TAKE A GOOD LOOK AT ONE OF THE BOARD MEMBERS OF
THE 'INTERNATIONAL KNIFE THROWERS HALL OF FAME' IKTHOF
THOMI HAWK IS AN ACTIVE AND HIGH RANKING MEMBER OF THIS
ORGINIZATION..THE'BREED'MC....RUNNING DRUGS..VIOLATING WOMEN..ROBBING..KIDNAPING
AND STRONG ARMING ....
...IF YOU DONT BELIEVE IT..CHECK HIM OUT FOR YOURSELF..
CHECK OUT HIS TATTOO SHOP..GO SEE HIS CLIENTEL....
HIM AND THE SHADY DRUNK ED IMPERATOR [SPECIAL ED]
ARE USING THE SOUTH JERSEY NEUSKTC TOURNAMENT
FOR A PROSPECT CLUB..SO NEW MEMBERS CAN JOIN THE 'BREED'
DONT LET THE SMILES AND NICE TALK FROM THESE PEOPLE..FOOL YOU
THEYVE TURNED KNIFE THROWING INTO MONEY AND POWER AND PLAN ON CAPITALIZING
IT...AND WHEN OTHER BIKER FACTIONS RECIEVE THIS INFO..
THEY WILL BE SHOWING UP AT TOURNAMENTS AROUND THE NATION TO SEE WHAT KNIFE
THROWERS ARE ALL ABOUT...ARE MOUNTAIN MEN PROUD & HONOURABLE MEN OR IS IT MORE
IMPORTANT TO FILL KNIFE THROWING UP WITH INGRATES & DRUNKS & PEDOFILES!!...ASK
OLE MIKE BAINTON WHO ED IMPERATOR HAD FOR A HELPING FRIEND IN THE 2007 NEUSKTC
TOURNAMENT...AND NOW SPECIAL ED HAS LUERED THE BOYSCOUTS INTO IT...OPEN YOUR
EYES AND SEE THE TROUBLE ON THE HILLS FOR KNIFE THROWING....
BELOW ARE THE ACTIVITIES OF THOMI HAWKS HICKEYS CLUB:
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The most prolific and fastest growing outlaw motorcycle gang in New Jersey, the
Breed's origins go back to the mid-1960's. Significant recruitment activity
occurred in 1983 when attempts were made to absorb members of the Aces and
Eights Motorcycle Club based in Riverside, New Jersey. Almost simultaneous with
this effort was the assimilation of members of the Branded Motorcycle Club into
the Breed. More recently, during 1986-1987, the Breed reportedly was negotiating
to merge with the Bandana Motorcycle Club, with the Breed retaining
organizational control. The Breed, with a membership of about 60, has three
chapters in New Jersey – the Jersey Chapter, which is the founding or "Mother"
chapter, operating out of Middlesex County, the South Jersey Chapter operating
out of Riverside in Burlington County, and the Trenton-Bucks Chapter operating
in the state capital and in Bucks County, Pennsylvania.
There is a growing concern that Breed members in the Trenton-Bucks Chapter are
exerting considerable influence in the drug market. Authorities estimate a local
presence of 30 members or significant associates and indicate that this group
has a substantial distribution network in place. The location and range of
activities of this chapter suggests that state boundaries mean little in
defining this organization's jurisdiction. All indications are that this chapter
operates freely between the two states.
Similar to other outlaw motorcycle gangs, the Breed is adopting a lower public
profile. Observations in the Mercer County area support their presence there,
but more conventional behavior, dress and mode of transportation make them less
noticeable.
The Breed uses violence to settle disputes and enforce policy. Instances of
intergang rivalry have been well documented, particularly with the Pagans. In
1987 and more recently in 1989, gang members were involved in incidents of
assault and kidnapping to settle disputes or to retaliate for acts of violence
against fellow members. A case in point involved a Breed member wearing his
colors in the Philadelphia area, which is considered Pagan turf. After repeated
warnings, the Pagans viciously assaulted the Breed member and confiscated his
colors. Arrangements were made to negotiate a settlement to this dispute.
However, two Breed members were arrested and charged with weapons offenses
during the prearranged meeting. Reportedly, the two were present and armed to
protect the chapter president, who was handling negotiations.
