Tragedy Outside Bikers Corner: St. Louis Man Charged in Fatal Shooting at North City Motorcycle Bar

In the early morning hours of May 28, 2026, a violent confrontation outside a popular north St. Louis biker bar left one man dead and the community once again grappling with gun violence in the city. Keith Taylor, 36, was shot and killed in front of Bikers Corner Cocktail Lounge at the corner of North Market Street and Vandeventer Avenue in the Jeff-Vander-Lou neighborhood. Just days later, authorities filed serious charges against a suspect, highlighting how quickly a night at a local establishment can turn deadly.

According to the St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department (SLMPD), the incident unfolded shortly before 2 a.m. Surveillance video from the bar captured the chaotic sequence of events. Taylor was attempting to leave the establishment on his motorcycle when he was approached and attacked by Corey D’Angelo Sterling-Tindle, 28, and another unidentified man. The confrontation escalated rapidly. As Taylor mounted his bike, both suspects reportedly drew firearms and advanced on him. Taylor then produced his own gun in what appeared to be self-defense, only to be shot by Sterling-Tindle.

Officers arriving at the scene found Taylor suffering from multiple gunshot wounds. Despite efforts to save him, he was pronounced dead at the location. The shooting sent shockwaves through the tight-knit biker community that frequents the bar, a known gathering spot for motorcycle enthusiasts in north St. Louis.

On June 3, 2026, prosecutors formally charged Sterling-Tindle with first-degree murder and armed criminal action. Charging documents detail the surveillance evidence as central to the case, showing the attack on Taylor as he tried to depart peacefully. Police continue to search for the second suspect involved in the initial assault.

This tragedy adds to a troubling pattern of violence in St. Louis, where disputes in nightlife settings often escalate due to the presence of firearms. Bikers Corner has long served as a hub for riders, offering a place for motorcycle clubs and enthusiasts to socialize. While many patrons describe it as a welcoming spot for those who share a passion for two-wheeled machines, incidents like this underscore the risks that can arise when alcohol, egos, and weapons mix.

Friends and family of Keith Taylor remember him as more than just another statistic. Those close to him portrayed Taylor as a dedicated motorcycle rider who enjoyed the camaraderie of the biking lifestyle. He reportedly had no known major conflicts prior to that fateful night, making the sudden eruption of violence even more heartbreaking for loved ones.

The case also raises broader questions about safety around late-night establishments in high-crime areas of north St. Louis. Neighborhood residents have expressed ongoing frustration with gun violence that spills into public spaces, affecting not just those involved in disputes but the wider community. Local leaders and police have repeatedly called for greater vigilance and community cooperation in solving these crimes.

SLMPD’s Homicide Division is actively investigating and urges anyone with additional information to come forward. Tips can be submitted anonymously through CrimeStoppers, which offers cash rewards for information leading to arrests.

As Sterling-Tindle awaits further court proceedings, the family of Keith Taylor must navigate the painful process of mourning while seeking justice. The video evidence may provide clarity on the sequence of events, but it cannot undo the loss of a life cut short in what should have been a routine night out.

Incidents involving motorcycle clubs or bars often attract extra attention due to stereotypes about biker culture. However, law enforcement stresses that this appears to be an isolated altercation rather than part of any larger organized conflict. Still, it serves as a stark reminder of how fragile peace can be in urban nightlife settings.

St. Louis continues to battle its reputation for violent crime, with fatal shootings occurring far too frequently. This latest case outside Bikers Corner adds another chapter to that ongoing story — one that families, investigators, and the community hope will lead to accountability and, ultimately, fewer tragedies on city streets.

Authorities have not released further details about potential motives or the relationship, if any, between Taylor and the suspects. The investigation remains active as prosecutors build their case for trial.

