OFF THE WIRE
agingrebel.com 
Stephen Stubbs, the gadfly attorney who filed a biker civil rights lawsuit in 
Nevada last June, filed another civil rights lawsuit in Flagstaff, Arizona 
Friday afternoon.
The suit was filed on behalf of the Sons of Hell Motorcycle Club, twelve 
members of the club and five women including the wives of four members. 
Defendants to the complaint include the Arizona Department of Public Safety; the 
Gang and Immigration Intelligence Team Enforcement Mission commonly called 
“GIITEM;” the Coconino County Sheriff’s Department; and various officials of the 
three law enforcement agencies including Robert Halliday, Brad Elliot, Brian 
Barnes and Nate Gould of the ADPS; Dan Wells, Frank Stewart, Michael Wischman 
and Douglas Wheeler of GIITEM; Bill Pribil, Marl Pierz, William Rackley, Jason 
Lurkins, Gerrit Boeck, Michael Curtis, Ethan Miltowski, Robert Gambee, Jason 
Bond and James Coffee of the Coconino County Sheriff’s Department; and numerous 
John and Jane Does and Roes.
Stubbs Takes Case
The suit is the result of an incident at the Too Broke for Sturgis Motorcycle 
Rally at the Mormon Lake Lodge Campground near Flagstaff on July 22, 2011. A 
previous lawsuit related to that night was filed by another attorney last year. 
The suit was dismissed after that attorney missed multiple court appearances. 
The two-year statute of limitations to sue would have expired today.
“With the statute of limitations looming, the Sons of Hell contacted me and 
asked me to jump in,” Stubbs said. “I got an attorney to assist me in Arizona, 
who will file the lawsuit and stay on as co-counsel. I will be applying for 
pro hac vice status in Arizona and expect to fight this thing there.” 
Pro hac vice is lawyer’s Latin for “this particular occasion.” It is 
the formal term used when an out of state lawyer is granted the same standing as 
a local attorney.
Stubbs has carved out a niche with bikers’ rights cases in the last two years 
and he has hardly endeared himself to biker cops. He was sued by Boulder City, 
Nevada Police Chief Thomas Finn last year. He was also the target last year of 
an apparent ATF sting.
The Incident
Stubbs said, “The facts of this case are beyond troubling – shockingly 
horrid.”
About 11 p.m. two years ago, a man named Christian Tejeda, who has no 
connection to the Sons of Hell and was camped on the other side of the 
campground, shot two men and two women after getting into an argument with his 
wife Desiree Tejada abou their unexpected dinner guests. Tejada shot his wife 
and the two guests, Edgar and Trina Atzin. Both the Atzins were killed. 
Christian Tejeda then shot and killed himself. Desiree Tejada survived.
The Sheriff’s Office, the Department of Public Safety, GIITEM and the 
Flagstaff Police Department all responded to the campground.
In the suit Stubbs alleges:
“At around 1:00 a.m. on July 23, 2011, approximately two hours after the 
incident, and despite the abundance of evidence that the incident was a 
murder-suicide perpetrated by Christian Tejeda, Defendants, as officers and 
deputies of ADPS, GIITEM and CCSD, under color of their authority as police 
officers, illegally and wrongfully invaded Plaintiffs’ residences (their tents), 
and forcibly removed Plaintiffs from their residences with assault rifles and 
other firearms.”
Throughout the suit, Stubbs characterizes the police actions as an 
“invasion.”
“During the invasion, Plaintiffs were handcuffed, forced to lay on the cold 
ground, detained and imprisoned for longer than three hours (some partially or 
mostly naked), photographed, forced to answer questions in interrogation, forced 
to reveal all of their tattoos for further photography, mocked, otherwise 
humiliated, yelled at, and threatened with violence by Defendants, under color 
of their authority as police officers. During the invasion, and even after 
Defendants determined that Plaintiffs did not have weapons and were not a 
physical threat of any kind, Plaintiffs were still forced to lay on the cold 
ground, were denied repeated requests to clothe themselves and use the restroom 
by Defendants, under color of their authority as police officers. During the 
invasion, Defendants obtained identifying information for a law enforcement 
databases and law enforcement are currently using such information.
“The gathering of information, as described in Paragraph 32 above, is 
encouraged in a de facto policy of GIITEM, ADPS, and other cooperating law 
enforcement agencies (including CCSD), by which officers unlawfully detain 
members of motorcycle clubs for the purpose of gathering information for law 
enforcement databases. All with complete indifference to how these policies 
affect the lives of motorcycle club members and their families.”
