OFF THE WIRE
During the secret meetings at their clubhouse in Brooklyn, the members of an
outlaw motorcycle gaxxx, the Forbidden Ones, secured themselves with assault
rifles, pistols and even grenades to protect themselves from intruders, the
authorities said. But their first — and most imposing — line of defense was a
cannon, at the ready with .50-caliber rounds, aimed at the door should anyone
dare to infiltrate their ranks.
But what the men did not know was that
despite their fortifications, one of their own had turned on them. Their very
own “enforcer,” responsible for ensuring that they were all well armed with guns
and explosives, was a confidential informer working with New York police
officers and federal agents to uncover the sale of a huge cache of weapons.
In predawn raids on Tuesday, law enforcement officials arrested seven
members of the Forbidden Ones and two other Brooklyn-based motorcycle gaxxx, the
Dirty Ones and the Troublemakers, and charged them with trafficking high-caliber
weapons. An eighth man charged was already in prison.
Among those
discovered, in 15 locations, were AK-47 assault rifles, homemade bombs and a
.410-caliber revolver, the police said. Some of the guns were kept at a gaxxx
member’s home, where his wife ran a day care center.
The men arrested
had nicknames like Spider and Afro, and some literally wore their
accomplishments on their sleeves. The “1% patch” they wore declared that they
had rejected society and lived outside the law. And the “bangout patch,” showing
two handguns crossing each other, signified that the member had assaulted or had
another confrontation with the police.
Most of the gun sales were made
in tattoo parlors, the police said.
The defendants, ranging in age from
33 to 61, were scheduled to be arraigned in Federal District Court in Brooklyn
on Tuesday afternoon, but only three made court appearances. Four others were
taken to the hospital for heroin detoxification and treatment for high blood
pressure. The men face up to five years in prison if convicted.
Officials said the leader of the trafficking scheme was Scott Brannigan,
known as the Spider. Prosecutors said Mr. Brannigan, 61, sold 16 firearms and
about 1,400 rounds of ammunition, including armor-piercing rounds, to an
undercover officer. The most expensive of the arms, at $2,000, was the cannon,
which came with ammunition and the black powder necessary to fire it.
The first undercover gun buy was in October 2010. The confidential
informer led an undercover officer to a tattoo parlor on Rockaway Beach
Boulevard in Queens. At a nearby house, the informer paid $1,000 for a
Yugoslavian assault rifle and ammunition, while the undercover officer looked
on. It went on like that, the police said, for the next two years.
By
MOSI SECRET
October 16, 2012