Whatever your taste Insane Throttle Has you Covered. Rock With Insane Throttle or bang with Defiant Afterlife. If your looking for Country check out Kenny Ashe and if you’re about the Street Life we have Ghost 21. All are streaming on all major platforms. #BikerNews #bikerNews1 #bikieNews #insaneThrottle #motorcycleClub #motorcycleClubNews #outlawBikerNews1

Outlaws MC Kidnapped Beaten & Executed

https://youtu.be/CBv9mDAlhAs

In this hard-hitting episode of Insane Throttle, we break down the shocking conclusion to a five-year saga involving felony murder, kidnapping, and evidence tampering tied to the Outlaws MC. From the 2021 execution-style killing of Jason Comm to the heavy reliance on surveillance video that tracked every move, this case raises serious questions about justice, the surveillance state, and motorcycle club involvement. We also connect it to broader biker news topics like police raids on clubhouses, cop accountability failures, and how doorbell cams and government tracking are changing everything for riders and citizens alike.

If you’re into raw outlaw biker stories, MC drama, police misconduct breakdowns, and warnings about Big Brother surveillance, this video is for you. Topics covered include the Outlaws Motorcycle Club, Kane County raid fallout, North Carolina cop punching incident, informal social control in biker neighborhoods, and the scary power of interconnected cameras in everyday life.

Stay informed on the latest motorcycle club news, law enforcement overreach, and rider issues. Drop your thoughts in the comments — was 44 years enough? Should surveillance be this invasive?

Subscribe to Insane Throttle for more honest biker news, Outlaws MC updates, and unfiltered commentary. Check out Insane Throttle Music on YouTube, Spotify, and Apple for pure rock and metal playlists.

Timestamps:

  • 0:00 – Five-Year Outlaws MC Murder Case Finally Ends
  • 0:22 – 44-Year Sentence for Felony Murder, Kidnapping & Tampering
  • 1:30 – Why Did This Happen? Judge & Family Demand Answers
  • 2:29 – Guilty Verdict: Zachary App & Surveillance Evidence
  • 3:43 – How Cameras Tracked Everything From Bar to Clubhouse
  • 5:23 – Details of the Beating, Binding & Shooting of Jason Comm
  • 7:15 – The Dangers of Constant Surveillance & Fourth Amendment Concerns
  • 8:18 – Digital ID, Social Credit Scores & Orwellian Future
  • 9:36 – Court System Delays & Final Thoughts on the Tragedy
Whatever your taste Insane Throttle Has you Covered. Rock With Insane Throttle or bang with Defiant Afterlife. If your looking for Country check out Kenny Ashe and if you’re about the Street Life we have Ghost 21. All are streaming on all major platforms. #BikerNews #bikerNews1 #insaneThrottle #motorcycleClub #motorcycleClubNews #outlawBikerNews1 #OutlawMC #outlawsMotorcycleClub

Outlaws MC Clubhouse Raids: Why Busybody Policing Might Be Making Neighborhoods Worse

In the opening of the latest video, the host makes a bold and controversial point: “Anytime you have a clubhouse of a motorcycle club, it does not matter whatsoever if they’re an outlaw club or a regular mom and pop club — the neighborhood is always safer.” According to him, when outsiders — especially law enforcement — go in and disrupt that flow, everything quickly goes “batshit.”

This perspective, rooted in years of observing biker culture and local neighborhood dynamics, forms the core of his argument following the recent raid on a suspected Outlaws Motorcycle Club-linked property in Kankakee, Illinois.

On May 8, 2026, the Kankakee Area Metropolitan Enforcement Group (KAMEG) arrested three men during a raid on a building in the 800 block of South Washington Avenue. Authorities seized guns, marijuana, and cash. The property is allegedly tied to members of the Outlaws MC, though it was described in media reports as a “suspected motorcycle clubhouse.”

What stands out, however, is the lack of follow-through. As of early June, there are no public records showing that the Kankakee County State’s Attorney has filed formal charges against the three men. KAMEG Director Clayt Wolfe stated that no further information could be released because the investigation remains ongoing. The raid involved assistance from the Tri-County Stolen Auto Task Force, Kankakee Police Department, and the Illinois State Police SWAT team — a heavy show of force for what many in the biker community view as questionable priorities.