“Plaintiffs were threatened, and with assault rifles and other firearms 
pointed at Plaintiffs, to answer questions under interrogation.”
Extra-Judicial Punishment For Gangs
The suit also alleges that the “Defendants wrongly identified the Sons of 
Hell Motorcycle Club as a ‘gang’ solely based on associations and friendships 
that members of the Sons of Hell Motorcycle Club have with the Hells Angels 
Motorcycle Club, and not based on any facts that would determine that the Sons 
of Hell Motorcycle Club, or its members, meets the legal definition of a 
gang.”
The suit complains that GIITEM and its fellow travelers “infringed on 
Plaintiff’s right against unwarranted searches and seizures guaranteed under the 
Fourth Amendment;” “infringed on Plaintiffs’ right against self-incrimination, 
guaranteed under the Fifth Amendment;” “infringed on Plaintiffs’ right not to be 
deprived of liberty without due process of law as guaranteed by the Fifth and 
Fourteenth Amendments;” “infringed on Plaintiffs’ right to equal protection of 
the laws as guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment;” “infringed on Plaintiffs’ 
right to be free from use of excessive force by law enforcement officers as 
guaranteed by the Fourth, Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments;” and “infringed on 
Plaintiff’s right to be free from pre-conviction punishment as guaranteed by the 
Fourth, Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution.”
The suit alleges that the police actions that night, “were done with actual 
malice toward Plaintiffs and with willful and wanton indifference to and 
deliberate disregard for their constitutional rights. Plaintiffs are thus 
entitled to exemplary damages against the individual officers in their 
individual capacities.”
Naming Names And Numbers
The suit singles out three defendants who have been leaders in Arizona’s 
ongoing war against the motorcycle menace. The document states:
“Defendant Robert Halliday has the duty and responsibility to implement and 
enforce the guidelines, procedures, and regulations of the ADPS and to train and 
supervise the conduct of its employees to ensure they are properly trained.”
“Defendant Dan Wells is the final policy maker, directly liable for the acts 
of GIITEM Officers for failing to enforce the rights provided under the United 
States Constitution, the laws of the State of Arizona, and the regulations of 
the GIITEM pertaining to an individual’s freedom of association and 
assembly.”
“Defendant Bill Pribil is the final policy maker, directly liable for the 
acts of CCSD Officers for failing to enforce the rights provided under the 
United States Constitution, the laws of the State of Arizona, and the 
regulations of the CCSD pertaining to an individual’s freedom of association and 
assembly.”
The plaintiffs demand “equitable remedies, including but not limited to the 
declassification of the Sons of Hell Motorcycle Club as a ‘gang,’ and enjoining 
Arizona Law Enforcement from using unconstitutional tactics in the future.” It 
also seeks “damages in a sum in excess of $75,000…” “exemplary damages in a sum 
in excess of $75,000” and “reasonable attorney’s fees.”
Big Picture
Sons of Hell et al. versus Arizona Department of Public Safety et 
al. is one of three major lawsuits filed by motorcycle club members who 
have been bullied or worse by police as part of an unofficial campaign of 
bullying. The others are James Coles et al. v. Nicholas Carlini et al., 
filed by current members of the Pagans against the New Jersey State Police and 
the Southern Nevada COC suit against the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police 
Department and others.
All three suits protest a national police strategy to enforce a de facto writ 
of attainder against motorcycle club membership or even association. Chuck 
Schoville, the former Tempe patrolman, GIITEM Training Director and the 
President of the International Outlaw Motorcycle Gang Investigator’s Association 
told the National Geographic Channel why cops bully and harass members 
of motorcycle clubs in a show about Operation Black Biscuit, the largely 
unsuccessful investigation of the Hells Angels in Arizona.
“Maybe the outcome (of Black Biscuit) wasn’t the desired outcome.” Schoville 
proclaimed to the world. “But there’s kinda two outcomes. There’s the outcome 
you read about in the newspaper and that is the prison sentences and some of the 
dismissals. But, there was also the outcome that you see on the streets. We got 
Hells Angels that all of a sudden decide, ‘You know that’s not the lifestyle for 
me and they’re leavin’ the club. It feels like a game of cat and mouse.”
Enjoy more of the cop who teaches GIITEM what to do and how to do it 
below.