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  1. #1
    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    9 Dead, 177 Arrested, Waco officials under scrutiny for biker shootout case

    Texas officials under scrutiny for biker shootout case

    Jerry Larson
    FILE - In this May 17, 2015 file photo, authorities investigate a shooting in the parking lot of the Twin Peaks restaurant, in Waco, Texas. Bikers and public watchdogs have criticized authorities here for how they’ve handled the shooting investigation, citing the mass arrests of more than 170 people held for days or weeks on $1 million bonds without sufficient evidence to support those arrests four months after the shootings. No formal charges have been made, and it remains unclear whose bullets, including police bullets, struck the dead and injured, or when cases will be presented to a grand jury, which is currently led by a Waco police detective. (AP Photo/Jerry Larson, File)






    Posted: Sunday, September 13, 2015 1:00 pm | Updated: 3:01 pm, Sun Sep 13, 2015.
    Associated Press |

    WACO, Texas (AP) — The secrecy that enshrouds the investigation into a biker shootout in May that left nine people dead and led to the mass-arrest of 177 people is hardly surprising in this city, where public scrutiny is rare and unwelcome.

    On the banks of the Brazos River in Central Texas, Waco and the surrounding county are largely run by a close-knit circle of judges, prosecutors and law enforcement that defense lawyers complain leads local agencies to close ranks in the aftermath of this most recent calamity.

    It's a city where a district judge and district attorney are former law partners, the mayor is the son of a former mayor, the sheriff comes from a long line of lawmen and Waco pioneers and the sheriff's brother is the district attorney's chief investigator.


    Bikers and public watchdogs have criticized authorities here for how they've handled the investigation, citing the mass arrests in which people were held for days or weeks on $1 million bonds without sufficient evidence to support such actions four months after the shootings.


    No formal charges have been made, and it remains unclear whose bullets, including police bullets, struck the dead and injured, or when cases will be presented to a grand jury, which is currently led by a Waco police detective.


    "I don't know of any defense lawyer who hasn't looked at the facts of this case and gasped," said Grant Scheiner, a criminal defense attorney in Houston not connected to the bikers' case.


    Waco police, McLennan County prosecutors and judges refused to comment — citing a gag order written by the DA — but law enforcement staunchly defend their actions, including the 12 shots that the police chief said officers fired into the melee after bikers allegedly opened fire on them.


    The violence erupted May 17 before a meeting of a coalition of motorcycle clubs that advocates rider safety. Police have said two rival biker gangs got into a confrontation that turned deadly when one group of bikers opened fire on another outside a Twin Peaks restaurant.


    Some 177 people were arrested and remained in custody until their bonds were reduced. Defense attorneys have been critical of how the cases have been processed, accusing District Attorney Abel Reyna of writing "fill-in-the-blank" arrest affidavits. A police officer testified a justice of the peace approved the affidavits without making any individual determination of probable cause.


    In the criminal case of one of the defendants, Reyna's former law partner, District Judge Matt Johnson, issued a gag order as written by Reyna.


    Many bikers who previously told The Associated Press they were innocent bystanders are now reluctant to speak further because of the gag order.


    Although police and the district attorney described last spring everyone who was taken into custody as criminals, an Associated Press review of a Texas Department of Public Safety database found no convictions listed under the names and birthdates of more than two-thirds of those arrested.


    Justifying the mass arrests, Sheriff Parnell McNamara said, "A message was sent to the whole country that we will not tolerate this type of disorder in our community."


    McNamara describes the county's criminal justice system as a close-knit Christian "posse" of Baylor University graduates committed to "putting away as many hard-core criminals as possible."


    That kind of mentality led the county's former district attorney, John Segrest, to compare the McLennan County criminal justice system to a "bubble, a separate realm. When you're a member of the system, you tend to think that most everything revolves around anything that you do. You get an unrealistic view of the world from inside."


    The city's crown jewel is Baylor, the world's largest Baptist university, which in the 1880s attracted Baptists from across Texas to Waco, then known as the buckle of the Bible Belt.

