Florida Tea Party Favorite Spoke To, Defended Criminal Biker Gang

Allen West, a national tea party favorite and the Republican nominee
for
Congress in Florida's 22nd Congressional District, has (to put it
mildly) some
controversial friends. According to a new report from NBC News, West
has been a
fan and defender of the Outlaws Motorcycle Club, a national group
targeted by
the FBI for involvement in racketeering, "violent crimes" and
"attempted
murder."

As NBC reported tonight, West has had personal dealings with the
Florida chapter
of the Outlaws, which lists on its website "Brothers In Prison," which
NBC
correspondent Lisa Meyers says includes "many" who "were convicted of
violent
crimes, including murder."

Meyers reports on email correspondence between West and a supporter
nervous
about his interactions with the group that appears to show West
defending the
group against a characterization that it's "criminal."

But as the FBI noted in a June press release announcing a federal
indictment of
American Outlaw leadership, the national group is suspected of being a
"a highly
organized criminal enterprise with a defined, multi-level chain of
command."
>From the release:

According to the indictment, the Outlaws planned multiple acts of
violence
against rival motorcycle gangs, including shows of force at the Cycle
Expo in
2006, Dinwiddie Racetrack in 2008, Cockades Bar in 2009, Daytona Bike
Week in
2009, and the Easyrider Bike Expo in 2010. The indictment alleges that
in the
Cockades Bar show of force, members of the Pagans Motorcycle Club
joined the
Outlaws in the assault against rival gangs.

In August, the FBI conducted a joint raid of Outlaw-affiliated
motorcycle gangs
across the country. According to this report from the Florida raid,
agents
stormed a compound in Jacksonville, FL and "wouldn't say what it
seized inside
the 1.5 acre compound of buildings and sheds." A similar raid in
Detroit
"snagged eleven Outlaws members who've been indicted for a range of
crimes
involving extortion, drugs, and guns."

West's dealing with the Florida branch of the group, according to
Meyers,
includes inviting them to a "campaign bike ride," using them to
"guard" him "in
an interview," and speaking before a "Constitutional rights rally"
organized by
"groups who bragged they were affiliated with the Outlaws."

Watch Meyers' report:

West, as our Eric Kleefeld reported in August, is a "retired Army
colonel, who
was forced into his retirement" after a 2003 incident in which media
reports say
he "'conducted a harsh interrogation' on an Iraqi police officer, in
which West
fired his gun near the man's head."

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