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Seven bikers get life for Hell's Angel murder



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Published Date: 29 November 2008
SEVEN members of the Outlaws motorcycle gang were yesterday jailed for life for murdering a Hell's Angel.
The entire South Warwickshire chapter of the Outlaws was sentenced at Birmingham Crown Court after being convicted of shooting Gerry Tobin as he rode along the M40 on August 12 last year.

Two shots were fired at the 35-year-old biker from two diff
erent handguns as he returned to his London home from the Hell's Angel Bulldog Bash festival in Warwickshire.

During the seven weeks of evidence, the jury was told that the mechanic was targeted by the rival gang simply because he was a "fully-patched" Hell's Angel.

Rivalry between the gangs originated in the 1960s with a series of murders in America.

Simon Turner, 41, from Nun-eaton, Warwickshire, was given a minimum term of 30 years for murder and two firearms offences. Coventry man Dane Garside, 42, received a minimum 27 years for the same charges. Sean Creighton, 44, of Coventry, will spend a minimum of 28 years and six months in prison after pleading guilty to murder and two firearms charges. Malcolm Bull, 53, of Milton Keynes, was sentenced to a minimum of 25 years in prison for murder and possessing a shotgun.

Dean Taylor, 47, from Coventry, will spend at least 30 years in prison for the same charges.

Karl Garside, 45, from Coventry, was given at least 26 years and Ian Cameron, 46, also from Coventry, received at least 25 years for murder.





The full article contains 255 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
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  • Last Updated: 28 November 2008 10:43 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
 
  

 
 


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