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Feds fail to ban lawyer from Bandidos case – Chron.com
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Kent Schaffer attorney for former Bandidos Motorcycle Club national President Jeffrey Pike. (James Nielsen / Houston Chronicle)
Kent Schaffer attorney for former Bandidos Motorcycle Club national President Jeffrey Pike. (James Nielsen / Houston Chronicle)
Photo: Houston Chronicle
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Jeffrey Fay Pike, 60, of Conroe, the national president of the Bandidos Motorcycle Club, is escorted from the Bob Casey Federal Courthouse, 515 Rusk, after an appearance in federal court, where he faced several charges related to his alleged activity with the Bandidos Motorcycle Club shown Wednesday, Jan. 6, 2016, in Houston. ( Melissa Phillip / Houston Chronicle ) Jeffrey Ray Pike is escorted by a U. S. Marshal after an appearance in federal court, where he faced several charges related to his alleged activity with the Bandidos Motorcycle Club Wednesday, Jan. 6, 2016, in Houston. ( Melissa Phillip / Houston Chronicle ) less
Jeffrey Fay Pike, 60, of Conroe, the national president of the Bandidos Motorcycle Club, is escorted from the Bob Casey Federal Courthouse, 515 Rusk, after an appearance in federal court, where he faced several … more
Photo: Houston Chronicle
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Jeffrey Fay Pike, 60, of Conroe, the national president of the Bandidos Motorcycle Club, is escorted from the Bob Casey Federal Courthouse, 515 Rusk, after an appearance in federal court, where he faced several charges related to his alleged activity with the Bandidos Motorcycle Club shown Wednesday, Jan. 6, 2016, in Houston. ( Melissa Phillip / Houston Chronicle ) Jeffrey Ray Pike is escorted by a U. S. Marshal after an appearance in federal court, where he faced several charges related to his alleged activity with the Bandidos Motorcycle Club Wednesday, Jan. 6, 2016, in Houston. ( Melissa Phillip / Houston Chronicle ) less
Jeffrey Fay Pike, 60, of Conroe, the national president of the Bandidos Motorcycle Club, is escorted from the Bob Casey Federal Courthouse, 515 Rusk, after an appearance in federal court, where he faced several … more
Photo: Houston Chronicle
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11/05/2000 – Members of the Bandidos Motorcycle Club during a weekend party at Bryant’s Ice House off Interstate-10, near Katy.
11/05/2000 – Members of the Bandidos Motorcycle Club during a weekend party at Bryant’s Ice House off Interstate-10, near Katy.
11/05/2000 – Detail of patches on the jacket of Bandidos Motorcycle Club North Houston chapter Sgt. at Arms Frank Pologruto. The Bandidos Motorcycle Club made local news when four members were arrested on felony drug charges. after undercover officers from the Harris County Organized Crime and Narcotics Task Force infiltrated the group. The group was formed in Houston in 1966 and has since grown to include chapters nationwide and in foreign countries. While police have said the group exists to commit crime and sell drugs. members dispute that claim, saying they are simply bonded by brotherhood and a love of motorcycles. less
11/05/2000 – Detail of patches on the jacket of Bandidos Motorcycle Club North Houston chapter Sgt. at Arms Frank Pologruto. The Bandidos Motorcycle Club made local news when four members were arrested on … more
Photo: Houston Chronicle
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02/21/1985 – Suspects (L-R, with restraints) Jimmy Glenn Faulk, Thomas Walter Eubanks, Jr. and Sammy Mares (president, Houston-Northwest Bandidos chapter) are led away from Houston’s federal building following their arrests as part of a nationwide organized crime probe of the Bandidos motorcycle club by the FBI. less
02/21/1985 – Suspects (L-R, with restraints) Jimmy Glenn Faulk, Thomas Walter Eubanks, Jr. and Sammy Mares (president, Houston-Northwest Bandidos chapter) are led away from Houston’s federal building following … more
11/05/2000 – Detail photo of rings on the fingers of Bandidos Motorcycle Club National Secretary ‘Bandido’ Bill, who declined to give his last name. The Bandidos Motorcycle Club made local news when four members were arrested on felony drug charges. after undercover officers from the Harris County Organized Crime and Narcotics Task Force infiltrated the group. The group was formed in Houston in 1966 and has since grown to include chapters nationwide and in foreign countries. While police have said the group exists to commit crime and sell drugs. members dispute that claim, saying they are simply bonded by brotherhood and a love of motorcycles. less