    The private university has an air of insularity that extends to the county courthouse, a domed palace whose Lady Justice lost her arm holding scales in a storm.


    From a series of Ku Klux Klan lynchings nearly a century ago to a massive twister in 1953 that tore through downtown to the Branch Davidian siege in 1993, Waco's downtown streets, a mix of historic mansions, public buildings, dilapidated houses and empty spaces where nothing was rebuilt reflect a city perpetually recovering from its last disaster.


    Sheriff McNamara, the descendent of one of Waco's early settlers, was formerly a U.S. marshal who participated in the Branch Davidian siege in which federal agents tried to arrest cult leader David Koresh for stockpiling weapons at a ranch outside town. The confrontation led to a 51-day standoff that ended when the complex caught fire, killing Koresh and nearly 80 followers.


    The international attention brought by the tragedy left Waco residents wary of outside law enforcement, and they say they'll handle the biker shootout themselves.


    "Waco's nickname is Six-Shooter Junction," McNamara said. "Not really anything we're real proud of, but that's just the way it is."

    http://www.brownsvilleherald.com/new...413704af8.html

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  2. #2
    Senior Member Judy's Avatar
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    Is it no wonder that law enforcement has a public relations problem? Wait until the truth comes out in the Fox Lake Shooting. Coming soon.
    A Nation Without Borders Is Not A Nation - Ronald Reagan
    Save America, Deport Congress! - Judy

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  3. #3
    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    Waco Police Bullets Hit Bikers in May Melee

    New reports reveal information about biker gang shootout

    POSTED: 09:17 AM CDT Sep 19, 2015


    FORT WORTH -When two rival motorcycle gangs clashed outside a Texas restaurant, nine bikers ended up dead, their bodies sprawled on the pavement, surrounded by blood and shell casings. After the shooting stopped, a police officer asked everyone with a weapon to raise a hand.

    Nearly everyone did, according to a police report.

    Four months after the shootout, authorities have released almost nothing about the gunfight beyond a vague initial description of a brawl that spiraled out of control. They have never indicated who fired the fatal shots.

    But evidence reviewed by The Associated Press now confirms that the gunfire included rounds fired by police that hit bikers, though it isn't clear whether those rifle shots caused any of the fatalities.

    The AP reviewed more than 8,800 pages of evidence related to the May 17 confrontation, including many police reports, and viewed dash-cam video and photos and listened to audio interviews. Together, the evidence offers the best insight yet into how the shootout unfolded.

    Investigators have offered scant details about what sparked the fight or how the gunfire played out, and no one has been charged with any of the deaths.

    The trove of evidence - expected to be presented to a grand jury - includes dashboard video of people fleeing the scene while shots ring out, audio of police threatening to shoot people if they rise from the ground and photos of bodies lying in pools of blood in the restaurant parking lot.

    The gunfire erupted shortly before a meeting of a coalition of motorcycle clubs that advocates for rider safety. Waco police were aware of the potential for violence and assigned 16 officers to watch over the gathering. State police were also present.

    Many witnesses, including bikers and waitresses at the Twin Peaks restaurant, told police that the shooting began after a Bandido rider hit a prospective member of the Cossacks with his motorcycle. A fistfight ensued, followed by several minutes of shooting, according to the evidence reviewed by the AP.

    Bikers and drivers can be seen on video fleeing the restaurant parking lot on foot and in vehicles while officers carrying rifles run to the scene. As shots pop off in the background, an officer swears repeatedly.

    The aftermath looked like a combat scene.

    "Bloodied bodies were lying all over. Guns and knives were strewn about everywhere," officer Phillip Zboril wrote in a 724-page incident report.

    Back in June, Waco Police Chief Brent Stroman said three officers fired a total of 12 shots, but police have never said whether those bullets struck anyone, fatally or otherwise.

    Officer George Vrail was assigned to a special detail to cover the meeting and wrote in the incident report that he saw two officers during the shootout who "had multiple suspects down on the ground."

