’s address number on the Orange Avenue curb.

The Vagos leader remains at large. Authorities asked that he not be identified until his arrest.

A few miles away, near the Cal State San Bernardino campus, another squad raided the house of Scott Rivera in the 1400 block of Sheridan Avenue, spending hours inside searching for weapons, drugs and evidence of his involvement with the Vagos.

Rivera, a bald, heavyset man with a Fu Manchu mustache, gave only a silent, icy stare as officers led him out of the house in handcuffs and loaded him into a squad car. Minutes later, a neighbor poked her head over the fence: “Did someone get killed?â€