11/05/2000 – Detail photo of rings on the fingers of Bandidos Motorcycle Club National Secretary ‘Bandido’ Bill, who declined to give his last name. The Bandidos Motorcycle Club made local news when four … more
Photo: Houston Chronicle
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11/05/2000 – Jan ‘The Man’ Christensen, VP of the NW Houston Chapter, Bandidos Motorcycle Club, and others head home along I-10 west after a weekend party at Bryant’s Ice House near Katy. The Bandidos Motorcycle Club made local news when four members were arrested on felony drug charges. after undercover officers from the Harris County Organized Crime and Narcotics Task Force infiltrated the group. The group was formed in Houston in 1966 and has since grown to include chapters nationwide and in foreign countries, While police have said the group exists to commit crime and sell drugs. members dispute that claim, saying they are simply bonded by brotherhood and a love of motorcycles. less
11/05/2000 – Jan ‘The Man’ Christensen, VP of the NW Houston Chapter, Bandidos Motorcycle Club, and others head home along I-10 west after a weekend party at Bryant’s Ice House near Katy. The Bandidos … more
Photo: Houston Chronicle
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The grave of Donald “Mother” Chambers, founder of the Bandidos Motorcycle Club, is seen at Lawndale Cemetery, Thursday, June 4, 2015, in Houston.
The grave of Donald “Mother” Chambers, founder of the Bandidos Motorcycle Club, is seen at Lawndale Cemetery, Thursday, June 4, 2015, in Houston.
Photo: Houston Chronicle
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09/15/1969 – (L-R) Bandidos Motorcycle Club president Donald Eugene Chambers at Houston Central Police Station with club member David McGraw, who surrendered to police Monday in connection with a murder and an assault outside the Actor’s Bayou Lounge Sept. 6. less
09/15/1969 – (L-R) Bandidos Motorcycle Club president Donald Eugene Chambers at Houston Central Police Station with club member David McGraw, who surrendered to police Monday in connection with a murder and an … more
09/15/1969 – (L-R) Bandidos Motorcycle Club member Patrick Anthony Manili (aka Animal) and club president Donald Eugene Chambers at Houston Central Police Station to turn in fellow club member wanted in connection with a murder and an assault outside a Houston lounge Sept. 6. less
09/15/1969 – (L-R) Bandidos Motorcycle Club member Patrick Anthony Manili (aka Animal) and club president Donald Eugene Chambers at Houston Central Police Station to turn in fellow club member wanted in … more
10/1969 – Bandidos Motorcycle Club president Don Chambers with family and friends. (L-R) Chambers family: Edward, Jo, Don and Sherri with Louis Bonilla, Barbara Pyros, and Jerry Pearce.
10/1969 – Bandidos Motorcycle Club president Don Chambers with family and friends. (L-R) Chambers family: Edward, Jo, Don and Sherri with Louis Bonilla, Barbara Pyros, and Jerry Pearce.
03/09/1970 – Members of the Bandidos motorcycle club were called to testify before a Harris County grand jury investigating the Jan. 23, 1970 death of former Bandido Patrick Anthony Manili (aka Animal). Manili was found shot to death in a ditch one day after he was convicted of aggravated assault. The witnesses are (L-R, SEATED); Pat Tinney, “Freaky Freddy” Pryor, Whitney Bullard (aka Sir Whiteness); (L-R, STANDING): Billy Tinney, Jimmy Howard (aka Happy Howard), Don Chambers, and David McGraw. less
03/09/1970 – Members of the Bandidos motorcycle club were called to testify before a Harris County grand jury investigating the Jan. 23, 1970 death of former Bandido Patrick Anthony Manili (aka Animal). Manili … more
03/09/1970 – Members of the Bandidos motorcycle club were called to testify before a Harris County grand jury investigating the Jan. 23, 1970 death of former Bandido Patrick Anthony Manili (aka Animal). Manili was found shot to death in a ditch one day after he was convicted of aggravated assault. The witnesses are (L-R, SEATED); Jo Chambers, Glen Wilheim, “Freaky Freddy” Pryor; (L-R, STANDING): Don Chambers, Pat Tinney, David McGraw, Billy Tinney (with sunglasses), Jimmy Howard (aka Happy Howard), and Whitney Bullard (aka Sir Whiteness). less
03/09/1970 – Members of the Bandidos motorcycle club were called to testify before a Harris County grand jury investigating the Jan. 23, 1970 death of former Bandido Patrick Anthony Manili (aka Animal). Manili … more