The host draws a striking historical parallel. He recalls how Italian-American communities in his old neighborhood maintained order and low crime through informal social control. Once the FBI (which he jokingly calls “Forever Bother Italians”) heavily targeted those networks, the neighborhoods deteriorated. He equates this to modern motorcycle club policing: “You start messing with clubhouses, the crime goes to crap.”

His central thesis is that motorcycle clubs — even outlaw ones — often act as a natural deterrent in their immediate territory. A two- or three-block radius around a clubhouse tends to stay relatively quiet because members don’t tolerate external troublemakers on their turf. When law enforcement aggressively disrupts that ecosystem, the protective structure collapses, and opportunistic crime fills the vacuum.

Critics will immediately push back, pointing to the guns and marijuana recovered. The host counters that marijuana is fully legal in Illinois, and questions why it was even highlighted in reports. He also raises familiar skepticism about seized cash — wondering aloud whether the full amount always makes it into official records.

This isn’t an isolated incident. The video also covers a separate North Las Vegas case involving a deadly shooting tied to outlaw motorcycle gang members, including the recent arrest of a high-ranking suspect on charges including open murder and conspiracy. These stories fuel ongoing debates about the role of motorcycle clubs in American society.

Whether you agree with the “clubhouses make neighborhoods safer” argument or see it as romanticizing criminal elements, the pattern the host describes is worth examining. Law enforcement agencies across the country continue to dedicate significant resources to motorcycle club investigations, often using multi-agency task forces and SWAT deployments. Yet measurable improvements in overall neighborhood safety remain debatable in many areas where clubs have historically maintained a presence.

The host ends by inviting viewer feedback: Do you believe areas around active motorcycle clubhouses are genuinely safer, or is that just biker folklore? His message is clear — before celebrating another headline-grabbing raid, society should consider the unintended consequences of removing informal social controls that may have been quietly working for decades.

In an era where traditional community structures continue to erode, stories like the Kankakee raid force uncomfortable questions: Are we actually solving problems, or are we breaking systems that were already maintaining a fragile peace?

https://youtu.be/VBFJvSF-ZOk

#BikerNews #bikerNews1 #insaneThrottle #motorcycleClub #outlawBikerNews1 #OutlawMC #OutlawsMCClubhouseRaids #outlawsMotorcycleClub

Outlaws MC Clubhouse Gets Hit Hard

https://youtu.be/VBFJvSF-ZOk

What Really Happens When Police Raid an Outlaws MC Clubhouse?

In this episode we break down how Outlaws MC got hit hard during a major police raid at the AOA Clubhouse in Kane County, Illinois. Three men arrested, guns and marijuana seized — but zero charges filed? We expose the truth about law enforcement targeting motorcycle clubs and why neighborhoods around clubhouses are usually safer until the “busy bodies” show up and destroy the balance.

From the Kane County raid on a suspected Outlaws Motorcycle Clubhouse to a deadly rival gang shooting in North Las Vegas involving high-ranking Outlaws members, we cover the latest biker news and the real consequences when cops disrupt established MC territories.

If you’re into Outlaws MC, 1%er clubs, biker lifestyle, and raw motorcycle club news, this one’s for you.

Timestamps:

  • 0:00 – Busy bodies always messing with motorcycle clubs
  • 0:47 – Kane County Outlaws MC Clubhouse Raid Breakdown
  • 2:20 – Three men arrested at suspected AOA Clubhouse
  • 3:05 – Guns, marijuana & cash seized (Legal weed in Illinois?)
  • 4:30 – No charges filed? The plot thickens
  • 5:39 – North Las Vegas Outlaws MC Rival Shooting Update
  • 9:16 – Why clubhouses actually make neighborhoods safer

Insane Throttle Biker News | Outlaws MC | AOA Clubhouse Raid

Whatever your taste Insane Throttle Has you Covered. Rock With Insane Throttle or bang with Defiant Afterlife. If your looking for Country check out Kenny Ashe and if you’re about the Street Life we have Ghost 21. All are streaming on all major platforms.

