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Two years after shootout, Twin Peaks resolutions remain elusive
Waco Tribune-Herald ^ | May 16, 2017 | TOMMY WITHERSPOON

Posted on 05/22/2017 8:32:40 AM PDT by Prolixus

In the two years since James “Patrick” Harris was arrested after the Twin Peaks shootout in Waco, he lost the lease on his apartment, was rejected for a job with a state health and human services agency and was kicked out of Mexico while on the way to work with sick children and Dr. Patch Adams.

All because he rode to Waco with a few friends as members of the Grim Guardian motorcycle group on May 17, 2015, he said.

Judy Bergman said her husband, George, hardly rides his motorcycle anymore. It used to be his passion. Now he rides occasionally with his son.

She said her husband, who owns his own trucking company in the Dallas area, has to be careful when he drives because police officers who initially pull him over for a defective taillight come back to his cab with their hands on their guns and order him out of his truck after checking records and finding his arrest at Twin Peaks.

He once delivered goods to Army bases and other areas with high security. Not anymore, she said.

A lot has happened in the two years since nine bikers died and 20 others were injured during a meeting of the Texas Coalition of Clubs & Independents at the former restaurant known for its cold beer and scantily clad waitresses. The restaurant never reopened, and the building is up for sale.

The McLennan County District Attorney’s Office sought and obtained indictments on 155 of the almost 200 bikers arrested in the wake of the shootout; federal civil rights suits have been filed on behalf of more than 100 bikers, including one seeking $1 billion in damages; there were efforts to disqualify District Attorney Abel Reyna from the criminal cases; millions of documents have been released to defense attorneys through the discovery process; and bikers have rallied on the courthouse steps to decry their treatment at the hands of Waco and McLennan County officials.

Pretty much the only thing that hasn’t happened is a trial, criminal or civil. And with multiple complicating factors at play, the prospect of trials anytime soon is still in limbo.

While most everyone, including 19th State District Judge Ralph Strother, agrees that the incident presented officials with a unique situation, there are varying opinions about how best to move forward. ‘A life of its own’

“It is an unprecedented set of circumstances, one that I have never seen or been involved in my legal career as a lawyer or judge,” Strother said. “I am trying to look at it as I am supposed to, from every point of view. I appreciate the dilemma that everyone involved in this is in.

“It is a very unique set of circumstances and situations that, because of the complexity of it, has taken on a life of its own. I wish I had a better answer about how to resolve it, but eventually this, too, shall pass. But it is probably not gong to be as quickly as everyone would like.”

The criminal trials have been held up, in part, by the sheer volume of evidence that had to be analyzed, including social media and cellphone messages and images, DNA, ballistics, videos, photos and more. Despite the quick indictments, the DA’s office simply wasn’t ready to go to trial because of the mounds of evidence waiting to be tested and analyzed.

A federal investigation that led to the indictments of national Bandidos leaders also has complicated matters. Federal authorities have told Reyna a portion of their evidence in the case involves defendants arrested at Twin Peaks. Under the Michael Morton Act, Reyna is bound to turn over all evidence to defense attorneys before trial, and federal authorities have said they won’t share their evidence with Reyna until after the trial in San Antonio is over. That trial recently was postponed from August to early 2018.

Still, there are attorneys for Twin Peaks defendants who have been clamoring for speedy trials since not long after their clients were freed from jail. They say they don’t need to wait to see the federal evidence because their clients did nothing more than attend the COC&I meeting and dive for cover when the shooting started.

Trial dates are set, but officials think there is a strong possibility they will be postponed on motions from the defense or prosecution.

> List of bikers indicted in May 17 Twin Peaks shootout

Since the beginning, Dallas attorney Clint Broden pushed the hardest for speedy justice for his clients, Matthew Clendennen, George Bergman and Richard Luther. Broden is also co-counsel with Dallas attorney Don Tittle for 40 of the 98 bikers Tittle represents in federal civil rights lawsuits.

“Lost in the constant delays sought by the state is the tragic death of nine Texas citizens,” Broden said. “Yet, to this day, the Waco Police Department has refused to tell the public how many of those nine killed were killed by law enforcement officers. Meanwhile, the Sword of Damocles hangs over the heads of those indicted and, even two years later, these motorcyclists and their families are being denied justice and are unable to move on with their lives because there is absolutely no end in sight as a result of the state’s delaying tactics.

“Also, during the past two years and likely into the next decade, McLennan County citizens are being asked to absorb the staggering financial burden of the ill-conceived actions by their elected district attorney.”

