Texarkana Gazette

Documents: Police did little to stop 2015 Waco biker showdown

- By Emily Schmall

FORT WORTH, Texas—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.

 ?? Associated Press file photo ?? Jeffrey Pike, the national president of the Bandidos Motorcycle Club, is escorted from the Bob Casey Federal Courthouse on Jan. 6, 2016, in Houston.
Associated Press file photo Jeffrey Pike, the national president of the Bandidos Motorcycle Club, is escorted from the Bob Casey Federal Courthouse on Jan. 6, 2016, in Houston.

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