#bikelife #BikerNews #bikerNewsToday #bikerlifestyle #bikers #IllinoisStatePoliceSWATTeam #insaneThrottle #KAMEGDirectorClaytWolfe #mcNews #motorcycleClub #motorcycleClubNews #motorcycleGangNews #outlawBikerNews #outlawBikers #outlawMotorcycleClubs #outlawsChicago #outlawsMc #outlawsMotorcycleClub

Why Cops Face More Arrests and Convictions Than Outlaw Motorcycle Club Members

In discussions about crime and public safety in the United States, outlaw motorcycle clubs (OMCs) like the Hells Angels, Outlaws, and Bandidos often receive intense scrutiny as symbols of organized criminal enterprise. However, a closer examination of available data reveals a striking pattern: American law enforcement officers are arrested for crimes in significantly higher absolute numbers and demonstrate notable conviction rates that frequently surpass the throughput of prosecutions against OMC members. This reality challenges assumptions about institutional immunity and highlights the scale of accountability within policing compared to smaller, more insular criminal networks.

The sheer volume of cases is telling. The Henry A. Wallace Police Crime Database, maintained by Bowling Green State University criminologist Philip Stinson, documents 20,711 criminal arrest cases involving 16,758 individual nonfederal sworn law enforcement officers between 2005 and 2021. These arrests span all 50 states and cover offenses ranging from assault and domestic violence to drug crimes, sexual misconduct, theft, and even murder. With roughly 800,000 sworn officers nationwide, this represents a consistent stream of documented misconduct — averaging around 1,000 arrests per year.

By contrast, outlaw motorcycle clubs operate with far smaller memberships. Estimates place active “1%er” OMC members in the low thousands to perhaps 10,000–20,000 across major clubs in the U.S. While individual members often have extensive criminal histories — with studies showing high lifetime conviction rates for violence, drugs, and racketeering — the absolute number of annual prosecutions remains lower due to the limited pool of individuals. Large-scale federal operations occasionally yield dozens of arrests, but these are episodic rather than a steady annual flow matching police misconduct cases.

Conviction Patterns and Accountability Mechanisms

Conviction rates further support the disparity. Research drawn from police crime data indicates that in many categories, officers face meaningful consequences. For instance, in cases involving sexual misconduct, conviction rates can reach around 80% in analyzed samples. Overall, when officers are arrested and prosecuted, felony convictions occur in a majority of resolved cases where outcomes are known, often leading to prison time averaging several years. Administrative actions compound this: arrests frequently result in immediate suspension, termination, or decertification, creating layers of professional ruin beyond criminal penalties.

OMCs, while notorious for criminal involvement, benefit from structural advantages that can dilute conviction efficiency. Loyalty codes, witness intimidation, and the use of “puppet” associates insulate leadership. Many operations target lower-level members, with full-patch leaders sometimes publicly distancing themselves. Lifetime criminality among OMC members is high (often exceeding 70-80% with records), but per-capita conviction throughput does not exceed the raw volume seen in policing when scaled nationally. Smaller group size inherently limits total convictions compared to the hundreds of thousands of officers subject to constant public and internal scrutiny.

Why the Numbers Favor Greater Police Accountability

Several factors explain this pattern:

  • Scale and Opportunity: With nearly 800,000 officers versus thousands of hardcore OMC members, the law enforcement population is orders of magnitude larger. Officers also hold positions of authority — carrying weapons, accessing sensitive information, and wielding discretion — which create unique opportunities for abuse, from excessive force to evidence tampering.
  • Transparency and Oversight: Police arrests generate media coverage, internal affairs investigations, body camera reviews, and Freedom of Information access. This produces better documentation than the shadowy operations of biker clubs. Federal databases and academic tracking (like Stinson’s project) capture police crimes systematically, while OMC data relies more on selective intelligence reports and occasional task force sweeps.
  • Resource Investment: Billions fund police oversight, producing visible results in arrests and convictions. OMC enforcement, though aggressive via ATF and FBI operations, competes with broader priorities and faces challenges infiltrating tight-knit groups.