    The officers told him they had been "engaged" by gunfire as they got out of their marked police car. Both of them returned fire and "struck multiple suspects with their patrol rifles."

    In his portion of the incident report, officer Keith Vaughn wrote that another officer spotted a man shooting into the crowd and told Vaughn that he fired one round "to stop the individual from shooting anyone else."

    Police and prosecutors have said that there is video footage that shows Bandidos and Cossacks shooting at one another. The AP has reviewed video from Twin Peaks and an adjacent restaurant, but neither shows clearly who is shooting at whom.

    At least 20 people were treated for gunshot wounds and other injuries.

    Waco police spokesman Patrick Swanton declined to comment on the evidence, citing a gag order in the criminal case of one of the bikers. Media organizations, including the AP, have gone to court to fight the order, which they contend is overly broad and unconstitutional.

    According to the incident report, a separate Waco police investigation into the police shootings was underway as of July 20. The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives is conducting ballistics analyses. ATF spokeswoman Nicole Strong declined to comment.

    Following the shooting, 177 people were arrested and held for days or weeks on $1 million bonds on charges of engaging in organized criminal activity. But no one has been indicted, and it remains unclear whose bullets struck the dead and wounded.

    Also unclear is when a grand jury will hear the evidence, which has been shared with criminal defense attorneys.

    More than 430 weapons were recovered from the crime scene, including 151 guns, according to the incident report. Many weapons were taken from bikers. Others were recovered from vehicles, bushes outside the restaurant and the men's bathroom, where two pistols were found in toilets, photos show.

    Authorities did not know exactly what to do with the large number of weapons and "just started laying them on the ground away from the suspects," officer Joshua Fischer wrote in a report.

    The bikers were taken to the Waco convention center for processing and were told on the way that they were going to be interviewed as witnesses, according to a 430-page Texas Department of Public Safety report that corroborates what arrested bikers have told AP.

    But prosecutors decided late that night to arrest the majority of those detained.

    District Attorney Abel Reyna and his staff told authorities at the convention center that anyone wearing a patch, clothing or insignia that indicated support for the Bandidos or Cossacks should be charged with engaging in organized crime, according to the report.

    Reyna did not return calls seeking comment.

    http://www.krgv.com/news/local-news/.../35369320scene.

    Last edited by JohnDoe2; 09-19-2015 at 04:46 PM.
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  4. #4
    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    New grand jury set to consider Waco biker shooting cases

    October 14, 2015 11:47 CDT


    WACO, Texas (AP) -- A grand jury has been empaneled and is poised to consider the cases of 177 people arrested after the May shootout involving bikers and police in Waco.


    The McLennan County district attorney subpoenaed two high-ranking members of the Confederation of Clubs and Independents, a coalition of motorcycle clubs that advocates biker safety, to provide information Wednesday about the confederation's meeting that was to take place May 17 at a roadside restaurant.


    Nine people died and 20 were injured during the shooting, which authorities say arose from an apparent confrontation between the Bandidos and the Cossacks motorcycle clubs.


    None of the 177 people arrested and held for days or weeks on $1 million bonds has been charged.


    It remains unclear whose bullets struck those who died or were hurt.

    http://www.kfoxtv.com/template/inews...l#.Vh6rOflViko
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  5. #5
    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    Last Person Jailed in Waco Biker Shooting to be Released

    Marcus Pilkington will be released more than five months after the shooting

    POSTED: 07:46 AM CDT Oct 31, 2015



    FORT WORTH -
    The last person jailed in connection with a deadly shootout among bikers and police outside a Waco restaurant was poised to be released from jail Friday, more than five months after authorities rounded up 177 people from the crime scene and initially held them on $1 million bonds on charges of engaging in organized criminal activity.

    A Waco jail was processing the release of Marcus Pilkington, 38, Friday on a $50,000 bond - a sharp contrast from the first biker to be released, Jeff Battey, 51, who posted the full $1 million three days after the shooting. Both men were injured in the melee.

