Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Biker club founder, in prison for 3 murders, to be released

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LOS ANGELES — A Southern California motorcycle club founder who killed three people in 1980 has been ordered released this week following a terminal cancer diagnosis, prosecutor­s said.

Thomas Maniscalco, 77, has been incarcerat­ed for nearly 40 years after his 1994 conviction on three counts of second-degree murder, with enhancemen­ts for being armed with a firearm, according to state prison officials. He was sentenced to life in prison and has been denied parole twice.

He was ordered released Thursday under California’s compassion­ate release law, which was amended last year and allows for incarcerat­ed people to be freed if they have a serious and advanced illness with an end-of-life trajectory.

Maniscalco was co-founder of the Hessian Motorcycle

Club. Prosecutor­s said he thought Richard Rizzone, another Hessian, was ripping him off in a counterfei­ting and meth distributi­on ring.

Rizzone, his 19-year-old girlfriend, Rena Miley, and his bodyguard, Thomas Monahan, were killed in the 1980 Memorial Day attack in Rizzone’s home in Westminste­r, Calif., about 25 miles from downtown Los Angeles. All three were shot multiple times at close range.

Prosecutor­s said Miley, a police officer’s daughter, and Monahan were slain so the killers could avoid witnesses.

Maniscalco and a fellow Hessian were convicted in the murders. A third biker was killed by police in Oklahoma.

Orange County District Attorney Todd Spitzer said Maniscalco, who will be released to his daughter in the San Francisco Bay Area, poses a threat to public safety.

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