Critics of policing rightly demand reform to address misconduct that erodes public trust. Yet data shows the system does produce accountability: thousands of officers enter the justice system annually, with solid conviction percentages in tracked cases. This contrasts with OMCs, where high criminal propensity exists but absolute societal impact through convictions appears smaller due to limited membership.

Broader Implications for American Justice

This empirical picture supports arguments for consistent standards. If society invests heavily in disrupting OMCs through specialized units and racketeering laws, equivalent rigor must apply internally to law enforcement. The higher documented arrest and conviction activity among officers demonstrates that policing is not a shield against consequences — it is subject to greater visibility and volume of intervention.

Communities deserve protection from all threats, whether from outlaw bikers engaged in drug trafficking and violence or from officers who betray their oaths. Acknowledging that law enforcement generates more arrests and maintains competitive conviction rates underscores the need for continued improvements in vetting, training, and independent oversight. No group should claim a monopoly on crime or immunity, but the numbers reveal that officers face more frequent and transparent reckoning within the American justice system.

True public safety requires balanced scrutiny. The data from comprehensive police crime tracking proves that accountability mechanisms, while imperfect, deliver higher volumes of arrests and convictions for law enforcement than for the much smaller universe of outlaw motorcycle club members. Strengthening these processes benefits everyone by reinforcing trust and equity in the rule of law.

#andConvictionsThanOutlawMotorcycleClubMembers #arrests #BikerNews #bikerNews1 #bikieNews #hellsAngels #history #insaneThrottle #motorcycleClub #news #outlawBikerNews1 #OutlawMC #outlawsMotorcycleClub

Guilt by Association: Ninth Circuit Battles Over Gun Permit Denied for Member Of BoozeFighters Motorcycle Club

In a case that pits Second Amendment rights against public safety concerns, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit recently heard arguments in Shilling v. County of San Diego. Plaintiff Kenneth Shilling challenged the county’s decision to revoke his concealed carry weapon (CCW) permit solely based on his membership in the Boozefighters Motorcycle Club. The dispute highlights deeper tensions in post-Bruen America: how far can local officials go in denying gun rights based on associations, and does this constitute unconstitutional discrimination?

What Happened: The Facts of the Case

Kenneth Shilling held a valid CCW permit in San Diego County until a change in sheriff leadership altered the landscape. In December 2023, Sheriff Kelly Martinez revoked his permit, citing Shilling’s affiliation with the Boozefighters Motorcycle Club (BMC), which the sheriff’s department internally labeled a “criminal street gang.” This classification stemmed from an unpublished policy deeming members “dangerous” under prior “good moral character” standards.

Even after California updated its laws following the 2022 Supreme Court New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen decision—which struck down subjective “proper cause” requirements—counties retained discretion. Shilling sued under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging violations of his First Amendment right to freedom of association and Second Amendment right to bear arms. A federal district court dismissed much of the case on immunity and mootness grounds (Shilling eventually received a new permit), but his attorney Gary Gorski appealed to keep the challenge alive to prevent future harms.

The “how” is straightforward: an internal policy allowed blanket denial based on group membership without individualized evidence of criminality by Shilling himself. The “when” traces to a sheriff’s policy shift post-election, amplified by California’s evolving CCW framework in 2024, which aimed for more objective criteria but left room for interpretation.

Why This Matters: Core Constitutional Questions

Why did the county act? Public safety. Motorcycle clubs, particularly those with outlaw reputations like some one-percenters, have documented ties to crime in law enforcement databases. Sheriffs argue that associating with groups involved in violence, drugs, or organized crime creates a reasonable risk for permit holders who carry firearms in public. Denying permits protects the community from potential escalation.

June 19th 2026 The Biggest Release Of Raw Unfiltered Biker Music in a generation

Shilling and advocates counter that this is guilt by association. No evidence showed Shilling committed crimes; the denial rested purely on membership. This raises “why” questions about due process: Can an unpublished policy override constitutional rights? Gorski warned of a slippery slope—labeling lawyers, bar patrons, or political groups as “dangerous” could strip rights arbitrarily.

