Catch us live on BlogTalkRadio every



Tuesday & Thursday at 6pm P.S.T.




Thursday, April 19, 2012

Northern Idaho prosecutor dismissing gxxg recruitment charges involving motorcycle club

OFF THE WIRE
SANDPOINT, Idaho — A northern Idaho county is dropping criminal gxxg-recruitment charges against five people following an Idaho Supreme Court decision making it more difficult to prove the law was broken.
The Bonner County Daily Bee reports (http://bit.ly/HP516i) that Bonner County Deputy Prosecutor Shane Greenbank has moved to dismiss the charges against five people associated with the Hermanos Motorcycle Club.
The Supreme Court upheld the recruitment law in January but said prosecutors would have to prove a person was drawn to a gxxg specifically to engage in criminal activity. The court said merely inviting a person to be a member of a criminal gxxg doesn't amount to inviting the person to break the law.
"It's almost impossible to try to get to that level of activity," Greenbank said. "These groups, they just want numbers. Once they get the numbers up, then everybody falls into step."
A grand jury indicted Bryan Michael Lukezich, Steven Jay Beal, Dale Michael Champine, James Ray Smith and Jonathan Brandon Bates for allegedly recruiting criminal gxxg members for the Hermanos. Authorities say the Hermanos is a support club for the outlaw Bandidos Motorcycle Club.
The newspaper reports in a story published Friday that documents in 1st District Court said that the recruitment case against Beal was dismissed April 4, while motions to dismiss are still pending in the other four recruitment cases.
The Supreme Court, in a divided ruling in January, decided that a state law designed to stop gangs from recruiting new members is constitutional.
The court was considering the conviction of Simona Manzanares, a Caldwell woman who in 2008 became the first person in Idaho to be sentenced under the then-new Criminal Gang Enforcement Act. Authorities said Manzanares recruited teens and younger children at concerts and car shows to join a gang.
But Manzanares appealed her conviction, saying that gangs don't exist just to commit crimes — they offer cultural, social and other benefits to members.
While the court upheld Manzanares' conviction, the analysis by the court concluded that a conviction can only be won if the state can prove a person was drawn into the gang specifically to engage in criminal conduct.
http://www.therepublic.com/view/story/517363f145ad4ceda727144cb0e3316b/ID--Gang-Recruitment/