Michael O'Farrell | |
|---|---|
O'Farrell in 1984 | |
| Born | Michael Vincent O'Farrell (1949-06-02)June 2, 1949 Los Angeles County, California, U.S. |
| Died | June 6, 1989(1989-06-06) (aged 40) San Leandro, California, U.S. |
| Cause of death | Gunshot and stab wounds |
| Resting place | Evergreen Cemetery |
| Other names | "Irish" |
| Occupations | Outlaw biker,gangster |
| Known for | President of theOaklandHells Angels chapter |
| Allegiance | Night Riders MC Hells Angels MC |
| Convictions | Conspiracy to transport and receive explosives in interstate commerce with intent to kill and damage buildings |
Michael Vincent O'Farrell (June 2, 1949 – June 6, 1989), nicknamed "Irish", was an Americanoutlaw biker andgangster who served as the vice-president and acting president of theOakland, California, chapter of theHells Angels Motorcycle Club (HAMC). O'Farrell was alleged by law enforcement officials to be the second-in-command toSonny Barger, the reputed international president of the Hells Angels. During the early-mid 1980s, he deputized for Barger, serving as the Oakland chapter president andde facto international leader of the Hells Angels, while Barger recovered from a throat operation for cancer. O'Farrell was murdered in a bar fight in 1989 shortly before he was due to start serving a prison sentence forconspiring to bomb the clubhouse of a rival motorcycle gang, theOutlaws.[1]
While a member of the Night Riders motorcycle gang inGlendale, O'Farrell, along with members of theSan Bernardino chapter of theHells Angels, the GlendaleMongols chapter and the Straight Satans ofVenice, committed a sexual assault on a fifteen year-old girl in August 1972. He was among eleven biker gang members convicted inLos Angeles of rape and sex perversion on April 5, 1973.[2][3] Aside from being a registered sex offender, O'Farrell also had convictions for robbery, grand theft, burglary and assault.[4]
The Night Riders were issued a Hells Angels charter by the club's San Bernardino faction and "patched over" to become the Angels'Los Angeles County (LACO) chapter. The Hells Angels recruited the Night Riders to bolster their ranks during a war with theVagos. While incarcerated atSan Quentin State Prison during the late 1970s, O'Farrell requested a transfer to theOakland Hells Angels chapter. This request was denied by LACO chapter presidentGeorge Christie because the Hells Angels' bylaws state that members may not transfer from one charter to another while imprisoned. O'Farrell ultimately transferred to the Oakland chapter following his release from custody.[5] Christie described O'Farrell in his bookExile on Front Street: My Life as a Hells Angel as "a tough-as-nails outlaw, ruggedly handsome with long, thick brown hair and sad, soulful eyes that made him a favorite with women. He was fast with his fists and a legendary fighter, which made him a favorite among [Hells Angels] members".[6]
On March 27, 1978, O'Farrell was arrested for parole violations along withSonny Barger, Russell Beyea and James "Jim Jim" Brandes when 42 Hells Angels members and associates were served withsubpoenas requiring them to appear before agrand jury investigating the club's activities inSolano County.[7]
Known for his prowess as astreet fighter, O'Farrell is alleged to have beatenNew York City Hells Angels chapter sergeant-at-arms Vincent "Big Vinny" Gerolamo while Gerolamo was visiting O'Farrell's Oakland chapter in 1979. Upon returning to theEast Coast, Gerolamo reported to New York chapter president Sandy Alexander that he had in fact been beaten by not just O'Farrell, but by several members of the Oakland chapter, prompting Alexander to travel to California to make inquiries. Alexander, a former professional boxer, reportedly returned to New York satisfied that O'Farrell was indeed solely responsible for Gerolamo's beating after a fight with O'Farrell at the Oakland chapter clubhouse. Gerolamo died weeks later, on September 12, 1979, of complications from a ruptured spleen, believed to have been sustained in the beating.[8][9]
While Oakland Hells Angels president Sonny Barger was recovering from an operation for throat cancer in the early-mid 1980s, O'Farrell served as acting president of the chapter beginning in 1983. As Oakland is the location of club's unofficial "mother chapter", he was additionally thede facto leader of the Hells Angels internationally.[10][11] During his tenure as president, O'Farrell denied to theLos Angeles Times in 1983 that the Hells Angels were involved inorganized crime,[1] and called Operation Roughrider, a nationwideFederal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) investigation that resulted in the arrests of 133 Hells Angels members and associates in May 1985, "an ongoing conspiracy by the government".[12] O'Farrell continued as the Oakland chapter's vice-president after Barger returned as president.[13]
