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Tragic Motorcycle Club Highway Ambush
The video dives into the explosive news of 17 alleged Homietos outlaw motorcycle gang members facing federal RICO conspiracy, racketeering murder, attempted murder, assault, and firearms charges in Texas. This major federal crackdown on the Homietos OMG (an extension of the violent Tango Blast prison gang) highlights how these groups allegedly turned highways into battlegrounds with shootings, intimidation, and violence to control territory in the Houston area.
The speaker breaks down the DOJ indictment, stressing that the feds aren’t playing around under this administration—old crimes from 2020 and beyond are coming back to haunt members via RICO predicates. It serves as a stark warning: joining an outlaw motorcycle gang isn’t just about riding; it can lead to life in prison or even the death penalty in Texas, especially with all the surveillance and technology making it impossible to get away with violence.

Feds tie deadly Interstate 45 shootings to Houston biker gang war
A shooting rampage that killed three bikers on Texas highways in 2023 was the work of the Homietos Outlaw Motorcycle Club — and appears connected to a motorcycle gang war that raged across the Houston area for years, states a federal criminal charging document filed in Houston this week.
The Justice Department filed new charges Thursday against Joseph Roy “Tequila” Gomez, accusing him of participating in a racketeering conspiracy tied to the motorcycle gang.
MORE ON HOUSTONCHRONICLE.COM: The FBI says the Bandidos started a war in Houston. Here’s what that means
Gomez is among a group of Homietos members who in 2023 were accused of participating in a 2020 assault on a motorcycle club at the Sterling Banquet Hall in Houston.
Law enforcement agencies targeted the Comanchero Outlaw Motorcycle Club
Law enforcement agencies from across Australia and New Zealand have targeted the Comanchero Outlaw Motorcycle Club in a coordinated National Day of Action as part of Operation Morpheus.
The focus of the National Day of Action was to cause maximum disruption to the Comanchero’s through compliance and enforcement activities across Australia and New Zealand.
With a significant legacy of past national coordination and collaboration by law enforcement and partners in Australia and New Zealand, National Taskforce Operation Morpheus is a joint initiative. This includes all Australian State and Territory police, New Zealand Police, Australian Federal Police, Australian Border Force, Australian Criminal Intelligence Commission, Australian Defence Force, AUSTRAC, Australian Taxation Office, and Services Australia collaboratively targeting the highest threat outlaw motorcycle gangs (OMCGs) impacting Australia and New Zealand.
The National Day of Action, held on Thursday 5 March 2026, was focused on disrupting and dismantling the organisational capability of the Comanchero OMCG. Across the country and New Zealand, police executed search warrants and arrest warrants, and targeted illicit firearms, weapons, drugs and traffic related offences.
Fight over Ownership Patch Of Outlaw Motorcycle Club
A fight for ownership of the trademark for an outlaw motorcycle club’s patch — a logo notorious from a biker war that killed more than 160 people — has been settled by federal bureaucrats at the Canadian Intellectual Property Office.
In a strange clash of corporate rules meeting biker culture, the mother of a former national president of the Rock Machine Motorcycle Club faced a hostile takeover of her right to the logo by a law firm representing a client the lawyers wouldn’t name.
The Rock Machine name and logo is recognizable to many people of a certain age, particularly in Quebec. The patch was worn on the backs of the losing side of a devastating underworld power struggle with the Hells Angels Motorcycle Club that shockingly stretched from 1994 to 2002 with a staccato of shootouts, assassinations, bombings, arsons, mass arrests, and screaming headlines.
Visit for more tunes on Spotify https://open.spotify.com/artist/7BuMkurpv1EpOmRpoLOZHwInmate who killed Quebec biker-turned-informant behind bars denied parole
A man who helped carry out the murder of a Quebec biker who turned informant on the Hells Angels has been denied parole, in part, because he recently attacked another fellow inmate.
In a decision made last week, the Parole Board of Canada denied full parole to Alvin Starblanket, 44, an Indigenous man who has twice been convicted of killing people, including a priest.
Starblanket is serving the life sentence he received in 2008, when he pleaded guilty to the second-degree murder of Aimé Simard, a former member of the Rockers, a support club of the Hells Angels Nomads chapter based in Montreal during Quebec’s biker gang war.
Simard decided to become an informant in 1997 after he was arrested for a murder. He testified in court against people tied to the Hells Angels, including fellow members of the Rockers. He admitted to killing three people for the gang as well as three attempted murders.
In 1998, Simard testified in a murder trial at the Montreal courthouse. Five other men tied to the Rockers were accused of murdering a rival drug dealer, but all were acquitted.