Mississauga, Canada (March 15, 2019) BTN — A massive turnout is expected for the funeral of Michael (Diaz) Deabaitua-Schulde, 32, a full-patch Hells Angels member who was murdered in broad daylight at a Mississauga strip mall Monday.
All of Ontario's roughly 200 Hells Angels members are required to attend and Hells Angels charters from across the country must also send members, a source said.
A Quebec man with Hells Angels ties is already in custody on first-degree murder charges and police have issued a Canada-wide first-degree murder warrant for another Montreal man who has a history of weapons possession, fraud and possession of false documents, and is awaiting trial for allegedly intimidating someone connected to the court system.
The funeral of Deabaitua-Schulde, a father of two, is set for Saturday, March 23 at the Vescio Funeral Home in Woodbridge, according to the funeral home's website.
A GoFundMe page has also been set up in Deabaitua-Schulde's name.
"God called Michael on Monday March 11, 2019, at the age of 32," his online obituary begins. "He will be forever missed by his loving spouse, Ashley and his children … He will be held dear in the hearts of his family, relatives, and many friends."
As his funeral is being planned, police continue to hunt for Montreal fugitive Joseph Pallotta, 38.
Deabaitua-Schulde was shot dead shortly before noon on Monday outside a gym in Mississauga at 700 Dundas St. E., near Cawthra Road.
Peel Regional Police chief Chris McCord said that Deabaitua-Schulde was the victim of a targeted attack.
Pallotta is considered armed and dangerous.
Related | Hells Angel MC member killed in shooting
Peel Regional Police announced on Thursday that they have arrested two Montreal men and that Pallotta is their third suspect.
None of the three suspects are members of biker gangs but they are linked to organized crime, Peel Regional Police acting Supt. Martin Ottaway said at a press conference on Thursday.
Marckens Vilme, 28, of Montreal was also charged with first-degree murder for Deabaitua-Schulde's death, Peel Regional police announced on Thursday.
Vilme has a lengthy criminal record that shows a long-standing association with a Montreal street gang called the Ruffriders, and connections to Quebec Hells Angels.
The Ruffriders are considered by police to be associated with a larger Montreal street gang called les bleus, who in turn are close to the Quebec Hells Angels.
Vilme's record includes convictions for violence and drug trafficking in Pierrefonds and in the west part of Montreal island.
Vilme was sentenced to 21 months in jail for drug trafficking in June 2011 and eight months for conspiracy and extortion in February 2014.
He also has an outstanding assault charge in Laval.
A third suspect Jonathan Martinez-Seyes, 27, was charged on Wednesday night with complicity after the fact.
Deabaitua-Schulde was a member of the Niagara Region charter of the Hells Angels. One of his fellow Niagara Region members has been seen in Montreal several times recently, according to a Quebec source.
Peel Regional police recovered a burned blue Honda Civic at the corner of Rymal Road and Tomken Road shortly after the murder on Monday.
SOURCE: The Hamilton Spectator
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Friday, March 15, 2019
Harry "Taco" Bowman funeral set for fairgrounds
Dayton, Ohio, USA (March 15, 2019) BTN — Harry Joseph "Taco" Bowman, the former president of the Outlaw Motorcycle Club who was on the FBI's top ten most wanted fugitive's list, will have his funeral on Saturday at the Montgomery County Fairgrounds.
Bowman's funeral is scheduled for 10:30 a.m.
A procession from the fairgrounds to Bear Creek Cemetery on North Union Road in Madison Twp. will begin at 12 p.m. Sheriff's Deputies will be shutting down North Union Road to Hoover Avenue in Trotwood for the funeral. Additionally, deputies will also partially close down Infirmary Road from the Montgomery County fairgrounds to SR-35 for the procession.
Related | Outlaws MC: Harry "Taco" Bowman dead at 69
Montgomery County Sheriff Rob Streck said officers are not expecting any safety issues but given the size of the crowd and the reputation of the group, they do have contingency plans in place. "There's always concerns when you have get large groups of people who have been known to be violent. They do not try to hide that fact," Streck said. "(But) We don't have any chatter of suspected violence, we don't have any indications that other clubs are going to try and cause trouble at the event."
