Posted on 11/04/2015 6:44:26 AM PST by Elderberry
According to a usually informed source, both CNN and The Associated Press are in possession of previously unreleased evidence related to the Twin Peaks Massacre last May.
The evidence has been presented to a grand jury currently convened in McLennan County and includes materials that have not yet been discovered to defense attorneys in the case. The evidence includes an affidavit by a Waco police detective who testified that a Texas Department of Public Safety âcovert cameraâ recorded a member of the Cossacks Motorcycle Club âexecutingâ a member of the Bandidos Motorcycle Club.
At a bond reduction hearing on June 5, Assistant District Attorney Michael Jarrett referred to the covert camera video and said it showed âBandidos executing Cossacks and Cossacks executing Bandidos, some at point-blank range.â Jarrett described the video in detail at that hearing. He said it showed Cossacks arriving and occupying the patio of the Twin Peaks then âspreading out across the patio in sentry positions.â Jarrett is leading the grand jury that will decide which of 177 defendants will be indicted for murder, criminal conspiracy and other charges. The covert camera video has not yet been released to defense attorneys in the case.
The usually informed source did not speculate who leaked the evidence but volunteered that although the major news sources have âall of this evidence, they are not reporting anything positive for the Bandidos.â FBI
Ann OâNeill, Ed Lavandera and Jason Morris of CNN have reported that âFBI agents in San Antonio and El Paso picked up intelligence that the Bandidos were planning to go to war with the Cossacks.â
The three CNN reporters also allege that âThe Bandidos made a crucial decision on March 27 of this year, moving the regular meeting of the Confederation of Clubs and Independents from Austin to the Twin Peaks restaurant in Waco,â and that âWaco police feared, with good cause as it turned out, that the May 17 meeting would trigger violence.â
Coverage of the incident has been so largely dominated by police and Cossack accounts that it is impossible not to suspect an interconnection.
The day after the deadly confrontation, a Cossack named Scott âScootâ Keon told the Palestine, Texas City Council that his club was law-abiding and the Bandidos were not. âOn our side, we are not a gang,â Keon said. âWe are an organization that is Texas-wide. None of us are one-percenters.â
Keon blamed the Bandidos for the massacre. âThere are things that they (the Bandidos) are involved in that we have no interest in,â he said. âWe are businessmen, family men, and veterans and are in no way affiliated with them. We wonât be pressured into paying them dues, and thatâs where their anger is coming from. Just because other clubs have given in, doesnât mean we are going to.â Published Accounts
All published first hand accounts of the massacre in which nine men died and 18 more were hospitalized have relied on statements made by Cossacks.
On May 23, The Washington Post ran a lurid account of the confrontation titled ââRichie died, then Diesel, then Dogâ: An eyewitness to the Waco biker brawl.â The eyewitness was a Cossack who was âpresident of a North Texas chapter of the motorcycle gang.â According to the well known Washington daily, the single source for the story âasked not to be identified because he is now in hiding and said he fears for his life. He is a rare eye-witness speaking publicly about the Waco massacre.â
On June 20, the Houston Chronicle ran an even more lurid first hand account titled âLife and death in Waco: A bikerâs story.â That feature described the Bandido âexecutionâ of Cossack Danny âDieselâ Boyett. The principal source for that story was Boyettâs son Cody Ledbetter. The account describes an unprovoked attack by Bandidos on Cossacks who had come to the Twin Peaks that day to talk peace. The story, by Dane Schiller, states, âA law enforcement officer familiar with the clash at Twin Peaks and well-versed in motorcycle gangs said Ledbetter seems to be telling the truth.â
The recent CNN coverage of the incident has relied on statements made by John Wilson, who is described as âpresident of the Waco-area chapter of the Cossacks.â
Wilson, not surprisingly, describes the Cossacks as victims of the Bandidos. According to CNN, âmany Cossacks and their supporters said they were invited to the meeting and told it had been called to broker peace. Now theyâre wondering if they were set up.â
Wilson has described the confrontation on camera, in detail for the cable network that describes itself as âthe most trusted name in news.â
âI couldnât even see who threw the punch. But I saw our guyâs head go back, and it looked like he was getting ready to punch back whoever did it and a shot went off.â Wilson told CNN there were âa couple more shots, some scuffling around and then, almost instantly, gunfire just erupted from all around the perimeter.â
âI promptly got down on that sidewalk trying to avoid being hit myself. At that time it was pretty horrific, there were guys getting hit, falling, and I realized that I needed to get away from where I was. I looked to the guy to my left, a good friend of mine, and said, âWe need to get off the sidewalk or we are going to die here.ââ
None of these dramatic accounts has been viewed skeptically. CNN has not questioned who fired the shots that âerupted from all around the perimeter.â The Police
During a bond hearing, Wilsonâs attorney Mike White told Judge Ralph Strother that Waco police âactually advised him to begin a dialogue to try to lower the tension that had been preceding this event (the May 17 Confederation of Clubs and Independents meeting) for numerous weeksâ¦They suggested that he either go to this meeting or start some dialogue or start having sit-downs with opposing motorcycle clubs.â
The police âsuggestionâ came at least weeks after the Confederation of Clubs and Independents decided to move its meeting from the Twin Peaks in Austin to the Twin Peaks in Waco. Representatives of the Confederation have said the meeting was moved to make it easier for members from the Dallas area to attend. The only basis for the theory that the meeting was moved to Waco to send some sort of message to the Cossacks is police conjecture. If it was meant to be a show of force by the Bandidos it is likely that the Bandidos would have made the Waco event a mandatory run. The whole argument that the Bandidos instigated the confrontation only sounds reasonable to people who know nothing about the very punctilious world of motorcycle clubs..
