Posted on 06/30/2017 4:46:44 PM PDT by Elderberry
The biker scheduled to be tried first for his alleged role in the Twin Peaks shootout was named Wednesday in a three-count superseding indictment.
A McLennan County grand jury charged Christopher Jacob Carrizal, 35, with one count of directing activities of a criminal street gang, a count of engaging in organized criminal activity with an underlying offense of murder and one count of engaging in organized criminal activity with an underlying offense of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon.
McLennan County District Attorney Abel Reyna and his first assistant, Michael Jarrett, have made it clear that they want Carrizal, a Bandido from Dallas, to be the first in a long line of 155 bikers indicted after the May 2015 shootout to stand trial, even while passing over other bikers who were clamoring for quicker trial settings.
Carrizals trial is set to start Sept. 11 in Wacos 19th State District Court.
Houston attorney Casie Gotro, who represents Carrizal, said all defendants have a right to request a chance to present evidence to a grand jury. However, she said, Reyna did not even provide me the courtesy of informing me he was taking Jakes case to the grand jury.
I was informed of this new indictment by you, the newspaper, Gotro said. The fact that Reyna has to sneak around and present evidence behind a defendants back just goes to show he is still trying to make chicken salad out of chicken feathers.
I havent had a chance to read the indictment, but adding that charge this late in the game feels like vindictive prosecution. Its like spaghetti charges when they throw it all against the wall and see what sticks.
The superseding indictment takes the place of the original indictment against Carrizal, which, like the matching arrest warrant affidavits used to take 177 bikers into custody the evening of the shootout, was identical to the other indictments charging engaging in organized criminal activity with underlying offenses of murder and aggravated assault.
The new charges
The superseding indictment charges that Carrizal, as part of the identifiable leadership of a criminal street gang, directed or supervised the commission of a conspiracy to commit murder and/or aggravated assault, by members of a criminal street gang, Bandidos.
The first count carries a punishment range of 25 years to 99 years or up to life in prison.
The second count charges that Carrizal, with the intent to establish, maintain or participate as a member of a criminal street gang, to wit: Bandidos, did commit or conspire to commit murder by causing the death of Wayne Campbell, Matthew Smith, Charles Russell, Daniel Boyett, Jacob Rhyne, Richard Kirshner, Richard Jordan II, Manuel Rodriguez and Jesus Rodriguez.
The second count carries a penalty range of 15 years to 99 years or life.
The third count charges that Carrizal, as a member of a criminal street gang, committed aggravated assault with a deadly weapon against 18 bikers injured or wounded in the melee. The count charges that Carrizal used or exhibited a firearm, and/or a knife or a sharp object and/or a club and/or an asp and/or a whip and/or brass knuckles and/or a chain and/or feet and or/hands and/or an object unknown to the grand jury.
The third count carries from five to 99 years in prison or up to life upon conviction.
Reyna, who is attending a conference this week of the Texas Gang Investigators Association in San Antonio, came back to Waco with Jarrett and prosecutor Amanda Dillon on Wednesday to present the superseding indictment and returned to the conference. Reyna did not return a phone message on Wednesday.
Reyna had hoped to push the bikers trials into next year, asking Judge Ralph Strother to postpone the trials until after federal authorities try national leaders of the Bandidos group in San Antonio. That trial is set to begin in February.
Reyna and Jarrett told the court in March that Reyna received a letter from U.S. Attorney Richard Durbin telling him that federal authorities prosecuting the Bandidos in San Antonio have information that relates to Twin Peaks cases but said they will not share it with McLennan County prosecutors until after the federal trial.
Jarrett said at previous hearings that under the Michael Morton Act, prosecutors are bound to wait so they can review the federal evidence and share it with defense attorneys now that Durbin has notified Reynas office that they have evidence that relates to the Twin Peaks cases.
The Michael Morton Act requires prosecutors to reveal all evidence, especially favorable evidence, to defendants attorneys.
Gotro asked Strother in May for a summer trial setting, saying she didnt need to wait on evidence from federal authorities because it does not pertain to Carrizal.
