A life story that keeps every page turning quickly. The reader will learn the childhood background of the author as it advances into adulthood, including his time as a hangaround with other MC clubs, Question Marks and Satan's Slaves, and eventually as a prospect with the Hells Angels. He even participated as one of the Olympic Games Torch Runners. As with members of New York's Five Families, the individual's home family life suffers irreparable damage and, in many cases, is eventually destroyed. You will even read of Christie's visit to a psychiatrist that mirrors the actions and experiences of the character Tony Soprano in "The Sopranos" TV series many years later.
Once Christie ascended to the presidency of 81, his 'regular' D.O.D. job ended. Police kept tabs on 81 members for identification purposes with traffic stops "They’d write down your name, nickname, license plate, club affiliation, and identifying features—such as distinctive patches on your cut or tattoos. The notes were kept on three-by-five index cards in pen. They would be copied and used as mini-files all street cops could carry and reference. It gave local law enforcement a way to tell at a glance who was riding where. If I moved the charter from Glendale to Ventura, I’d screw up the system." Merging other clubs who 'patch over' to 81, and reestablishing the charter to Ventura, gave its members a sort of fresh start.
"I’m biased, but I don’t believe the word justice gets mentioned much, if at all, inside the offices of the DEA, ATF, FBI, or any other alphabet agency. In my experience, decency and fairness are much rarer qualities within law enforcement than they are in “outlaw” motorcycle clubs. Law enforcement gets away with things outlaws would not tolerate other outlaws doing... The Hells Angels and the feds. It’s like the Hatfields and McCoys. The feds have an irrational hatred for the Angels. This isn’t law enforcement doing their job. It’s an ongoing vendetta. Bullies with badges are one thing, but the ATF is far more dangerous. They have a scary stop-at-nothing mentality. Some truly despicable, soulless people work for the ATF." -George Christie
- Additional Excerpts:
"The feds are another matter. Sometimes, especially at the federal level, agents and prosecutors blur the line between outlaw and cop. They are driven individuals who are often more about the win than they are about any sense of right and wrong."
"My grandparents on both sides had changed their names. Vlassopoulos became Blacy. Chrispikos became Christie. If it’s Us, why change your name unless you were ashamed? I also knew early on that people in town looked down their noses at Greeks. We weren’t respectable society."
"The outlaw world promised what we all felt was real freedom. It was authentic, the exact opposite of the lockstep, mindless conformity of Arrow shirt ads, freshly mown lawns and polite Sunday-afternoon backyard cookouts. By the early seventies, all of that seemed plastic and phony. I knew there would be consequences for living against the grain, just as every outlaw does. But to me, the price was well worth it."
"I didn’t realize it right then as I bundled up the M14, climbed down from the roof, and quietly drove away. But that decision set the tone for my leadership and my role in the Hells Angels going forward. Sonny was the figurehead. Irish was the brawler. Animal was the crazy one."
"What are we, a Rotary Club?"
"The DA’s investigators started handing out search warrants like candy on Halloween."
"After the Dirty Dozen patched over to become the first Hells Angels charter in Arizona, the stage was set. In August 1997, Sonny requested a transfer to the Cave Creek charter. It was a formality. Nobody was going to debate the issue. The move was part of Sonny’s settling into a different role within the club. He became more of a figurehead than an active leader. He wasn’t the guy that the media went to for comments. I was. He wasn’t running the West Coast Officers’ Meeting. I was. By 1998, I was at the height of my power as a Hells Angels leader."
"George Christie served as a Marine reservist and, after completing his service, became an electrician and communications troubleshooter for the Department of Defense. He prospected for the Hells Angels Motorcycle Club in 1975, becoming a full-patch member in 1976, eventually founding the Ventura charter and serving as its president for more than thirty years. He also served as the club’s international spokesman for more than two decades. He lives in Ojai, California."
- Works that may be of interest to you:
Mit Liv av Jørn Jønke Nielsen
Outlaw Riding Through the Storm
The Last American Outlaw - documentary film by Nick Mead
Mafia Democracy: How Our Republic Became a Mob Racket by Michael Franzese