[imagesource: IMDb]
A retired special agent infiltrated the Hells Angels biker gang as part of a two-year undercover operation.
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) agent Jay Dobyns ran Operation Black Biscuit between 2001 to 2003, where he was exposed to the outlaw motorcycle gang’s inner world of sex, drugs, and violence.
He posed as a gunrunner and debt collector named Jay Davis, or ‘Jaybird’, joining the Mesa, Arizona chapter of the organisation, pretending to trade narcotics and even staging a murder once by using “blood and guts from a butcher shop”.
The two-year, $1 million operation resulted in the indictments of 55 Hells Angels members and associates, while 16 of the members were indicted on racketeering charges, reported The New York Post.
Besides having a hit on his life for his work as an undercover agent, he is not afraid to speak out about the bike gang and their wild, often illicit antics.
His recent outtake was part of an Insider interview video, How The Hells Angels Actually Works:
In the video, he reveals how the organisation has rather strict sex rules, where failure to follow them could have very “violent consequences”:
“With regards to women, there’s a hierarchy that takes place,” Dobyns dished, discussing the gang’s bangs. “There are Old Ladies, who are the wives and girlfriends of members [at the top of the chain]. You better not get caught trying to mess around with a member’s wife or girlfriend, because there’s a violent price to pay.”
To satiate the men’s urges, there were apparently Hells Angels groupies who often appeared at the clubhouse:
“They moved from member to member to member,” he stated, implying that there was no bad blood between bikers who slept with the same women.
Dobyns didn’t disclose whether sex was allowed inside the clubhouse, but said parties were a frequent occurrence at the chapter.
Further along, he defends the gang by saying that it is a complex organisation made up of members with diverse lifestyles and interests:
“There’s a myth that every Hells Angels member is a drug addict,” he stated. “Some were fitness freaks. They ate well, they got their rest, they didn’t drink, they didn’t smoke. To decline those things wasn’t necessarily a false alarm.”
Dobyns also explained that while many members were mixed up in illegal activities, there are chapters of the gang that “run a fairly clean business” and “aren’t involved in a lot of crime.”
The infamous “motorcycle club” was founded in San Bernardino, California, circa 1948, and has since grown into 475 chapters in 62 countries.
These global “charter” groups span from Alaska and Norway to Argentina and yes, even South Africa.
He said that many of the chapters partake in community service, donating blood to local hospitals and participating in toy drives for children:
“They make positive contributions to society,” Dobyns declared. “That shouldn’t be taken away from them.”
After his infiltration, Dobyns’ identity was exposed and a hit was put on his life.
In 2008, his home was burned to the ground.
Now 61, the retired agent wrote a book about his experience titled No Angel: My Harrowing Undercover Journey to the Inner Circle of the Hells Angels. There’s also his 2018 tome titled Catching Hell — A True Story of Abandonment and Betrayal.
[source:nypost]
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