Post-Bruen, courts must evaluate gun regulations against historical traditions. Subjective “dangerousness” based on associations may lack clear historical analogs, favoring shall-issue regimes with objective disqualifiers (felonies, domestic violence, etc.).

Pros and Cons of the County’s Approach

Pros (Public Safety Perspective):

  • Targeted Risk Mitigation: Law enforcement has intelligence on certain clubs. Revoking permits for members could reduce armed confrontations or insider threats.
  • Local Discretion: Sheriffs, elected officials closest to communities, should have flexibility in high-crime areas like parts of California.
  • Precedent for Restrictions: Courts have upheld some associational limits (e.g., felon-in-possession laws). If a group is designated a gang, membership signals elevated risk.

Cons (Rights Perspective):

  • Chills Association: Penalizing membership discourages lawful exercise of First Amendment rights. Peaceful riders in clubs lose rights without due process.
  • Vague and Unaccountable: Unpublished policies evade scrutiny, risking abuse. Shilling received his permit later, suggesting inconsistency.
  • Discriminatory Impact: This disproportionately affects working-class or subcultural groups. Similar logic could target gun clubs, hunting groups, or political organizations, creating unequal protection under the law.
  • Mootness Evasion: Even if one person gets a permit, the policy remains, deterring others.

Is This Discrimination?

Yes, arguably viewpoint or associational discrimination. The First Amendment protects freedom of association, including with unpopular groups, absent imminent harm (see NAACP v. Alabama). Applying this to gun rights implicates the Second Amendment’s core protection for “law-abiding, responsible citizens.”

Critics see class or cultural bias: Motorcycle enthusiasts, often blue-collar, face hurdles that affluent applicants might not. It echoes concerns about “good moral character” clauses historically used against minorities or dissidents. However, if the club has verifiable criminal activity, individualized assessments (not blanket bans) would better balance rights and safety.

California’s shift to “objective criteria” post-2024 was meant to fix subjectivity, yet cases like this show implementation gaps. Long wait times and varying county policies exacerbate access issues.

Broader Implications and the Road Ahead

This case tests whether post-Bruen reforms truly constrain discretionary power. A Ninth Circuit win for Shilling could force counties to abandon guilt-by-association tactics, requiring evidence of personal disqualifiers. A loss might embolden sheriffs, inviting more litigation up to the Supreme Court.

The panel—Trump appointees Kenneth Lee and Patrick Bumatay, plus Biden appointee Jennifer Sung—heard arguments on May 21, 2026. No immediate ruling, but the decision could clarify boundaries for concealed carry nationwide, especially in permissive states with restrictive pockets.

Ultimately, this isn’t just about one man’s permit. It’s about whether constitutional rights are indivisible or can be traded for administrative convenience. Strong gun rights advocates argue that law-abiding citizens, regardless of hobbies, shouldn’t lose fundamental protections on flimsy associations. Public safety proponents insist that ignoring group dynamics invites tragedy.

As courts navigate this, the balance must favor evidence-based decisions over stereotypes. True discrimination occurs when rights are stripped without cause; reasonable regulation protects everyone. The Ninth Circuit’s ruling will signal which way the scales tip in California’s ongoing gun rights battles.

Sources / References:

  • Washington Examiner – “Ninth Circuit weighs gun owner’s fight against California county for denying gun permit over motorcycle club membership” (May 21, 2026) https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/justice/4577111/ninth-circuit-gun-owner-fight-against-san-diego-county/
  • MSN Original Article https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/crime/ninth-circuit-weighs-gun-owners-fight-against-california-county-for-denying-gun-permit-over-motorcycle-club-membership/ar-AA23KGBw
  • Additional court background from public records on Shilling v. County of San Diego (Case No. 25-291).
  • #BikerNews #boozefighters #CaliforniaConcealedCarry #CaliforniaGunLaws #CCWRevocation #concealedCarryPermit #constitutionalRights #discrimination #freedomOfAssociation #guiltByAssociation #gunPermitDenial #gunRights #insaneThrottle #motorcycleClub #motorcycleGang #NinthCircuit #postBruen #publicSafetyVsGunRights #SanDiegoSheriff #secondAmendment #ShillingVCountyOfSanDiego