Most Cossacks, and most members of Cossacks friendly clubs like the Scimitars and Bogatyrs learned about the Twin Peaks run long after police learned that the Confederation would be meeting in Waco. About March 27
What happened, exactly if not in totality, according to legally obtained police reports, was that the Texas Department of Public Safety learned that the COC&I was coming to Waco on March 27. They learned this from a Lorena, Texas Police Officer named Shawn Board who got his information from confidential sources of information. âOfficer Board explained that the COC is run by the Bandido OMG. Officer Board further explained that the COC is where other motorcycle clubs are required to join and pay dues to the Bandido OMG to be able to operate in Texas. Officer Board felt like the change of the meeting location was purposely done to show support for the Bandido OMG in the Waco area to the Cossacks MC.â
How officer Board learned this remains an official secret.
Waco police and DPS agents then made contact with John Wilson on April 16, a month before the Twin Peaks Massacre, and told him that he was in danger. Letâs Have Brunch
Then, purely by coincidence, 30 â 40 Cossacks as well some number of Scimitars and Bogatyrs arrived at the Twin Peaks well before the scheduled start of the COC&I meeting and stole all the seats and most of the parking spaces. As about a dozen Bandidos and scores of Bandidos supporters rode into the Twin Peaks parking lot, a Cossacks prospect named Clifford Pearce told the pack to find somewhere else to park. Local police were well aware the pack was coming. At 10:30 that morning, Texas DPS agents observed the pack assembling at the Flying J Truck Stop in Waco. Local and state police had assembled a large and heavily armed force, including a Bearcat armored vehicle, to âgather intelligenceâ at the meeting.
Seconds after Pearce told the Bandidos to park somewhere else he was reinforced by additional Cossacks.
There are conflicting accounts of what happened next. One that hasnât been reported before describes a man in a yellow full face helmet firing a stainless steel or chrome revolver. The man has never been identified although CNN does possess a photo of a yellow full face helmet sitting in the grass.
The same grand jury that a source identifies as the source of the leaked evidence has also subpoenaed virtually ever imaginable record that might be in the possession of the COC&I including: âAll individual members names, club affiliations and any other persons claiming independent status with the COC&I, home addresses, billing, shipping, email and IP addresses, home and alternate telephone numbers for each member and club; a copy of the original applications filed by each past and current member;â âany and all documents relating to the organizational structure of the Texas COC&I and its relation to all other state COC&Iâs and/or its relations to a national COC&I organization or US Defenders.â Cocktail
From up close all of this looks like a witch hunt. But from a longer view much of this, including the recent CNN reports, looks like a smoke screen. Waco and McLennan County have been frantically searching for somebody to blame for the Twin Peaks Massacre since about an hour after it happened.
Officials have blamed this putrid cocktail of death, personal tragedy, cop speak and Bonfire of the Vanities quality journalism on a cabal of âfive motorcycle gangs,â who âdidnât come to Waco to eat barbecue;â on the owners of the Twin Peaks Waco franchise; on the dead; on the Confederation of Clubs; on the witnesses; and on the Bandidos.
The stakes are high. There is considerable evidence that local, state and federal law enforcement officials knew of a conflict between the Cossacks and the Bandidos; decided that the Waco Twin Peaks was where that conflict might escalate into something RICO worthy and interesting; encouraged Cossacks to confront Bandidos at the Twin Peaks; surrounded the Twin Peaks with militarized police; set up their cameras; then watched, as in CNNâs memorable phrase, a âparking lot was turned into a raging war zone;â and have been pounding their chests ever since.