    Nine people died and 20 were injured during the shooting, which authorities say arose from an apparent confrontation between the Bandidos and the Cossacks motorcycle clubs.

    More than 430 weapons were recovered from the crime scene, including 151 firearms.

    The gunfire erupted shortly before a meeting of a coalition of motorcycle clubs that advocates for rider safety.

    Investigators have offered scant details about what sparked the fight or how the gunfire played out, and no one has been charged with any of the deaths.

    In a 430-page Texas Department of Public Safety report reviewed by The Associated Press, Pilkington told investigators interviewing the injured that he did not fire a gun.

    Battey, who was shot in the arm, said "I may have fired a gun, I don't know."

    Also Friday, Battey's attorney, Seth Sutton, filed a motion to have the ex-Marine's ankle monitor removed and the condition that he not speak with any bikers lifted.

    According to the motion, Battey's attacker first fired his gun at Ray Allen, who was among those killed, before pointing his gun and firing at Battey's chest. Battey raised his arm to deflect the bullet.

    http://www.krgv.com/news/local-news/...eased/36174914

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  6. #6
    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    NOV 10 2015, 8:43 PM ET

    106 People Indicted in Waco Biker Brawl That Killed Nine

    by M. ALEX JOHNSON




    Watch New Surveillance Video of Bikers Shooting 1:47

    A Texas grand jury returned indictments Tuesday against 106 of the 177 people who were arrested after a shootout between cops and members of two motorcycle clubs left nine people dead at a Waco restaurant in May.

    The McLennan County grand jury returned true bills accusing the 106 suspects of engaging in organized criminal activity, with the underlying offenses being murder and aggravated assault, District Attorney Abel Reyna said Tuesday night in Waco.


    Charges against the 71 other suspects weren't presented Tuesday but will be "at a later time," Reyna said.


    The scene after a shooting in the parking lot of the Twin Peaks restaurant May 17 in Waco, Texas. Jerry Larson / AP — file

    The indictments weren't made public, and the identities of the 106 suspects weren't released.


    "We're not done," Reyna said. "We still have a lot of work to do."


    Nine bikers were killed and more than 20 other people were injured in the shootout May 17 at the Twin Peaks sports bar in Waco. Nearly all of the suspects are free on bond.


    Related: Waco Biker Brawl: Scores Arrested After Shootout at Twin Peaks Bar


    More than 430 weapons were recovered from the scene, including 151 firearms, according to a police incident report.

    Police said in June that three officers fired 12 shots, but they haven't said whether the bullets hit anybody.

    http://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/...d-nine-n461096

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  7. #7
    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    4 Bikers Shot In Waco With Same Rifle Type Police Use

    It was not clear whether any bikers had similar guns to the police that day.


    12/11/2015 01:13 pm ET

    FORT WORTH, Texas (AP) — Four of the nine people killed in a melee between rival biker gangs outside a Texas restaurant were struck by the same caliber of rifle fired by Waco police, according to evidence obtained by The Associated Press that provides the most insight yet into whether authorities were responsible for any of the deaths and injuries.


    The latest trove of potential grand jury evidence reviewed by the AP depicts a chaotic, bloody scene in which police swarmed into the shootout between rival biker gangs on May 17 outside the Twin Peaks restaurant that left about 20 wounded and arrested nearly 200 people.


    ASSOCIATED PRESS
    People stand as officers investigate a shooting in the parking lot of the Twin Peaks restaurant Sunday, May 17, 2015, in Waco, Texas. (AP Photo/Jerry Larson)

    Hours of audio and footage and hundreds of documents including ballistics reports show that four of the dead and at least one of the wounded were struck with bullets from .223-caliber rifles — the only type of weapon fired by police that day.

    Two of the four dead had wounds from only that kind of rifle; the other two were shot by other kinds of guns as well. The ballistics reports show that the rest of the people killed were shot by a variety of other guns.


    It was not clear whether any bikers had similar guns to the police that day. Among the hundreds of weapons authorities recovered from the scene were 12 long guns, which could include rifles.