    Danny D Low- Vegas Profile Stories- Satans Choice Interviews

    https://youtu.be/0Xp2NMh9tSE

    Was I Wrong About Satan’s Choice Motorcycle Club? The Truth About Danny D Low & Vegas Profile Stories

    In this raw response video, I break down my complete turnaround on Satan’s Choice after diving deep into their vision. I give full credit to Danny D Low and Rick from Vegas Profile Stories for their powerful interviews that exposed the real story behind one of the fastest growing motorcycle clubs in 2026.

    From admitting my initial doubts, to calling out the fake cheerleaders and patch police in the comments, this is straight talk from the streets. Danny D Low has always been solid, and Rick delivered a professional interview with Harley that got both sides. If you’re tired of the drama, violence, and outdated MC politics, this one’s for you.

    Keywords: Satan’s Choice, Danny D Low, Vegas Profile Stories, Insane Throttle, motorcycle club drama, biker news 2026, MC interviews, outlaw motorcycle clubs, Satan’s Choice interview.

    Don’t let the haters get to you — real brotherhood is evolving. Drop a comment if you’ve seen the interviews and tell me what you think.

    Timestamps:

    • 0:00 – Danny D Low & Vegas Profile Stories on Satan’s Choice
    • 0:47 – Why I was originally wrong about Satan’s Choice
    • 1:04 – Danny D Low was 100% spot on
    • 2:01 – My personal history with Danny D Low
    • 3:23 – Satan’s Choice vision and why they’re growing fast
    • 4:19 – The truth about internet recruiting in major clubs
    • 6:13 – Rick from Vegas Profile Stories badass interview
    • 7:13 – Admitting when you’re wrong in the biker scene
    • 9:56 – Why I don’t do interviews anymore
    • 12:25 – Shoutout to Danny D Low & Vegas Profile Stories
    • 12:57 – New Insane Throttle Music & Albums
    June 19th 2026 The Biggest Release Of Raw Unfiltered Biker Music in a generation #bikelife #BikerNews #bikerNewsToday #bikerlifestyle #bikers #dannyDLow #HarleyGuindon #insaneThrottle #mcNews #motorcycleClub #motorcycleClubNews #motorcycleGangNews #outlawBikerNews #outlawBikers #outlawMotorcycleClubs #satansChoice #vegasProfileStories

    Los Diablos MC Mass Shooting At Clubhouse

    https://youtu.be/V-SzXkVYv90

    What happens when a motorcycle club clubhouse gets shot up with 90 rounds — does it put every biker bar and clubhouse at risk?

    In this video, we break down the recent Lost Diablo MC shooting in Omaha where 90 shots were fired at their clubhouse, leaving six people with non-life-threatening injuries. We discuss the real cause and effect this type of violence has on the entire motorcycle club scene — from zoning laws being used as a weapon against clubhouses to business owners protecting their investments with “No Colors” policies.

    Whether you’re a patched rider, independent biker, or just follow outlaw biker news, this video covers the tough conversations happening right now in the motorcycle community: community backlash, police pressure, potential new gang laws, and why some bar owners are drawing hard lines.

    Topics covered:

    • Lost Diablo Omaha shooting update
    • How one incident can trigger zoning crackdowns on motorcycle clubs
    • “No Colors” signs in bars — discrimination or smart business?
    • Protecting million-dollar investments vs. biker rights
    • Real talk on rallies, fights, and changing times in the biker lifestyle

    If you ride, support clubs, or own a business that caters to bikers, drop your honest answer in the comments: If you invested $1 million+ in a bar, would you put up a No Colors sign?

