Ventura, the highest profile member of the Mongols, took the
stand as an expert witness in the midst of an ongoing federal racketeering
trial in which prosecutors are attempting to gain control over the motorcycle
club’s trademark name, a move that would allow law enforcement to bar the
bikers from wearing the patches that adorn their vests.
Jesse Ventura sitting on his Harley - Photo Credit: Alexia Wambua
“Are you a member of the Mongols Motorcycle Club,” Attorney
Joseph Yanny, who is representing the Mongols, asked Ventura at the beginning
of his testimony. “Yes I am,” replied Ventura, who later explained that he is
currently an inactive member of the Mongols. “Are you member of a gang?” Yanny
asked. “No,” Ventura responded. “Gangs generally don’t broadcast who they are.”
Related | Feds attempt to seize Mongols MC trademarked logo
Related | Feds attempt to seize Mongols MC trademarked logo
During the trial, prosecutors have accused Mongols’ leaders
of encouraging and rewarding members who commit crimes, including assault, drug
trafficking and murder. The Mongols’ attorney has denied the allegations,
telling jurors that the organization isn’t responsible for crimes committed by
individual members or attacks carried out in self-defense, and claiming that
law enforcement has entrapped some members into committing crimes.
Ventura said he joined the Mongols in 1973, shortly after
returning from his second tour in Vietnam. The former governor testified that
he was still an active duty member of the U.S. Navy when he became a
“full-patch” member of the Mongols, recalling putting on his club vest as he
left the base. “It was a stepping stone I needed to make the transition
from military life back to civilian life,” Ventura said. “I owe them for being
there for me when the rest of the world wasn’t.”
Ventura became an officer in the now-defunct South Bay San Diego County chapter of Mongols, but by late 1974 decided to step back from active membership in order to move back to Minnesota, where he had grown up. But Ventura said he has held onto his club vest and patches, including a “property of” patch he gave to his wife last year after more than 40 years of marriage.
Ventura denied that he had been ordered to take part in
illegal activity as part of the Mongols.
“Yeah, there are some bad apples, that is true for any
organization,” Ventura said. “But there are also a lot of damn good people in
there. You can’t blame all for a few.” Ventura acknowledged he was not an active member of the
Mongols when the clubs problems with the Hells Angels motorcycle club began in
the late 70s, a rivalry that has led to repeated bloodshed on both sides over
the subsequent decades. He said the Mongols had no choice but to retaliate. “I’d lose respect for them if they didn’t,” Ventura said.
During at times contentious questioning, a prosecutor
challenged Ventura’s claim that he was unaware of any illegal activity. A clip
of an interview between Ventura and podcaster Joe Rogan was played for the
court, in which Ventura said the group’s president would tell him to leave
their meetings if they were going to talk about illegal activity, since they
knew Ventura was still in the military.
In the portion of the interview played in court, Ventura
responded to Rogan asking him if it was weird to be in an organization involved
in illegal activity by saying “No, because I thought at least I’m not going to
go to jail.”
Ventura testified that he had no idea what the rest of the
club’s leadership talked about during the meetings when he wasn’t present. At
times, Ventura responded angrily or sarcastically to the prosecutors’
questions, at one point saying “are you kidding me” when asked if he knew what
a SWAT team is.
“I believe this trial is ridiculous because of the First
Amendment,” Ventura said. During breaks in the hearing, a group of Mongols, dressed in
suits and ties, gathered around to speak to Ventura in the hallway outside the
courtroom.
The current federal trial stems from Operation Black Rain, a
multi-agency effort involving law enforcement infiltrating the Mongols, which
began in Montebello in the 1970s, and is now based in West Covina. An earlier
racketeering case that targeted members of the Mongols rather than the
organization itself resulted in 77 guilty pleas.
Among the incidents outlined by prosecutors during the trial
have been the so-called 2002 River Run Riot in Laughlin, Nev. that left three
Hells Angels and Mongols dead, a melee at the Morongo Casino in Cabazon near
Palm Springs, and attacks, some fatal, allegedly carried out by Mongols in bars
or restaurants in Hollywood, Pasadena, Merced, La Mirada, Wilmington and
Riverside.
SOURCE: The Sun
Photo of Jesse: Artistry Work of Alexia Wambua