    The Southwestern Institute of Forensic Sciences, which conducted the ballistics analysis, declined to comment on its findings.


    Waco Police Chief Brent Stroman had said in June that officers shot a total of 12 rounds using the semi-automatic setting on their .223-caliber rifles. The AP has previously reported that evidence showed some of those shots struck bikers, but didn't indicate whether they were fatal.


    Police and the district attorney's office declined to comment on the latest evidence, but have previously defended the officers' use of force, claiming that bikers had also opened fire on police. Police have previously cited a gag order in the criminal case of one of the bikers. Media groups including the AP have fought the order, contending that it is overly broad and unconstitutional.


    Investigators have offered few details publicly about what sparked the fight or how the gunfire played out. Much of the narrative has come from the evidence obtained by the AP, including the latest batch of documents, footage, autopsy photos and audio of 911 calls and biker interviews describing how a feud between the Cossacks and Bandidos motorcycle gangs turned deadly.


    Bikers have criticized the way police dealt with the incident and believe the ballistics findings prove that officers made the situation worse.


    "I think they handled it badly," said John Wilson, who was at the shooting and is a chapter president of the Cossacks. "I think their first responsibility is to be a deterrent to crime, not to set up and hope they get to use their rifles."


    The gunfire had erupted shortly before a meeting of a coalition of motorcycle clubs that says it advocates for rider safety.

    Waco police assigned 16 officers to watch over the gathering, and state police were present.


    Police dashboard video shows a tight group gathered in front of the Twin Peaks patio. A biker can be seen striking others with a chain. Twenty seconds later, the biker is shot in the leg and the hip, staining the grass with blood. One biker shoots while running backward away from the parking lot while another fires from the patio. The group quickly disperses, with many taking cover behind cars and trucks.


    Department of Public Safety video shows one of the men who was killed, Jesus Delgado Rodriguez, tackling another biker brandishing a gun. The two wrestle on the ground until another biker approaches and appears to stomp on Rodriguez's head.

    The biker with the gun then shoots Rodriguez in the head and walks away.


    In separate police video of the aftermath, several dead bikers are seen slumped on the ground, blood streaming from their wounds. Hats, sunglasses, knives, guns, cigarettes, and a hammer litter the pavement, while rock music can be heard playing loudly in the background.


    Inside the restaurant, blood pools in the sink and floor of the men's bathroom, and a baton and handgun are dumped into separate toilets.


    "They got people shooting at people," a man reports in a call to 911. During another 911 call, a man can be heard urging people to get in the cooler. In the background of that call, police can be heard saying, "Hands up! Everybody keep your (expletive) hands up!"


    Authorities recovered more than 430 weapons, including 151 guns, knives, brass knuckles, clubs and a chain, according to a 724-page police incident report reviewed by the AP in September.


    A grand jury indicted 106 people in November on charges of engaging in organized criminal activity. McLennan County District Attorney Abel Reyna has said the grand jury will consider charges against the other 80 bikers arrested on identical charges. The next session is scheduled for Wednesday, but Reyna has declined to say whether the rest of the cases will be presented that day.


    Among other evidence reviewed by the AP are more than 100 police interviews with bikers who were arrested, several of whom attested to simmering tensions between the Cossacks and the Bandidos beforehand.


    One Cossack told police the Bandidos had been trying to force his group to join the confederation of clubs in order to profit from $30 per month in dues each biker paid, and that this caused the animosity leading to the shootout.


    In a separate interview, a Bandido who was shot in the leg claimed the Cossacks had long refused membership in the confederation. He denied that membership or dues were being forced on anyone.

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/...b0f290e522fed9

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  8. #8
    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    FBI arrests top Bandidos Motorcycle Club leaders in San Antonio, Houston

    By Guillermo Contreras
    Updated 12:52 pm, Wednesday, January 6, 2016



    Photo: JOHN DAVENPORT, .

