United States v. Harry Bowman

302 F.3d 1228, 2002 WL 1905955
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedAugust 20, 2002
Docket01-14305
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 302 F.3d 1228 (United States v. Harry Bowman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Harry Bowman, 302 F.3d 1228, 2002 WL 1905955 (11th Cir. 2002).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

Harry Joseph Bowman, the international president of the Outlaws Motorcycle Club, was convicted of racketeering, conspiracy to murder, and various drug and firearm offenses. He was sentenced to life in prison. He appeals his convictions, con *1231 tending that the district court erred by refusing to disclose the juror’s names and by refusing to redact the Outlaws’ Constitution to eliminate the whites-only membership policy. He also challenges the sufficiency of the evidence. We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

A. FACTS

1. The Outlaws Motorcycle Club

The Outlaws Motorcycle Club was founded at a bar just outside of Chicago in 1935. It has since grown to include 64 chapters in the United States and chapters in eight other countries. The United States is divided into five regions, and each other country is considered a region. Chapter presidents report to their regional president. The regional presidents report to the international president.

Each chapter has a clubhouse. These clubhouses are used for “church meetings,” parties, and privacy, and they are usually secured by concrete walls, steel doors, razor wire, guard dogs, and video surveillance.

The Outlaws profess to be “l%ers,” or the one-percent of bikers who have rejected societal norms and dedicated their lives to the club. Membership is limited to men who own American-made motorcycles of a particular size, and membership dues are divided between the chapter and the region. A prospective member is first a “hang-around” or associate. He then becomes a probate and, finally, a patched member.

A patched member is entitled to wear a leather or denim vest bearing an Outlaws emblem, called “colors.” The patch is surrounded by chapter and club membership information, called “rockers.” These emblems are purchased directly from the international president. A patched member is also allowed to attend the weekly church meetings, while associates, probates, and “old ladies” wait outside. After being a member in good standing for a year, • an Outlaw may wear a tattoo depicting the Outlaws emblem.

An Outlaw’s tattoos can reflect other membership information as well. An Outlaw who commits murder, attempts murder, or explodes a bomb on behalf of the Outlaws is entitled to wear “lightning bolts,” a Nazi-style “SS” tattoo. An Outlaw who has spent time in jail may receive an “LL” tattoo, which stands for “Lounge Lizard.”

Membership in the Outlaws has its privileges. The Outlaws maintain a list of Lounge Lizards, or incarcerated Outlaws, and collect money on their behalf. Chapters also encourage the Lounge Lizards’ “old ladies” and fellow Outlaws to send letters to imprisoned members.

While the Outlaws are allied with the Bandidos, a Southwestern motorcycle club, they have rivalries with several other clubs. Their dislike of Hell’s Angels is expressed in their slogans “AHAMD,” or “All Hell’s Angels Must Die,” and “ADIOS,” or “Angel’s Die in Outlaws States.” They also dislike the Pagans and the Warlocks.

The Outlaws collect information on their rivalries with other clubs. They primarily collect newspaper clippings regarding incidents with other clubs. On occasion, though, an Outlaws member will bribe a law enforcement officer to obtain information on the location of a rival club’s members. Outlaws also travel, at the club’s direction, to the funerals of fellow bikers.

2. Harry Bowman

Harry “Taco” Bowman held various administrative positions within the Outlaws Motorcycle Club. He served as a regional president and national vice-president before becoming international president in *1232 1984. Bowman conducted his presidential activities from the Outlaws clubhouse in Detroit, while living in an affluent Detroit suburb, sending his children to private schools, and driving an armor-plated Cadillac. He served as international president for thirteen years, until 1997. As international president, Bowman handled matters large and small, from setting the Outlaws’ policies regarding other biker gangs to monitoring the activities of members.

For most of Bowman’s presidency, Wayne “Joe Black” Hicks was Bowman’s right-hand man. In 1984, during the early part of his presidency, Bowman became concerned that a former Outlaw would reveal the whereabouts of an Outlaw fugitive. To alleviate his concerns, Bowman asked Hicks, then the vice president of the Toledo chapter, to kill the former Outlaw. Hicks was unable to complete this assignment because he failed to locate the former Outlaw. Nevertheless, impressed by Hicks’s dedication, Bowman transferred Hicks to Florida so Hicks could help revive the Fort Lauderdale chapter. Hicks eventually became chapter president.

As chapter president, Hicks accompanied “Wild” Bill Pilgrim, Florida’s regional president, to national meetings of regional presidents. At these meetings, held every couple of months, the regional presidents discussed chapter membership, the status of Lounge Lizards, the Outlaws’ community activities, and the activities of rival clubs. Bowman, as international president, chaired these meetings, and the regional presidents were obligated to seek his permission before taking action against rival clubs.

Hicks became Florida’s regional president in 1990. At a meeting with Bowman, Hicks reported that Alan “Greaser” Wolfe, an Outlaw, had testified before a grand jury. Bowman, who distributed Outlaws tee shirts bearing the slogan “snitches are a dying breed,” told Hicks to kick Wolfe out of the club and otherwise take care of him. Hicks and another member revoked Wolfe’s membership and beat him.

3. Murder of Raymond Chaffin

In the early 1990s, the Warlocks, another Florida club, allied with the Hell’s Angels and began selling drugs on their behalf. This ignited a war between the Outlaws and the Warlocks. When the Outlaws learned that Raymond “Bear” Chaffin, a former member, was the leader of a Warlocks chapter in Edgewater, Bowman told Hicks to find Chaffin and kill him. Hicks asked Houston Murphy, the Fort Lauderdale president, to recommend an Outlaw who could gather intelligence on Chaffin. Murphy recommended Alex “Dirt” Ankerich, an Outlaws probate. Ankerich traveled to Edgewater and spent the night with Chaffin, who was unaware that Ankerich was affiliated with the Outlaws.

At the next regional presidents meeting, Hicks told Bowman about Ankerich’s adventure, and Bowman asked Hicks if Ankerich could be trusted to kill Chaffin. Bowman then asked Ankerich if he was willing to do anything to become an Outlaw and told Ankerich that he could earn some lightning bolts. Ultimately, Anke-rich and Murphy were directed to kill Chaffin and given a number to call when the murder was complete. Bowman and Hicks then agreed to present themselves in public to establish an alibi.

Murphy and Ankerich arrived in Edge-water on February 21, 1991. Murphy gave Ankerich a .22 pistol equipped with a silencer and told him to aim for Chaffin’s head to facilitate the kill. Ankerich went into Chaffin’s garage, shot Chaffin four times in the back of the head, and ran away.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
302 F.3d 1228, 2002 WL 1905955, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-harry-bowman-ca11-2002.