04/21/1972 – Houston Police officer Paul H. Mauk with weapons confiscated in arrests of rival motorcycle gang members. Three members of the Conquistadores and five members of the Bandidos Motorcylce Club were arrested in an attempt to prevent fighting between the two clubs. less
04/21/1972 – Houston Police officer Paul H. Mauk with weapons confiscated in arrests of rival motorcycle gang members. Three members of the Conquistadores and five members of the Bandidos Motorcylce Club were … more
06/08/1977 – Pallbearers, including national Bandidos motorcycle club president Ronnie Hodge (left front), carry the casket of fellow biker, Ronnie E. Floyd, at Brookwood Funeral Home, 10817 W. Hardy. Floyd accidentally shot himself in the head Monday during a party in his home. less
06/08/1977 – Pallbearers, including national Bandidos motorcycle club president Ronnie Hodge (left front), carry the casket of fellow biker, Ronnie E. Floyd, at Brookwood Funeral Home, 10817 W. Hardy. Floyd … more
06/08/1977 – Ronnie Hodge, national Bandidos motorcycle club president, at the funeral for former Bandidos member Ronnie E. Floyd. Floyd accidentally shot himself in the head Monday during a party in his home.
06/08/1977 – Ronnie Hodge, national Bandidos motorcycle club president, at the funeral for former Bandidos member Ronnie E. Floyd. Floyd accidentally shot himself in the head Monday during a party in his home.
10/31/1969 – Bandidos member Jimmy Lee Lindsey meets with Asst. DA Gerald Mackney at the Harris County District Attorney’s office to press charges against fellow Bandidos Motorcycle Club members he says beat and robbed him in a three-day beating carried out in Houston and New Orleans in mid-September. less
10/31/1969 – Bandidos member Jimmy Lee Lindsey meets with Asst. DA Gerald Mackney at the Harris County District Attorney’s office to press charges against fellow Bandidos Motorcycle Club members he says beat … more
Jeffrey Fay Pike, 60, of Conroe, the national president of the Bandidos Motorcycle Club, is escorted from the Bob Casey Federal Courthouse, 515 Rusk, after an appearance in federal court, where he faced several charges related to his alleged activity with the Bandidos Motorcycle Club shown Wednesday, Jan. 6, 2016, in Houston. ( Melissa Phillip / Houston Chronicle ) Jeffrey Ray Pike is escorted by a U. S. Marshal after an appearance in federal court, where he faced several charges related to his alleged activity with the Bandidos Motorcycle Club Wednesday, Jan. 6, 2016, in Houston. ( Melissa Phillip / Houston Chronicle ) less
Jeffrey Fay Pike, 60, of Conroe, the national president of the Bandidos Motorcycle Club, is escorted from the Bob Casey Federal Courthouse, 515 Rusk, after an appearance in federal court, where he faced several … more
Photo: Houston Chronicle
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Jeffrey Fay Pike, 60, of Conroe, the national president of the Bandidos Motorcycle Club, is escorted from the Bob Casey Federal Courthouse, 515 Rusk, after an appearance in federal court, where he faced several charges related to his alleged activity with the Bandidos Motorcycle Club shown Wednesday, Jan. 6, 2016, in Houston. ( Melissa Phillip / Houston Chronicle ) Jeffrey Ray Pike is escorted by a U. S. Marshal after an appearance in federal court, where he faced several charges related to his alleged activity with the Bandidos Motorcycle Club Wednesday, Jan. 6, 2016, in Houston. ( Melissa Phillip / Houston Chronicle ) less
Jeffrey Fay Pike, 60, of Conroe, the national president of the Bandidos Motorcycle Club, is escorted from the Bob Casey Federal Courthouse, 515 Rusk, after an appearance in federal court, where he faced several … more
Photo: Houston Chronicle
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Jeffrey Fay Pike, 60, of Conroe, the national president of the Bandidos Motorcycle Club, is escorted from the Bob Casey Federal Courthouse, 515 Rusk, after an appearance in federal court, where he faced several charges related to his alleged activity with the Bandidos Motorcycle Club shown Wednesday, Jan. 6, 2016, in Houston. ( Melissa Phillip / Houston Chronicle ) Jeffrey Ray Pike is escorted by a U. S. Marshal after an appearance in federal court, where he faced several charges related to his alleged activity with the Bandidos Motorcycle Club Wednesday, Jan. 6, 2016, in Houston. ( Melissa Phillip / Houston Chronicle ) less
Jeffrey Fay Pike, 60, of Conroe, the national president of the Bandidos Motorcycle Club, is escorted from the Bob Casey Federal Courthouse, 515 Rusk, after an appearance in federal court, where he faced several … more
Photo: Houston Chronicle