Bowman, who was serviving a life sentence in federal prison, died on Sunday at the Federal Medical Center in North Carolina. He was 69 years old. According to the Detroit News, Bowman was considered one of the most infamous motorcycle club leaders in U.S. history. The Outlaws were rivals to the Hell's Angels.
Bowman was placed on the FBI's Most Wanted List in 1998, interrupting what had been a relatively low profile kept by Bowman while serving as leader of the Outlaws. In 2001, he was convicted in a Federal court in Florida of the murders of several rival club members, firebombings, racketeering and conspiracy among other charges.
He was sentenced to two life sentences plus 83 years. Bowman had a long-running feud with Hell's Angels leader Sonny Barger over which club was superior. Several members of the Outlaws were previously interned at Bear Creek Cemetery.
SOURCE: WDTN2 News
A procession from the fairgrounds to Bear Creek Cemetery on North Union Road in Madison Twp. will begin at 12 p.m. Sheriff's Deputies will be shutting down North Union Road to Hoover Avenue in Trotwood for the funeral. Additionally, deputies will also partially close down Infirmary Road from the Montgomery County fairgrounds to SR-35 for the procession.
Related | Outlaws MC: Harry "Taco" Bowman dead at 69
Montgomery County Sheriff Rob Streck said officers are not expecting any safety issues but given the size of the crowd and the reputation of the group, they do have contingency plans in place. "There's always concerns when you have get large groups of people who have been known to be violent. They do not try to hide that fact," Streck said. "(But) We don't have any chatter of suspected violence, we don't have any indications that other clubs are going to try and cause trouble at the event."
Bowman, who was serviving a life sentence in federal prison, died on Sunday at the Federal Medical Center in North Carolina. He was 69 years old. According to the Detroit News, Bowman was considered one of the most infamous motorcycle club leaders in U.S. history. The Outlaws were rivals to the Hell's Angels.
Bowman was placed on the FBI's Most Wanted List in 1998, interrupting what had been a relatively low profile kept by Bowman while serving as leader of the Outlaws. In 2001, he was convicted in a Federal court in Florida of the murders of several rival club members, firebombings, racketeering and conspiracy among other charges.
He was sentenced to two life sentences plus 83 years. Bowman had a long-running feud with Hell's Angels leader Sonny Barger over which club was superior. Several members of the Outlaws were previously interned at Bear Creek Cemetery.
SOURCE: WDTN2 News
Wednesday, March 13, 2019
Hells Angels ride off from their clubhouse
New York, NY (March 22, 2019) BTN — The Hells Angels have been vacating their East Village clubhouse and residence in recent days, an exodus
spurred by the apparent transfer of their six-story building to a buyer. The new owner, Nathan Blatter, president of the Whitestone
Realty Company in Brooklyn, said he was not available for immediate comment.
So where are the Hells Angels Motorcycle Club heading on
their motorcycles after 50 years at 77 E. Third St.?
Related | Hells Angels might sell their 3rd Street clubhouse
Related | Man punched in front of Hells Angels clubhouse
Related | Man punched in front of Hells Angels clubhouse
“We don’t know,” said a lean, member of the famed motorcycle club. As he moved packing material out through the clubhouse
door over the weekend, he shielded his face from this reporter’s camera. Two
motorcycles belonging to the Hells Angels were parked outside. Across the street was a pickup truck with and the words
“Hell Bound” on its tailgate.
Last Thursday, The Villager rang the bell on the clubhouse
door repeatedly after learning the Angels were leaving. Finally, a muscular
biker of middle age came outside, his face nearly covered by a sock cap and
huge sunglasses.
“No pictures,” he said, declining a request to pose for a
photograph. “But you can take photos of the clubhouse if you want.” Was he going to miss it? “Of course, I’m going to miss it,” the black-clad biker
replied as he walked west toward Second Ave.
The building has some distinctive touches. The ground
floor’s red-brick facade bears the Angels “death’s head” insignias. There’s
also plaque commemorating deceased club president “Big Vinnie” Girolamo, along
with his motto, “When in doubt, knock ’em out.” The rotund biker died in 1979 before he could stand trial
for allegedly throwing his girlfriend Mary Ann Campbell off the roof of the
clubhouse to her death, reportedly because he believed she was an F.B.I.
informant.