The city of Waco, McLennan County, the state of Texas and, possibly, the Department of Justice face potential liabilities of billions of dollars. The Twin Peaks Massacre has not faded from public consciousness with the passing of a few dozen news cycles. This is a big story and it is not going away. Whoever leaked all that evidence to CNN should have known that. November is a sweeps month. The most trusted name in news knows that. And CNN has obviously made the editorial decision to play its leaked documents and videos as sensationally as possible.
Whoever leaked the documents knew how CNN would play this story. Seen in the context of a brisk November day the leak looks like a masterful spinning of the facts. Seen in the context of all that has happened since last May, the leak looks more like an act of desperation.
Why?
Available evidence and common sense say that what actually happened is that LEO choreographed the fight as a pretense to kill 9 and arrest (and financially destroy the lives of) 177 Texas residents, 118 of them (including one dead) with totally clean records in the state of Texas.
What you really mean is you tend to believe the MSM and LEO narrative.
You're talking about LEO, not members of biker clubs. You just don't know it. Poor sap.
Where’s that other freak of nature, Texas Cajun or whatever he calls himself?
We are talking about the classic outlaw bikers not Harley riders in general right? They guys that manufacture and sell meth and smuggle drugs around, etc? That is not true?
So they have less rights than other citizens?
I never said they did not have rights nor did I side with the police side overly much. I can both respect the rights of these bikers and not respect them as people even though they do have a 'cool factor' in society the way the Italian Mob is seen as cool. That does not mean a mobster does not have rights either.
The kinds of "classic outlaw bikers" I think you mean, the criminals, the bad-hearted dudes, the ones who assault and rob and manufacture meth and murder and kidnap and extort and harm innocent people out of meanness or greed, PRETTY MUCH ALL HAVE CRIMINAL RECORDS by the time they're 22, if not earlier.
There is a vast chasm between a criminal and an outlaw. A criminal is someone who harms innocents, at least in a right world that's what a criminal is. "Outlaw" is a state of mind and often -- if not usually -- part and parcel of honorable, good men who do what they believe is right in the world their way independent of convention.
If we are talking about 118 members of motorcycle clubs with not a single arrest among them ... then we are talking about regular Joes who love motorcycles and who probably have an "outlaw" mentality. God bless them for the Americans they are.
You, of course, are free to hold such an opinion and express it. Law enforcement is not free to do so.
Law enforcement must operate within the constraints of the Constitution. They may not arrest because they do not like your looks. They must comply with the 4th Amendment and arrest an individual only upon probable cause that an individual has committed a crime.
The "law" under which the 177 were arrested and detained under unconstitutional $1,000,000 bonds makes it a criminal act to sport certain insignia and calls a peaceable assembly an overt act in furtherance of a conspiracy. All this and more of what is happening in Waco ought to concern anyone who claims to be awake to the stripping away of American's liberty.
The Waco Police admit to firing 12 rounds of .223 caliber. During the “siege.”
I agree but the Banditos and Cossacks are such a criminal group - even if they did not deserve to be shot down in the street like dogs.
I have a feeling if these were Bloods and Crips no one would be complaining except Al Sharpton. :P - tongue in cheek.
don-o said it VERY WELL. He really cuts to the chase — the right to assembly and free association is fundamental in America; police at Waco not only deprived these people of their right to assembly, they destroyed the financial and personal lives of all those arrested.
How do you know they are criminals?
The rule of law is what you criminal biker gang coverup guys will be crying about following the trials.
I absolutely reject that Cossacks are "such criminal groups" because that group wasn't even on any lists of criminal groups in law enforcement prior to May 17, and as for the Bandidos, they were only second-tier "gangs" on LEO biker gang lists. Are there some bad dudes in the Bandidos? Yep, and there are some bad dudes in the church you attend or the civic club you belong to, as well. Do the Bandidos have a history of having criminal elements in their club? YEP, they sure do. Have the Bandidos refused to allow some to join the club because of their criminal pasts?
Why don't you do a little online investigating and find the answer to that one?
Trumpinator, here is something you had better understand: COPS WILL LIE if it will help support their narrative. Not all cops, but way too many.
Not factual and you know it.
The complaint was about some of the biker gang wannabes making personal threats on FR. JR must have handed out some spankins, cause that crap stopped.
Or are they just middle aged men pretending to be criminals while going through a mid-life crisis?
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