Page Eight THE SUMMER DAILY Tuesday, July 10, 1973 New Angels: Big Time crime By TIM REITERMAN Associated Press Writer OAKLAND, Calif. - The Hell's Angels have kicked into high gear. Once content to invade small towns and rough up other motorcycle clubs, the Angels now have become what police and informants describe as a full-blown mob. They are reported to have handled mil- lions of dollars in narcotics, executed snit- chers and secured police favors by, trad- ing guns and explosives. Authorities say the Angels designate 'hit men," issue them weapons from club armories and order them to kill informers and- others. "THEY HAVE NO destiny in life ex- cept getting loaded on drugs and selling them to keep from going to work," form- er Angels Vice President George "Baby Huey" Wethern, a police informant, said in an exclusive written interview. "Now it seems they don't draw the line on what they'll do to accomplish this." On Halloween Day, 1972, a grim pic- ture materialized. Three Angels were arrested in the slayings of two bikers whose rotting corp- ses were excavated from Wethern's ranch, a reputed Hell's Angels burying ground near Ukiah, Calif. Authorities say death contracts were but on the Wethern family after he agreed to testify about the club's criminal activities. IN CALIFORNIA attorney general's crime report has described the Angels as "becoming large scale organized crime operators." 'It also quoted U.S. Customs estimates that the 300-member California clan shipped more than $31 million in narcotics from the West Coast to the East Coast during one three year period. In Oakland, high ranking Angels have faced trial in the murder of a Texas drug dealer found in the bathtub of a burning home. These events - together with the We- thern interview, and interviews with law enforcement oficials and current club members - portray a motorcycle gang characterized by comaraderie and a code of ethics bearing the threat of death. THE ANGELS have been cast as killers and thugs, anti-social folk heroes and matinee idols, patriots and racists. But certain aspects of their image never change - chain whipping toughness, un- predictability and frightening loyalty to their "colors," or winged skull 'emblems worn on their sleeveless denim jackets. victions or narcotics, illegal weapons and forced imprisonment charges. And he fac- es charges of federal income tax evasion. ONLY TIME will show how well the Angels will weather the leadership vacuum created by the separate crim- inal convictions of Barger and three of his top lieutenants. After police raiders got past his six- foot fence and Dobermann Pinscher watch dogs last December, they said they found 'The Angels are dealing in guns because they like guns mainly. They don't deal with subversive groups. Not groups like the Weathermen. Not the Black Panthers either, because the Angels are notorious racists.' --an Oakland investigator Through trials and transitions two things have kept the club together: their snarl- ing bikes or "choppers," raked low and. mean and tuned for speed; -and Ralph "Sonny" Barger, the Hell's Angel's Hell's Angel. "It was Sonny who got Iny first motor- cycle running for me," says Wethern ilB his handwritten reply to questions sub- mitted to federal authorities and relayed to him by U.S. marshals. "In those days it was just a bunch of guys riding m.c.'s (motorcycles) and-having a good time. "THE FIRST TIME I put on the colors, I felt proud because it brought atten- tion from outsiders and a sense of be- longing." But when Wethern, 33, a bearded 270- pound man, rejoined the club after a few inactive years in the mid-1960's, he found the Hell's Angels had become a fulltime job. "My activities consisted of trying to have a good time, getting loaded on mari- juana and drugs, and dealing in drugs.". Despite the acquittal of Barger and his co-defendants in the Oakland murder trial, his legal problems continue. He has re- ceived a 10-year-tW-life sentence for con- three pistols in Barger's bedroom, an unidentified human skull on the dresser and five other guns scattered throughout the houses. Like the leader, many Hell's Angels are gun afficionados. During Barger's eight-week murder trial, it emerged that the Angels had an ar- rangement with police. "IF WE COME into possession of guns and explosives, we don't like to keep them around," Barger testified. "We turn them in hoping they - the police - will do something for us." Oakland Police Sgt. Ted Hilliard con- firmed in court that the Angels had trad- ed hundreds of guns and hundreds of pounds of explosives for bail reductions and other considerations. He also s a i d Barger had offered to deliver the body of one Weatherman radical for each Hell's Angel released from prison, an offer Barger denied making. The contraband arrangement was need- ed to help stem a spate of 80 bombings in Oakland and Berkeley in the late 1960's and early 1970's, testified Hilliard, now a district attorney's investigator. WEAPONS - stolen from armories and gun shops, or smuggled from abroad - come to the Angels because they have a reputation for silence. "Hell's Angels informants are damn few and far be- tween" said one Oakland investigator. "Let's face it, they kill a guy for snitch- ing.", "The Angels are dealing in guns be- cause they like guns mainly," he added. "They don't deal with subversive groups. Not groups like the Weathermen. Not the Black Panthers either, because the An- gels are notorious racists." Wethern, Oakland vice president for one year in the late 1950's, had some 35 guns in his personal collection, including sophisticated NATO weapons from a Swiss armory. WETHERN WAS a retired Angel at- tempting a gradual move from Oakland to the Mendocino County coastal region when authorities found three bodies buried on his 153-acre ranch. "I wanted to get myself and my family out of the drug environment and into a healthier way of life," he said. "I want- ed the ranch to become a happy place and a home for my family and a home for families of a few close friends who wanted to get away from it too. "But I was doing it all wrong," he wrote. "I was taking some of the things I was trying to get away from with me - mainly the drugs and some of the con- nections with people that I really didn't want to have anything to do with." THE ATTORNEY said the bodies were brought to the ranch as a sort of debt payment to another club member whom Wethern had wounded with a pistol. Shooting a fellow Angel violated the club's code, so Wethern was indebted to both the member and the club. While in jail, Wethern tried to gouge his eyes out with sharpened pencils. The sheriff said he was distraught from the "pressure" of having sold out friends. FREE THE UOFM 5000! ANN ARBOR BANK OFFERS A WAY - A We want toA ARBOR K1I be your bank. BANK MEMBER F.D.I.C. OVER 5000 STUDENTS ENTER THE U OF M EACH FALL, GOT BETTER THINGS TO DO THAN STAND IN A BANK LINE WITH A MOB OF THEM?- ANN ARBOR BANK THOUGHT YOU'D LIKE TO AVOID THAT HASSLE. SO $1.00 WILL OPEN ANY CHECKING OR SAVINGS ACCOUNT -- NOW! WE'LL REMIND YOU TO -MAKE A DEPOSIT IN-TIME FOR FALL. AND THERE WILL BE NO CHECKING CHARGES UNTIL YOU USE YOUR ACCOUNT. DROP IN TODAY, -OR MAIL OUR COUPON AND WE'LL TAKE CARE OF THE REST. WHAT ELSE DO WE OFFER? LOCATIONS: THE MOST -- INCLUDING 4 ON CAMPUS. HOURS: OPERATING ON CAMPUS EVERY EVENING UNTIL 6 P.M. WEEKDAYS AND UNTIL NOON ON SATURDAY. 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