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In the brutal world of the Aryan Brotherhood, the notoriously violent White supremacist gang born some 60 years ago in California’s prisons, it’s an unwritten but widely understood rule that any ...
Jesse James Bailey, 40, received a 17.5-year sentence in U.S. District Court in Tacoma. His wife, Candace Bailey, 43, was sentenced to five years.
Authorities say they have traced seven homicides — two in a California prison, five on the streets of Los Angeles County — to three men suspected of being top members of the Aryan Brotherhood.
KAUFMAN, Texas April 2, 2013— -- The Aryan Brotherhood of Texas, a white supremacist prison gang, has become one of the top focuses of authorities investigating the murders of two Texas ...
Federal officials are cracking down on the Aryan Brotherhood in California prisons. Authorities to announce results of an investigation that found gang members ordering murders, smuggling ...
Three members of the Aryan Brotherhood were found guilty Friday in a trial that revealed five murders on the streets of Los Angeles County were orchestrated from behind bars.
A high-ranking member of the Aryan Brotherhood of Texas was sentenced to life in prison without parole for torturing, killing and burning a man who owed him $600.
Bash was not an Aryan Brotherhood member, but had a position of power within the gang’s hierarchy in Salinas Valley State Prison in 2020, according to an indictment against him.
A poster depicting different aspects of the Aryan Brotherhood of Texas is seen during a press conference at the US Attorney's office Friday, Nov. 9, 2012, in Houston.
Her Aryan Circle lover, Dennis Clem, died charging police with a gun in each hand. Handout photo Rachel Tutt, left, and Ashley McLemore are serving prison sentences for their parts in the 2009 ...
Two “Aryan Circle” gang members were sentenced to prison over the beating of an inmate suspected to be gay in Mississippi, feds say. Getty Images/iStockphoto Two members of a white supremacist ...
Virginia passed the Racial Integrity Act in 1924. On a birth certificate or marriage licenses, each person was identified as “white” or “colored,” and the act said the two should never mix.