The federal government tried for years to shut down the
clubhouse under a 1984 law that allows seizure of properties used for drug
trafficking. In 1985, it was one of 12 “H.A.” hangouts raided by F.B.I. agents
across the country. The G-men arrested 15 New York City members and confiscated
drugs like cocaine.
The incident and the resulting convictions became part of an unsuccessful 1994 civil lawsuit by the government to take over the East Village clubhouse. All that, of course, was a long time ago. Several newcomers to the East Village seem to revere the Angels as heroes.
The incident and the resulting convictions became part of an unsuccessful 1994 civil lawsuit by the government to take over the East Village clubhouse. All that, of course, was a long time ago. Several newcomers to the East Village seem to revere the Angels as heroes.
Three teenage female students who live in a dormitory run by
the New York City Conservatory for the Dramatic Arts, at 81 E. Third St., said
they would miss the bikers’ presence on the block. “I won’t be able to tell my friends anymore that I live next
door to the Hells Angels,” one said, plaintively.
Nina Holton, 18, a Barnard student who was photographing
Angels motorcycles on Saturday, said her mother lives on E. Third St. “She’s upset and sad that they are leaving,” Holton said.
“She feels they added character to the neighborhood and now they’ll be replaced
by some developer who’ll build condos.”
Holton believes the Angels helped keep the neighborhood safe
and provided a sense of community. “I’d pass the clubhouse late at night, and a couple of them
would be outside and they’d nod,” she recalled. “They were like eyes on the
street.”
Others on the block are clearly terrified of them.
“They’re known for being menacing and they cultivate that
image,” said a longtime block resident who asked only to be identified as a
community activist. She claimed the Angels had “assaulted” a friend of hers and
her boyfriend’s.
“I try to stay as a far away from them as possible,” she
said. “It’s a myth that they make neighborhoods safe.” The woman noted that the Angels have become known recently
for “ridiculous disputes over parking spaces and their stupid cones” used to
reserve public spaces as their own.
“One of them shot someone in the stomach over a parking
cone,” she said. She was referring to now-deceased Angel prospect Anthony
Iovenitti, who was accused of shooting David Martinez, 25, in the early-morning
hours of December 2016. A rumble erupted erupted after Martinez had gotten out
of his Mercedez- Benz to move an orange cone blocking his car’s way. Assault
and weapons possession charges were dismissed against Iovenitti after he died
at 52 of an aneurysm during a motorcycle trip in 2017.
Captain John L. O’Connell, commanding officer of the Ninth
Precinct, said there were “no interactions” with the club since his arrival
last year “except for one short fight.”
In that instance, a 22-year-old deliveryman was sucker-punched in the face for parking in front of the clubhouse in late December 2018, according to the Daily News. O’Connell noted that his cops have taken away the Angels’ cones “because they’re not allowed to reserve spots on a public street.”
In that instance, a 22-year-old deliveryman was sucker-punched in the face for parking in front of the clubhouse in late December 2018, according to the Daily News. O’Connell noted that his cops have taken away the Angels’ cones “because they’re not allowed to reserve spots on a public street.”
Criminal defense lawyer Ron Kuby has represented members of
the club for years. He dismissed claims by some in law enforcement that the
Hells Angels are into rackets and operate like organized crime.
“Think of it as a church,” he said of the group. “Members of clergy who violate the law don’t make the church a criminal enterprise.”
“Think of it as a church,” he said of the group. “Members of clergy who violate the law don’t make the church a criminal enterprise.”
The New York City Hells Angels are actually incorporated in
New York State as the Church of the Angels, a nonprofit religious organization.
That name was used when club members purchased the property in 1977, for a
reported $1,900. The moniker was used again last year in a preliminary
memorandum of contract to sell the property to 77 East Third LLC, a
limited-liability company linked to the aforementioned Nathan Blatter, EV
Grieve reported last month. A 2013 court dispute over a deceased Angel
president, Sandy Alexander, who had held title to the deed, was settled last
year, apparently leading to a sale.