Reyna, who testified at an early Twin Peaks hearing that he speaks to all media outlets except the Tribune-Herald, did not return phone messages left at his office.

Tittle said two years is a long time for innocent people to have criminal charges hanging over their heads. Jobs have been lost, reputations have been smeared, and families have been placed under undue hardships, he said.

“Of all the shocking things associated with this fiasco, I’d have to say that the general lack of concern and outrage from the media and the public is the most disappointing thing of all,” Tittle said. “These are not just technicalities we’re talking about. These are real people’s lives, and no one seems to give a damn. Not speaking up just because one isn’t like ‘these people’ is not an excuse. Trust me, they’re just like all of us.

“As was famously said many years ago, the danger in not speaking up is that when they come for you, there may not be anyone left to speak. Hopefully, the fact that we’re at the two-year anniversary without a single trial scheduled, and justice nowhere in sight, will jolt a few people into actually taking action.”

Waco police Sgt. W. Patrick Swanton, who is named as a defendant in many of the federal civil rights lawsuits, released a statement about the two-year anniversary.

“As events unfolded on 5-17-2015 and several days/weeks following, we relayed to our public the most accurate and available account of the occurrences at Twin Peaks,” Swanton wrote. “Our investigators, along with other local, state and federal officials, have worked tirelessly to prepare the cases for criminal proceedings. At this point, there is nothing additional we can release.”

> List of Twin Peaks bikers jailed, released Haunted by arrest

As for Harris, the 29-year-old Austin resident has not been indicted in the Twin Peaks case, but his arrest continues to haunt him. Harris recently graduated from St. Edward’s University in Austin with a master’s degree in counseling but fears any background checks will prevent him from being licensed as a professional counselor.

It was a background check that resulted in his landlord telling him he no longer is welcome there at the end of his lease and the reason he was given for not getting a job at the Department of Health and Human Services in Austin.

Harris is also one of four plaintiffs in a lawsuit filed over Twin Peaks arrests that seeks $1 billion in damages.

But he said the most disappointing event was being forcibly removed from Mexico a few months ago while he was en route to work with Hunter "Patch" Adams, the doctor portrayed in a movie by Robin Williams who dresses as a clown and makes children laugh.

Harris met Adams at the famed physician’s Gesundheit Institute in West Virginia a few years ago and had planned to help in a clinic Adams was conducting for impoverished children in Mexico City. Harris was supposed to change planes in Guadalajara, but when officials there swiped his passport, red flags from his Twin Peaks arrest popped up.

“The officer looked at me and told me to follow him,” Harris said. “They took me to an interrogation room, left me there about an hour and came back in and asked me if I had ever been in trouble with the law. I have not been indicted and told them that, but they wanted to know about Waco and why I was there.”

After two hours of questioning, they told Harris he could not stay in Mexico. Military officers escorted him through the airport and put him on the first available flight to the United States, which happened to be going to Seattle, Harris said. He was stuck in Seattle for two days before he could make it back to Austin.

“That was among the most frustrating things. I had already paid $2,000 for my lodging and meals and everything, and I was really looking forward to the experience,” he said. “Not only was I not able to go but I lost all that money, and it was all over being arrested in Waco. What a lot of people don’t realize is that the whole ‘innocent until proven guilty’ thing is fine, but until the charges are dropped, I am still in limbo. This has followed me around for two years.”

Harris was born in Houston. Both his parents were police officers, and so was his stepfather. His great-uncle was the first Hispanic police officer in Houston, and his uncle’s brother was the first Hispanic firefighter in Houston, Harris said.

The Grim Guardians work with foster children and abused kids and include among its members youth ministers, police officers, city of Austin employees and other professionals, Harris said. He and three of his riding buddies had just pulled into the Twin Peaks parking lot when the shooting started. They dove for cover behind cars, he said.

“My anger has calmed down a lot,” he said. “What Reyna and others have done to us by painting all of us with these negative images, we have an indelible mark on our records right now. Even if we win the lawsuit and they drop the charges, anyone who Googles my name, as a therapist, I can never go into private practice or open my own business.

“We live in a time where we hear about Black Lives Matter. That has portrayed police officers in an unfavorable light, but we know there are good officers and bad officers. People should have the same objective approach to bikers. No group should be painted with the same broad brush.”


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Government; News/Current Events; US: Texas
KEYWORDS: fiasco; gangs; texas; twinpeaks; waco; zimbabwaco
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8th Amendment rights were ignored two years ago.