    IMAGE 1 OF 23

    21 things you need to know about the Bandidos Motorcycle Club

    A Houston dockworker and Vietnam vet started the notorious Bandidos motorcycle gang in the mid-1960s. The group, which the feds have linked to ... more



    The FBI has arrested the top three purported leaders of the Bandidos Motorcycle Club, leveling racketeering charges alleging a pattern of crimes including conspiracy, drug trafficking and murder.

    The agency said the gang’s national vice president, John Xavier Portillo, and its national sergeant at arms, Justin Cole Forster, were taken into custody in San Antonio. The group’s president, Jeffrey Fay Pike of Conroe, was taken to federal court in Houston. All are named in a nine-count indictment obtained by the San Antonio Express-News.


    The indictment does not directly link the trio to a deadly brawl at a restaurant last May in Waco involving the Bandidos and a rival group, the Cossacks, but the period of the conspiracy listed in the indictment is May 2015 through August 2015, making it apparent that the FBI targeted the Bandidos for crimes after the melee.

    For more on this developing story, go to www.express-news.com or check Thursday’s print editions.

    gcontreras@express-news.net

    http://www.mysanantonio.com/news/loc...ed-6740709.php



    A Bandido's motto: "We are the people our parents warned us about."
    Last edited by JohnDoe2; 01-06-2016 at 05:24 PM.
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  9. #9
    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    Documents: Police did little to stop Waco biker showdown


    Jerry Larson
    FILE - In this May 17, 2015 file photo, authorities investigate a shooting in the parking lot of Twin Peaks restaurant in Waco, Texas. Law enforcement did nothing on the day to stop a meeting in Waco, Texas in 2015 that erupted into the deadliest shootout between biker gangs in U.S. history, even though they had detailed advance intelligence that the encounter between the Cossacks and Bandidos was likely to turn violent, according to a review by The Associated Press of a trove of evidence compiled by prosecutors for use in state trials of 154 bikers. (AP Photo/Jerry Larson, File)



    Posted: Wednesday, October 11, 2017 1:45 pm |Updated: 2:02 pm, Wed Oct 11, 2017.
    Associated Press |

    FORT WORTH, Texas (AP) — Law enforcement officers prepared for war in Waco, Texas, on May 17, 2015.

    In parking lots surrounding the Twin Peaks restaurant just off Interstate 35, 16 police officers, including a SWAT team of 11, were poised with assault rifles in five police cars and two unmarked SUVs. Seven state police, some undercover, were inside the restaurant or nearby.

    Families were eating Sunday lunch apparently oblivious to the gathering storm, as dozens of armed bikers from the Cossacks poured onto the restaurant patio to confront the most powerful motorcycle gang in Texas, the Bandidos.


    When the first Bandidos rolled in, "the Cossacks began coming off the patio. You could see the tension building up instantly," Waco Police Detective Jeff Rogers said in an affidavit that is part of a trove of evidence provided to The Associated Press.


    Then the shooting started. A SWAT officer said he saw a biker fire first. But evidence isn't clear who started the deadliest biker shootout in U.S. history that left nine bikers dead and 20 wounded. Police bullets struck four bikers, killing at least two of them. Police arrested 177 bikers and state authorities indicted 154. Jury selection began this week in the first of those trials, against Bandidos Dallas chapter president Christopher "Jake" Carrizal for leading and engaging in organized criminal activity.


    Evidence that prosecutors gave to lawyers who are representing the bikers shows local and state authorities had overwhelming intelligence that violence was likely and did little in advance to prevent the meeting. While the strong police presence was aimed at deterring violence, and bikers said they noticed police cars, the uniformed police were mostly on the restaurant perimeter.


    The evidence also shows that the Texas Department of Public Safety, which was investigating biker gangs, met three times with Waco police in advance of the Twin Peaks meeting and had "contingency plans ," although the document simply called on officers to follow department policy before firing.