Gotro told Strother that much of the evidence against the Bandidos charged in San Antonio was obtained through wire intercepts. When the investigation is done, defendants either get indicted or they receive a letter from the government that says they were the target of wire surveillance, she said. Carrizal was not indicted in San Antonio and did not receive such a letter, Gotro said.
Also, she asked for a list of all Department of Public Safety troopers and agents and Texas Rangers who were listed as case agents in the federal Bandidos investigation, Gotro said. She compared that list to officers listed in the Twin Peaks investigation, and there was no overlap, she told the judge.
Based on those things, I dont think they have any evidence related to Jake Carrizal in San Antonio, Gotro said.
Be interesting to watch the defense tactics here. This gives them a good shot at a continuance, but that is part of Reyna’s stall tactics.
The judge is likely to be a good boy and put off all the other trials if this one is continued and Reyna so directs.
The Court of Appeals has already ruled that the right to a speedy trial doesn’t exist in Waco.
By the way.
In before....
Yeah, IBTG.
IBTG
8 years to go before a patsy gets a wrist slap.
This strikes me as BS. The DA won’t say who pulled the trigger on who, and that’s probably because at least 1/2 of those dead were assassinated by the over-watch snipers.
Did even one biker shoot another biker? Maybe this guy is the head of the Bandidos, and the Bandidos did come to the bar and shoot people in cold blood, but the DA isn’t building up from the actual shootings, he’s trying to build down from the top.
“This is a bad guy, head of a bad organization, he went to a bar, this bad guy and there was a shooting and his gang had something to do with it, so as the head bad guy he is responsible and you should convict him.”
That’s not justice in my book, that’s just nonsense.
Charge the killers, who shot who? How many did the overwatch snipers kill with their AR-15s?
At this point, due to how this entire thing was handled, I hope everyone gets off scott free, wins their civil case to the tune of millions each for all 155 of them, and Reyna gets disbarred for his complete corruption in this case.
I know there were some crimes committed at TP that day by a very few individuals. The fact that Reyna conspired to take down as many of the innocent bystanders as he could reeks of corruption. He needs to pay for that in every way the law allows. Use his own tool against him.
Oh, and tg, pack sand; right up to the belt.
This was a gang fight involving two gangs, a small number of groupie clubs, with a bunch of bystander bikers that didn't know there was going to be a fight. The "mom and pop" types brought their significant others, the gang members didn't. Rhetorical question, "who brings their wife to a fight?" Nobody.
This wouldn't be a controversy had the DA arrested every one, ID'd everybody, cut loose all the Mom and Pop types, and held all the Cossacks and Bandidos, plus the Bandido groupies. Indicting everybody was a big mistake.
When prosecutors file superseding indictments, judges shockingly allow prosecutors to try defendants according to any one or a combination of the indictments on file in a case, so that defendants may not even know what charges to prepare for at trial. “[T]he government may elect to proceed on any pending indictment,” wrote the U.S. Ninth Circuit in a recent opinion, “whether it is the most recently returned superseding indictment or a prior indictment.”
https://www.lewrockwell.com/2013/10/roger-roots/no-more-speedy-trials/
The worst thing is this all stems from grown men in a dispute over a rocker patch. Effing ridiculous.
Read the autopsies. The answer is “all”.
I guess TG is not on the payroll anymore...
This story on the ballistics report says 4 of the dead and one of the wounded.
Your statement that all were killed by police is disproved by the released video that shows Jesus Rodriguez getting killed by two opposing team bikers. He died of point blank gunshot wounds to the head and torso.
Yes and the police did not shoot the triggerman who stood over another and executed him.
They did shoot a guy with an "automatic" "assault" link of chain metal, though.
Between the two outcomes of:
OR
This wasn't in response to my comment, but supports the point I made at the top of the thread.
Why aren't the kllers of Jesus Rodriguez, who you say the police have on video, the first ones to go to trial. Ultimately the most important question is who killed the nine dead guys. Start with the simple case with the best evidence: these two guys killed Jesus, but shooting him at claose range.
If the police shot 4 dead, and we know who got Jesus, then you are down to four more to solve. Then move onto people seriously injured in assaults.
Except that is wasn't a chain and fist fight. I also haven't seen any proof of "roof top snipers." Not a lot of rooftop to be had around there unless they were all on top of the Mexican place on the adjacent lot.
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