6th Amendment rights have been ignored ever since.

For followers of Waco's "Baghdad Bob" Sgt. Pat Swanton, this is his obligatory quote from the article: “As events unfolded on 5-17-2015 and several days/weeks following, we relayed to our public the most accurate and available account of the occurrences at Twin Peaks,” Swanton wrote. “Our investigators, along with other local, state and federal officials, have worked tirelessly to prepare the cases for criminal proceedings. At this point, there is nothing additional we can release.”

1 posted on 05/22/2017 8:32:40 AM PDT by Prolixus
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To: Prolixus

“...there is nothing additional we can release.” = Null Set....


2 posted on 05/22/2017 8:35:49 AM PDT by Paladin2 (No spelchk nor wrong word auto substition on mobile dev. Please be intelligent and deal with it....)
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To: Prolixus

“...there is nothing additional we can release.” = Null Set....


3 posted on 05/22/2017 8:36:01 AM PDT by Paladin2 (No spelchk nor wrong word auto substition on mobile dev. Please be intelligent and deal with it....)
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To: Prolixus

A fair sized chunk of the responsibility can be laid at the feet of Hollyweird and the hit show “Sons of Anarchy”.


4 posted on 05/22/2017 8:43:41 AM PDT by fella ("As it was before Noah so shall it be again,")
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To: fella

“A fair sized chunk of the responsibility can be laid at the feet of Hollyweird and the hit show “Sons of Anarchy”.”

I don’t think that watching that show influenced the Bandidos and Cossacks into a gang war.


5 posted on 05/22/2017 8:52:07 AM PDT by TexasGator
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To: Prolixus
When this first happen, I posted that there was something strange about the situation. It just becames more confusing as time goes on. What are the legal powers to be in Waco and Texas covering up? There were some on Free Republic which strongly disagreed with my posting......... I told them we shall see. Two years later we are still waiting, damn the Speedy Trial Clause of the Sixth Amendment, damn discovery.

One day the truth will come out and the citizens of Waco will have to pay the bill.

6 posted on 05/22/2017 8:58:55 AM PDT by Lockbox
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To: Lockbox

“When this first happen, I posted that there was something strange about the situation.”

What is strange about two motorcycle gangs having a gang war?


7 posted on 05/22/2017 9:03:12 AM PDT by TexasGator
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To: Prolixus
Yes.

As predicted, Constitutional rights were casually trashed. They're working on trying to force as many as possible into forfeiting 5th Amendment rights, too. It's the new normal?

From the article;

Tittle said two years is a long time for innocent people to have criminal charges hanging over their heads. Jobs have been lost, reputations have been smeared, and families have been placed under undue hardships, he said.

“Of all the shocking things associated with this fiasco, I’d have to say that the general lack of concern and outrage from the media and the public is the most disappointing thing of all,” Tittle said. “These are not just technicalities we’re talking about. These are real people’s lives, and no one seems to give a damn. ..."

Trial for two Bandidos (if still on, according to schedule) slated to begin today, at 1 PM, in Fort Worth, for the incident which occurred Dec. 12, 2014 at Gator's Jam Inn II on Race Street. 401 Belknap Street, 396th District Court, on the sixth floor.

I have no idea if law enforcement got the right guys -- or not (or if they did get the "right" guys -- if they got all of them). All I do know is what I've read in the papers, and that one man, Geoffrey Brady, is dead. I've seen the grave.

Though I never knew the man, from what I've been able to gather, Brady was not a bad guy, was not a criminal. He was just a member of a small-time, local MC that's been around since at least the 1970's, and lacks reputation for criminality (as far as I know).

A Ghost Rider, from Arlington, Texas, presently resting (I do hope, in peace) a few dozen paces East of one of the ponds at Moore Memorial Gardens, in Arlington.

8 posted on 05/22/2017 9:12:24 AM PDT by BlueDragon
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To: TexasGator
<>I"I don’t think that watching that show influenced the Bandidos and Cossacks into a gang war."

No but it has influenced the civilians and probably edged the police into shooting anybody they could get into their sights.

9 posted on 05/22/2017 9:30:04 AM PDT by fella ("As it was before Noah so shall it be again,")
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To: BlueDragon

” He was just a member of a small-time, local MC that’s been around since at least the 1970’s, and lacks reputation for criminality (as far as I know). “

The Ghostriders were involved in a long-time ‘dispute’ with the Bandidos. One had previously been charged in the death of a Bandido.