On November 10, 1987, O'Farrell and Barger were among thirteen Hells Angels arrested on narcotics, weapons, explosives and conspiracy charges during a series of raids carried out by the FBI,Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) andCalifornia State Police personnel in theSan Francisco Bay Area, which also resulted in the seizure of over a hundred weapons, more than $1 million in cash and drugs, and three methamphetamine laboratories.[14] The operation in the Bay Area was executed in synchronization with raids on various other HAMC chapters in four other states – producing a total of thirty-eight arrests – and concluded a two-year FBI investigation of the club, which commenced in 1985 afterAnthony Tait, an officer in theAnchorage, Alaska Hells Angels chapter, volunteered to become a paid informant. Travelling the country at government expense, Tait made documented purchases of weapons, explosives and drugs from the Hells Angels.[15] He also covertly recorded club meetings by wearinga wire.[16] O'Farrell, Barger and eight other Hells Angels from California and Alaska were extradited toLouisville, Kentucky, to face trial for conspiring to transport firearms and explosives across state lines in order to kill members of theOutlaws Motorcycle Club in retaliation for the death of John Cleave Webb, the Anchorage HAMC chapter president who was shot and killed by two Outlaws members outside abiker bar inJefferson County, Kentucky, on August 12, 1986.[17] O'Farrell and Barger were convicted of conspiracy on October 28, 1988.[18] While awaiting sentencing, the pair attended the funeral of San Bernardino Hells Angels chapter sergeant-at-arms Aristeo Andres "Art" Carbajal, which was held inBloomington on February 21, 1989.[19][20] Carbajal had been stabbed to death in a fight with theMongols at a motorcycle trade show inLong Beach on February 11, 1989.[21] On March 10, 1989, O'Farrell was sentenced to three and a half years in prison.[22]
Two weeks before he was due to report toUnited States Penitentiary, Atlanta to begin serving his sentence, O'Farrell was drinking at the Halfway Club inSan Leandro, California, on June 6, 1989, when he was recognized by a member of theAryan Brotherhood as the man who had attempted to collect a drug debt from him two months prior. Fearing he would be beaten by O'Farrell again, the Brotherhood member ambushed O'Farrell outside the bar, stabbing him five times in the back, once in the chest and once in the neck, before shooting him four times from behind with a.25 caliber pistol while he was dying. He then shot another Hells Angel, Michael Musick, who fled after being wounded in the shoulder.[1][4] Powderedmethamphetamine was found on the bar's patio, where the killing occurred.[23] Police stated that O'Farrell may have been killed as a result of a power struggle between the Hells Angels and the Aryan Brotherhood in theEast Bay.[24] According to the prosecutor Cleve Gambill, O'Farrell was murdered as part of the killer's initiation into the Aryan Brotherhood.[25] O'Farrell was laid to rest atEvergreen Cemetery after approximately a thousand people, including his wife Teddy and son, attended his funeral inEast Oakland on June 11, 1989.[26]
Two Aryan Brotherhood members charged in connection with O'Farrell's death, Aaron "Jerry" Marsh and Michael Bruce "Tank" Shepherd, were arrested in the following weeks. Marsh – who was accused of firing several shots during the fight, including one that wounded Musick – was taken into custody inManteca on June 27, 1989, and Shepherd – who was charged with the homicide of O'Farrell – was apprehended bySan Bernardino County Sheriff's Department deputies andCalifornia Highway Patrol troopers onRoute 60 on July 26, 1989, after a high-speed chase throughChino andOntario.[13] Shepherd allegedly admitted his guilt in the killing to his lawyer Steven Gore.[27] Marsh was strangled to death inPelican Bay State Prison on July 25, 1997, by cellmate Gary J. Littrell after refusing an order from the Aryan Brotherhood leadership to murder another inmate.[28][29] Shepherd committed suicide by hanging himself in his cell atSanta Ana Central Jail in December 2004 shortly after pleading guilty in aRICO case.[30][31]
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