    Rogers said that he made several calls before the shooting to the restaurant manager that went unanswered. State police Special Agent Christopher Frost spoke to Twin Peaks owner Jay Patel three days before the showdown and asked if the bikers had booked the whole restaurant. Patel said they had reserved only the patio area. Frost warned of "rising tensions" between the groups. Patel said he was expecting about 400 bikers and had hired three security guards. Frost's report of the conversation ended with him asking Patel to let him know if any threats were received, but made no mention of any request to Patel to cancel the booking.


    One mystery of that day is exactly when federal authorities arrived on scene. The Drug Enforcement Administration had been investigating the Bandidos since January, 2013.


    A senior official closely involved in federal prosecutions of the bikers insisted in an interview with the AP that federal investigators were not aware of the Twin Peaks meeting or of "any impending violence." The official spoke on condition of anonymity because of court cases against the bikers.


    A Waco policeman reported that he spoke to an FBI agent at the scene immediately after the shooting. Other federal agents arrived quickly including the DEA, The U.S. Marshals Service, and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.


    The federal investigation intensified immediately after Waco. Federal agents got approval to wiretap Bandidos national vice president John Portillo a day after the Twin Peaks shootout. Prosecutors later indicted Portillo and former president Jeffrey Pike on racketeering charges, including ordering killings and assaults, and they are scheduled to go on trial next year. Five lower-level Bandidos pleaded guilty to similar charges.


    AP reviewed video from surveillance cameras, police dashcams and witness interviews, crime scene photos, contents of more than 100 cellphones and thousands of pages of documents.


    The Waco tragedy prompted soul-searching among law enforcement officials nationwide. Two experts on biker gangs who did not work on the Waco investigations, said that unless there is fear of a terrorist attack, authorities have to convince a judge to issue an injunction to stop a public meeting protected by the constitutional guarantee of free speech and assembly.


    "I think this was definitely a learning experience where they would probably do more proactive stuff to stop the meeting, even if they'd had to get an injunction," said Charles Falco, a former federal informant on California biker gangs who now trains law enforcement officers.


    Jay Dobyns, a retired ATF agent who was an informant on the Hells Angels, said violence between biker gangs sometimes happens even with good advance intelligence and a strong police presence. In 2002, the Hells Angels and the rival Mongols got into a fight at a Nevada casino that resulted in a fatal stabbing and two shooting deaths.


    "Did we anticipate problems? Yes. What we didn't know, what no one knew, was where and when that was going to pop off," he said.


    Biker gangs are a small but violent problem, according to a 2015 FBI report, with some 44,000 members and associates of a few "outlaw" criminal groups such as the California-based Hells Angels and the Bandidos. The Cossacks are more of "an aspirational club" aiming to gain notoriety, said Donald Charles Davis, a biker club enthusiast who blogs under the name The Aging Rebel.


    The animosity between the Bandidos and Cossacks may date from November 2013, when Cossacks started wearing a "Texas" patch on the back of motorcycle jackets — seen as a provocation to the Bandidos.


    It came to a head in March 2015, at the small town of Lorena near Waco, when a group of suspected Cossacks beat-up a Bandido with chains and metal pipes. The injured Bandido did not press charges.


    Waco detective Rogers learned in April from an informant that the bikers were planning to meet at Waco in May.


    Also in April, the FBI reported that the Bandidos discussed "going to war" with the Cossacks at a biker rally in West Texas.

    Law enforcement warned both clubs there would be a strong police presence. There was no significant violence.


    As the Twin Peaks meeting approached, communications became more ominous. On May 1, Rogers warned in an email to a colleague: "the potential for violence is very high."


    The morning of the meeting, Rogers was "very nervous," and predicted a "high probability for violence."


    The shooting lasted just three minutes but left a scene of carnage.


    In a conversation captured by her bodycam, Waco police officer Nicki Stone told a colleague after the shooting, "I really didn't think it was going to end like this."


    "I thought that we were supposed to stay back and let them fight this out," she said.

    http://www.brownsvilleherald.com/news/texas/article_b8601406-d6bc-5c78-ac59-9670ae6f003f.html

    NO AMNESTY

    Don't reward the criminal actions of millions of illegal aliens by giving them citizenship.


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