Montreal Gazette

Another bloody chapter in bikers’ violent history

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Texas authoritie­s had warned earlier in May there was growing animosity between the motorcycle gangs most involved in the weekend massacre at a restaurant in Waco, Texas.

The Texas Department of Public Safety’s Joint Informatio­n Center issued a bulletin May 1 that cautioned authoritie­s about increasing violence between the Bandidos and the Cossacks, Dallas TV station WFAA reported Monday. The county sheriff has said all nine people who were killed Sunday were part of those two groups.

The shootout at a Twin Peaks restaurant also left 18 injured, and about 170 have been charged.

The bulletin, obtained by WFAA, said the tension could stem from Cossacks refusing to pay Bandidos dues for operating in Texas and for wearing a patch on their vest that claimed Texas as their turf without the Bandidos’ approval.

“Traditiona­lly, the Bandidos have been the dominant motorcycle club in Texas, and no other club is allowed to wear the Texas bar without their consent,” the bulletin said, according to WFAA.

The bulletin said the FBI had received informatio­n that Bandidos had discussed “going to war with Cossacks.” It also outlined several recent incidents between the two groups, including one instance in March when about 10 Cossacks forced a Bandido to pull over along Interstate 35 near Waco and attacked him with “chains, batons and metal pipes before stealing his motorcycle,” WFAA reported.

That same day, a group of Bandidos confronted a Cossack member fuelling up at a truck stop west of Fort Worth, the bulletin said. When the Cossack member refused to remove the Texas patch from his vest, the Bandidos hit him on the head with a hammer and stole it.

Two members of the Bandidos were recently indicted in connection with the stabbing of two Cossacks at an Abilene, Texas, steak house in March 2014.

And in December, three Bandidos were arrested for a shooting at a Fort Worth motorcycle bar that left one dead and two others wounded. Fort Worth police said the victims were known members of a criminal motorcycle gang.

McLennan County Sheriff Parnell McNamara, whose office is involved in the investigat­ion, said the nine dead were members of the Bandidos and Cossacks.

Waco police spokesman Sgt. Patrick Swanton said five gangs from across Texas had gathered at Twin Peaks to in part to settle difference­s over turf.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ??
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

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