Top Bandidos Arrested in Texas
Three of the highest ranking leaders of the Bandidos Outlaw Motorcycle Organization (OMO) were arrested in Texas on Wednesday.
Three of the highest ranking leaders of the Bandidos Outlaw Motorcycle Organization (OMO) were arrested in Texas on Wednesday.
A pro-law enforcement, pro-military, ex-judge and ex-federal prosecutor with 39 years of public service said he has “looked at the facts” and “there are many, many, red-flags in this case.”
Judge Ralph Strother, one of the judges who set $1 million bonds in the Twin Peaks biker cases, reduced the bond of the president of the local Waco, Texas, chapter of the Cossacks Motorcycle Club, but ordered that he turn over all of his guns. John Wilson has approximately 30 guns in his home.
The Twin Peaks Corporation, located in Dallas, and the Don Carlos restaurant next door, have filed a lawsuit against the Waco restaurant. A biker has sued for civil rights violations because of his arrest.
On Sunday, CNN’s Brian Stelter of Reliable Sources hosted Ferguson activist DeRay McKesson to discuss media coverage of the motorcycle gang gun battle that broke out in Waco, Texas last week. McKesson promptly blamed white privilege for what he termed “nuance[d]” media coverage.
Despite the characterization by police that the afternoon gathering at a Twin Peaks restaurant in Waco, Texas that led to Sunday’s bloody shooting incident was a gathering of criminal biker gangs with violent intent, the meeting appears to have been a legitimate, organized gathering of motorcycle riders meeting to discuss political issues.