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More bad luck for the Breed biker gang: Fifteen members and associates have been
indicted by the Pennsylvania Attorney General for allegedly running a major
methamphetamine ring in lower Bucks County and South Jersey. Now, two weeks
after the busts, sources close to the ongoing investigation say many of the 13
suspects now in custody have a hunch that one or more of their brethren may be
ratting out their gang to the Feds.
"These guys are worse than the mob," one organized crime investigator tells City
Paper. "They're ready to turn on each other."
Although the Breed and rival biker gang the Warlocks usually steer clear of one
another, a Warlock was allegedly selling meth to a Breed who lives in Bristol;
state agents stumbled onto the Breed meth ring during their investigation into
drug trafficking by the Warlocks.
Last year, undercover agents for the Pennsylvania Attorney General's Bureau of
Narcotics Investigation (BNI) began buying crystal methamphetamine, known as
"ice," from Breed associates and members in Bucks County and South Jersey. Then,
five weeks ago, BNI agents, Bucks County detectives and Philly police fanned out
with 13 search warrants. They seized 22 pounds of "ice," $500,000 in cash and
bank deposits, a submachine gun, a shotgun and 42 other firearms. They also
seized 24 motorcycles, some of which were stolen. After the raids, state agents
listened in on wiretapped telephones as members of the Breed continued to blab,
allegedly about their own illegal activities.
State Attorney General Tom Corbett says that John "Junior" Napoli, president of
the Pennsylvania chapter of the Breed, had plenty of bad things to say about
investigators. Napoli, of Levittown, was allegedly overheard on a wiretap
saying, "Maybe one day they will get shot in the head while on the job. ...
Maybe someone will rape their mothers with a hot curling iron."
At least one lawyer representing a member of the Breed now under arrest thinks
that Napoli's foul mouth is the reason the gang was rounded up so quickly but
sources say his words had nothing to do with the busts.
Those arrested include John "Shameless" Kovacs, the reputed New Jersey Breed
chapter president and William "Tattoo Billy" Johnson of Philadelphia, who
supposedly used his tattoo shop in Bensalem, House of a 1000 Tattoos, to store
multipound shipments of meth and distribute the drug to other Breed members.
"As low class, lowlife as the Pagans are, the Warlocks are worse," ex-Pagan
Jimmy DeGregorio once told the Pennsylvania Crime Commission. But along the
spectrum of bad to worse in the outlaw-biker subculture, the Breed seems to
occupy the very bottom rung of a very grimy ladder.
"They've been around the Trenton, New Jersey, and the Bensalem area of Bucks
County for about 30 years now," one organized crime investigator explains. "If
you get kicked out of the Pagans, if you get thrown out of the Warlocks, then
the Breed will take you as a member."
Nicknames of Breed members and associates arrested two weeks ago include Slam,
Ruthless, Coffin, Nazi Jimmy, Crypt Keeper and a woman known as Scary Movie.
State agents say that a search of Breed chapter secretary Kenneth "Chains"
Steinmuller's Bensalem home turned up a shrine to Adolf Hitler and the Third
Reich. Steinmuller is accused of distributing meth.
Even though Breed bikers count among their members and associates former
Warlocks and Pagans, many fellow 1-percenters can't stand them. In December
1988, the Warlocks kidnapped then Breed chapter president Craig "Coyote"
Gudkneckt. Since several Warlock members had been jumped in a Bensalem bar,
Gudkneckt was taken to the home of a Warlock where he was tied up, beaten and
pistol-whipped. Gudkneckt escaped and in a very un-biker moment, went straight
to the police to report the crime.
At the same time, the Breed was involved in a series of incidents with the
Pagans. One Breed was jumped in Philly — Pagan Nation territory — and stripped
of his colors. (Colors are club emblems sewn on the back of a member's jacket
and are considered the most prized possession of an outlaw biker. Losing one's
colors is grounds for expulsion.)
During the next 20 years, things didn't get much better for the 100-member club
with chapters in Central and South Jersey, Bucks County and western
Pennsylvania. Six years ago, Central Jersey Breed members were arrested in Long
Branch for extortion and assaulting nude dancers who worked in area strip clubs
controlled by the gang. And two years ago, one high-ranking South Jersey Breed,
who allegedly ran a burglary ring specializing in ripping off rural bars, was
forced to flee the state after loose-lipped associates began bragging about
their crime ring and their close connection to the Breed.
"I'd say they're the scum of the earth," says an investigator, "but scum is too
nice a word for them."