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Jeffrey Pike, the national president of the Bandidos Motorcycle Club, is escorted from the Bob Casey Federal Courthouse on Wednesday, Jan. 6, 2016, in Houston. National leaders of the Bandidos biker gang were arrested Wednesday on charges of racketeering and waging a deadly “war” on the rival Cossacks gang, federal authorities said. (Melissa Phillip/Houston Chronicle via AP) MANDATORY CREDIT less
Jeffrey Pike, the national president of the Bandidos Motorcycle Club, is escorted from the Bob Casey Federal Courthouse on Wednesday, Jan. 6, 2016, in Houston. National leaders of the Bandidos biker gang were … more
Photo: Associated Press
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Feds fail to ban lawyer from Bandidos case
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Federal prosecutors recently failed to have high-profile Houston lawyer Kent Schaffer barred from representing the former head of the Bandidos Motorcycle Club in an ongoing criminal case. They had contended he reviewed court papers for all Bandidos members accused of crimes in order to sniff out informants.
Schaffer is the lawyer for Jeffrey Pike, former head of the Bandidos, who is charged federally in San Antonio with engaging in racketeering, including such crimes as murder and assault, on behalf of the Bandidos.
In a transcript released Tuesday, federal prosecutors said in a hearing last Tuesday that they believed Schaffer was on retainer for the Bandidos, and that it was standard procedure for him to review plea agreements in all cases involving members of the club to ensure they were not secretly cooperating with authorities.
They argued that as a result, there is a conflict of interest against Pike and other members of the group. A judge denied prosecutors’ request to stop Schaffer from representing Pike, saying they had not proved their contention, but he opened the door for the issue to be re-examined if they are later to present him with more evidence.
U.S. Magistrate Judge Henry J. Bemporad said that while the government succeeded in showing there was a potential conflict of interest in the case, the conflict was not so serious that Schaffer should be disqualified from the case.
Schaffer is not charged with any wrongdoing. Prosecutors said he could potentially be called as a witness in the case against Pike.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Eric Fuchs told the judge that when Bandidos are charged with a crime, they are required to turn in their legal paperwork to a higher ranking member of the organization and that in several instances, that paperwork was handed up to Pike and then Schaffer.
“Cooperation is forbidden by the Bandidos organization with the government,” Fuchs said.
Schaffer told the judge he never reviewed any court papers on any Bandidos other than his clients and that if he’d been asked to do so, he would have said no. “I don’t know what one Bandido may have said to another about me, but I know I’ve had about three Bandidos cases, maybe four, in the last 12 years,” he said.
“Nobody has brought papers to me in 35 years, Bandidos no non-Bandidos, saying, ‘want you to look at these papers and see if this person is cooperating.'”
Schaffer has repeatedly been a challenge for prosecutors.
Pike was arrested by an FBI SWAT team using an armored vehicle and a loudspeaker to approach his Conroe area home before dawn.
Schaffer represented Pike at a hearing a few days later, and a federal magistrate judge ruled he should be released on a minimal bond.
Pike was the only one of four defendants who were able to secure such conditional freedom pending trial.
Pike later stepped down as leader of the Bandidos to face the charges — and remains a respected member of the group. The Bandidos are considered by law-enforcement to be a criminal gang.
The Texas Department of Public Safety places the Bandidos in the same category as the Bloods, Crips and Aryan Brotherhood of Texas in terms of strength and reach.
The Bandidos contend that they are not a criminal organization and that their reputation today is colored by the group’s origins, which go back to the mid-1960s when it was founded in the Houston area.
The Bandidos drew national attention in May 2015 during a clash with the Cossacks Motorcycle Club at a Twin Peaks restaurant in Waco that left nine people dead, about two dozen wounded and nearly 200 bikers charged with engaging in organized crime.
A trial date has not yet been set in that case, in which McClennan County authorities contend the bikers were gangsters that had come to town to rumble and defense lawyers say all but a very few of the men were acting in self defense once gunfire erupted there.