Kuby said he doesn’t know the buyer or the club’s current
president “and I have no authorization to speak to the press with regard to the
business sale.” He also couldn’t provide a “nose count” on the number of
members in the club. He only said that most of them are just “looking to be left
alone and to ride motorcycles with their colleagues.”
Photos: Mary Reinholz
SOURCE: The Villager
Tuesday, March 12, 2019
Hells Angel MC member killed in shooting
Mississauga, Canada (March 12, 2019) BTN — A full patch member of the Hells Angels motorcycle club was the victim of a fatal shooting Monday in a Mississauga plaza that sent bystanders scrambling for cover in what was described as a "chaotic scene."
The shooting outside a popular gym comes amidst a massive shuffling amongst the Hells Angels in Ontario, multiple sources said.
Peel Regional Police are investigating whether a burnt-out car found in the area was the shooter's getaway vehicle. A senior Hells Angels member from London, Ont., has recently moved to the Niagara Region to bolster the club there while Keswick-area Hells Angels have moved to Ottawa, multiple sources said.
Peel Region paramedics and heavily-armed tactical officers with police dogs responded to gunfire at 700 Dundas St. E. near Cawthra Rd., just before 11:20 a.m. on Monday A 32-year-old man was rushed to a trauma centre with life-threatening injuries, according to Peel paramedics. Police said he died in hospital. His name has not yet been released. "It's a chaotic scene and we're just waiting in the car," tweeted Joyce Clarissa, who was visiting St. John the Baptist Anglican Church across the street. Clarissa said she saw at least two people running into their vehicles as police were responding to the scene. "They're taping off the whole plaza," she said.
The plaza houses Huf Gym, the Floor Shop and other businesses. The shooting occurred near the gym. Olga Rosa Heron, who owns the gym, said the victim ran into her facility for help after he was shot. Huf Gym employees "helped him out and hopefully they can be an asset to the investigation as well," she said. Peel Const. Iryna Yashnyk said police were investigating a scene near the Bank of Montreal at Dundas St. E. and Tomken Rd., in relation to the shooting. "As far as suspect information, we know that there was one male running east on Dundas towards, which we now know is what we believe is a second associated scene," Const. Bancroft Wright told reporters.
The elite Hells Angels Nomads chapter returned to the Ottawa area this year, three years after the chapter was abruptly dismantled. The Nomads are considered an elite group who require little direction. The Ontario Nomads had run into conflict with Quebec Hells Angels, sources said. The Hells Angels have about 175 Ontario members and 450 members across Canada.
SOURCE: The Star
Peel Regional Police are investigating whether a burnt-out car found in the area was the shooter's getaway vehicle. A senior Hells Angels member from London, Ont., has recently moved to the Niagara Region to bolster the club there while Keswick-area Hells Angels have moved to Ottawa, multiple sources said.
Peel Region paramedics and heavily-armed tactical officers with police dogs responded to gunfire at 700 Dundas St. E. near Cawthra Rd., just before 11:20 a.m. on Monday A 32-year-old man was rushed to a trauma centre with life-threatening injuries, according to Peel paramedics. Police said he died in hospital. His name has not yet been released. "It's a chaotic scene and we're just waiting in the car," tweeted Joyce Clarissa, who was visiting St. John the Baptist Anglican Church across the street. Clarissa said she saw at least two people running into their vehicles as police were responding to the scene. "They're taping off the whole plaza," she said.
The plaza houses Huf Gym, the Floor Shop and other businesses. The shooting occurred near the gym. Olga Rosa Heron, who owns the gym, said the victim ran into her facility for help after he was shot. Huf Gym employees "helped him out and hopefully they can be an asset to the investigation as well," she said. Peel Const. Iryna Yashnyk said police were investigating a scene near the Bank of Montreal at Dundas St. E. and Tomken Rd., in relation to the shooting. "As far as suspect information, we know that there was one male running east on Dundas towards, which we now know is what we believe is a second associated scene," Const. Bancroft Wright told reporters.
The elite Hells Angels Nomads chapter returned to the Ottawa area this year, three years after the chapter was abruptly dismantled. The Nomads are considered an elite group who require little direction. The Ontario Nomads had run into conflict with Quebec Hells Angels, sources said. The Hells Angels have about 175 Ontario members and 450 members across Canada.
SOURCE: The Star
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