Cossacks Motorcycle Club
Founded | 1969 |
---|---|
Founders | Earl Swift, Charles Hanks, Butch Cheatham, Paul Henley, Tom Eliason and Carl Blair |
Named after | The Cossacks, an East Slavic ethnic subgroup |
Founding location | Tyler, Texas |
Years active | 1962–present |
Territory | Texas, Virginia, Ohio and Indiana |
Ethnicity | Predominantly white Americans |
Membership | Around 900[1] |
Allies | |
Rivals |
The Cossacks Motorcycle Club or Cossacks MC are an American outlaw motorcycle club. Said to be one of the largest outlaw biker groups in the state of Texas, they are best known for their conflicts with the rival Bandidos Motorcycle Club - most notably, the 2015 Waco shootout which left seven members of the group dead. The Cossacks MC are allegedly the second-largest biker club in the state of Texas.[1]
History
[edit]The Cossacks Motorcycle Club was founded in Tyler, Texas in 1969 by a group of six bikers: Earl Swift, Charles Hanks, Butch Cheatham, Paul Henley, Tom Eliason and Carl Blair. The club was named after historical Cossack Horsemen of Ukraine and southern Russia. Membership eventually grew in number, with many chapters being established across the state of Texas. [3] Chapters of the club also exist in Ohio, Indiana and Virginia.[6]
Criminal allegations and incidents
[edit]During November 2013, Bandidos MC Abilene Chapter President was arrested for the stabbing of two members of the Cossacks - one of which was the group's Mingus chapter President: Timothy Satterwhite. The incident occurred outside a Logan's Roadhouse restaurant in Abilene, Texas.[7][8][9]
Nearly two years later, on March 22, 2015, a total of ten Cossacks MC members forced a lone Bandidos MC member to pull off Interstate 35 near the town of Lorena (roughly 15 miles south of Waco, Texas). The members of the Cossacks then proceeded to beat the Bandidos biker with melee weapons including chains, metal pipes, and batons. Afterwards, those members of the Cossacks MC stole the motorcycle that the Bandidos MC member had been riding.[10][11][12][13] That same day, A group of either Bandidos or Bandidos-affiliated bikers (support club members), approached a single member of the Cossacks Motorcycle Club at a Palo Pinto County gas station (approximately 60 miles west of Fort Worth and request that the Cossack biker remove his 'Texas' bottom rocker. The biker responded with refusal, resulting in him being hit in the head with a hammer and his Cossacks MC vest being taken off his person.[3]
The El Paso branch of the FBI was 'tipped off' by a confidential source on April 7, 2015 about a group of 100 Bandidos members expected to travel to Odessa, Texas for the purpose of starting a gang war with the Cossacks MC.[14]
On April 7, 2015, the FBI's San Antonio headquarters were alerted to be on the lookout for potential conflicts between the Bandidos Motorcycle Club and Cossacks Motorcycle Club at the biker rallies held in the towns of Amarillo, Hondo, Midland and Odessa.[3]
References
[edit]- ^ a b Termo, Bruno (April 11, 2020). "15 Things You Didn't Know About The Cossacks Motorcycle Club". Hot cars.
- ^ "10 Things You Didn't Know About The Cossacks Motorcycle Club". HotCars. July 10, 2020.
- ^ a b c d e f "Cossacks MC (Motorcycle Club)". One Percenter Bikers. February 18, 2016.
- ^ Throttle, Insane (November 19, 2017). "Attorney requests sanctions against D.A in Second Waco Trial- Better yet Charge the DA for Misconduct".
- ^ "Cossacks MC patch logo new 2017". One Percenter Bikers.
- ^ "Home". Cossacks 1% Motorcycle Club. Retrieved 2023-05-19.
- ^ Goldstein, Sasha. "Bandidos and Cossacks: Things to know about the outlaw biker gangs involved in Waco Twin Peaks shootout that left 9 dead". New York Daily News.
- ^ Throttle, Insane (February 2, 2019). "Abilene Bandido member found guilty of Jones County murder.Bandido Biker Club leader Curtis Jack Lewis was found not guilty of his part in the stabbing".
- ^ Group, Sinclair Broadcast (December 15, 2015). "Testimony kicks off in Bandidos motorcycle club leader's trial". KTXS.
{{cite web}}
:|last=
has generic name (help) - ^ Ford, Dana (May 19, 2015). "Bandidos vs. Cossacks: Was the Texas biker shootout over territory?". CNN.
- ^ "The Untold Story of the Texas Biker Gang Shoot-Out". September 30, 2015.
- ^ "Bandidos v. Cossacks: Was the Texas biker shootout over territory?". May 19, 2015.
- ^ Holl, Skip; April 2017 32, sworth (March 23, 2017). "The Wild Bunch". Texas Monthly.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ "Bulletin warned of potential trouble between bikers". 12news.com. 18 May 2015.