10 posted on 05/22/2017 9:45:18 AM PDT by TexasGator
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To: Prolixus; ExTexasRedhead

For openers, Texas Tick Turd Judge Ralph Strother should be impeached and removed from the bench. It never ceases to amaze me that Texas, a state that loudly crows about just how “wonderful” it’s “Just Us System” is, can allow this piece of crap to hold sway over these “proceedings.”
What this has devolved into, is a process to try, against all odds, to get the Whacko Gubbemint “officials” off the hook for the murders their police department committed at Twin Peaks. I am not a fan of criminal bikers, but I have yet to see any substantive evidence that ANY of those who have been charged are liable for the killings that happened. I would be surprised if ALL of them are killers, and I only hope that at the end of the day Whacko and McLennan County are made insolvent by the succeeding lawsuits brought by the defendants. I may not like bikers, but I do like the Constitution.


11 posted on 05/22/2017 9:50:42 AM PDT by vette6387
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To: BlueDragon

” local MC that’s been around since at least the 1970’s, and lacks reputation for criminality (as far as I know). “


Harms had a loaded gun with him and several bullets in his pockets. Harms said he was assisting the Ghostrider club president, who is blind, towards the bar when they were contacted by two others.

The two people demanded Harms and the others “give up their colors or they will ‘shoot them off,’” court documents state.

Harms said he saw one of the men reach behind his back and thought he was getting a gun.
Harms fired his gun.

One man was struck by two bullet fragments in his right arm and shoulder area. He was taken to Tacoma General Hospital for treatment.

Harms, a convicted felon, was charged Wednesday with first-degree assault and second-degree possession of a firearm. He was ordered held in Pierce County Jail in lieu of $250,000 bail.

http://blog.thenewstribune.com/crime/2012/06/07/charges-filed-against-man-in-shooting-at-spanaway-bar/


12 posted on 05/22/2017 9:53:58 AM PDT by TexasGator
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To: vette6387

Cossack brandishing gun BEFORE melee started ...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nxs4GzPC9Hs


13 posted on 05/22/2017 9:59:52 AM PDT by TexasGator
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To: TexasGator; ExTexasRedhead

I’m sorry TG, you have a myopic view of what happened, so I am not at all interested in what you have to say about Whacko. You hate bikers and can’t seem to comprehend the part of the Constitution where is says it’s protections apply to everyone, and that you are assumed to be innocent until proven otherwise. There is no “Constitutional exemption” for bikers who “deserve to be killed!” And that Whacko is also violating the Constitutional mandate for speedy trials is something that should be of concern to you just in case you get yourself accused of some crime or another. You need to get a copy of The Constitution and study it!


14 posted on 05/22/2017 10:15:36 AM PDT by vette6387
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To: BlueDragon

“local MC that’s been around since at least the 1970’s, and lacks reputation for criminality (as far as I know). “

Bandido/Ghostrider violence goes back at least to 1977.

http://www.texasmonthly.com/articles/never-love-a-bandido-2/


15 posted on 05/22/2017 10:21:32 AM PDT by TexasGator
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To: vette6387

“I’m sorry TG, you have a myopic view of what happened, so I am not at all interested in what you have to say about Whacko.”

First-hand testimony from a guy at ground zero does not interest you? LOL!


16 posted on 05/22/2017 10:22:30 AM PDT by TexasGator
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To: vette6387

“You hate bikers “

Interesting that you throw that out since I have never said that and in fact am a biker.

OTOH it was YOU that stated you didn’t like bikers!


17 posted on 05/22/2017 10:24:35 AM PDT by TexasGator
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To: vette6387

“and that you are assumed to be innocent until proven otherwise.”

LOL! From the guy that says the police murdered the gangsters at Twin Peaks!


18 posted on 05/22/2017 10:26:16 AM PDT by TexasGator
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To: TexasGator

Ever the most obtuse and densest element around. Someone would have better luck talking to an ingot of lead than TG if wanting any kind of intelligent response.


19 posted on 05/22/2017 10:30:14 AM PDT by Boomer (Stupid is as stupid does and no one does stupid like the left.)
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To: Boomer

“Ever the most obtuse and densest element around. Someone would have better luck talking to an ingot of lead than TG if wanting any kind of intelligent response.”

I post a link from a first-hand testimony of a biker at ground zero and I get personally attacked. I guess this is all about NOT letting the truth get out.


20 posted on 05/22/2017 10:33:49 AM PDT by TexasGator
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