    Timestamps:

    • 0:00 Cause and Effect – The Big Picture
    • 0:46 Lost Diablo Clubhouse Shooting in Omaha – What Happened
    • 1:13 Zoning Laws: The Government’s Favorite Weapon Against MCs
    • 2:34 How Incidents Like This Create Backlash & New Laws
    • 5:18 Iowa Bar Owner Drops $1M+ and Puts Up No Colors Sign
    • 6:36 Discrimination or Protecting Your Investment?
    • 9:54 Why More Businesses Are Saying No to Colors
    • 11:15 Question for Viewers: Would YOU Risk Your Bar for Club Colors?

    Stay tuned for more raw biker news, motorcycle club updates, and real talk from the streets.

    Outlaw Forever. New album drops June 19th, 2026.

    🔥 Subscribe for daily motorcycle club news and outlaw biker content. Turn on notifications so you never miss an update.

    #LostDiablo #MotorcycleClub #BikerNews #OmahaShooting #NoColors #OutlawBikers #MCNews #BikerLife #ZoningLaws #InsaneThrottle

    June 19th 2026 The Biggest Release Of Raw Unfiltered Biker Music in a generation #bar #bikelife #BikerNews #bikerNewsToday #bikerlifestyle #bikers #insaneThrottle #losDiablos #losDiablosMc #mcNews #motorcycleClub #motorcycleClubNews #motorcycleClubhouse #motorcycleGangNews #omaha #outlawBikerNews #outlawBikers #outlawMotorcycleClubs

    19 Injured as Stampede Causes ‘Mass Casualty Incident’ at South Carolina Biker Festival

    At least 19 people have been injured following a stampede at an annual motorcycle rally in Atlantic Beach, South Carolina.

    The “mass casualty incident” occurred on the morning of Sunday, May 24, 1:05 a.m. local time, Horry County Fire Rescue (HCFR) confirmed. Authorities were dispatched to the stage area near South Ocean Boulevard following the “reported stampede.”

    The incident happened during the Black Pearl Cultural Heritage and Bike Festival, which is held annually in the area over Memorial Day weekend, NBC News reported, citing the town of Atlantic Beach.

    Read More

    June 19th 2026 The Biggest Release Of Raw Unfiltered Biker Music in a generation #19InjuredAsStampedeCausesMassCasualtyIncidentAtSouthCarolinaBikerFestival #BikerNews #bikerNews1 #bikieNews #insaneThrottle #motorcycleClub #outlawBikerNews1

    VAGOS MC Brutal Bar Fight

    https://youtu.be/RxDhvmznomc

    Is the Douglasville Police Department turning a bar fight into a full-blown outlaw motorcycle club crackdown?

    In this episode, we break down the dramatic response from Douglasville Police Chief Dr. Gary Sparks after a fight at Topps Bar and Grill involving members of the Vagos Motorcycle Club (Green Nation). From over-the-top Facebook statements lumping outlaw motorcycle clubs with street gangs to questionable charges of “gang activity” over what appears to be a typical bar fight, we call out the hype and ask the real questions the mainstream media won’t.

    We cover the arrests, the seizure of Harleys and alleged weapons, the cooperation with county sheriffs, and why small-town police seem to love using biker clubs for headlines and funding. Is this legitimate public safety or just fear-mongering for clicks and budgets?

    If you follow Vagos MC, outlaw motorcycle clubs, biker news, 1%er culture, or police vs bikers drama, this one’s for you.

    Timestamps:

    • 0:00 – Douglasville Police Dramatic Statement
    • 1:20 – Chief Dr. Gary Sparks warns outlaw MCs & street gangs
    • 2:45 – Details of the Topps Bar and Grill fight
    • 4:52 – Why small towns hype biker incidents
    • 6:19 – Arrests, charges & “gang activity” claims
    • 7:49 – What police seized from Vagos members
    • 8:46 – Media bias & Green Nation explanation
    June 19th 2026 The Biggest Release Of Raw Unfiltered Biker Music in a generation #bikelife #BikerNews #bikerNewsToday #bikerlifestyle #bikers #douglesville #insaneThrottle #mcNews #motorcycleClub #motorcycleClubNews #motorcycleGangNews #outlawBikerNews #outlawBikers #outlawMotorcycleClubs #vagosMc #VAGOSMCBrutalBarFight