Rebels Motorcycle Club (Canada)

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Rebels Motorcycle Club (Canada)
Edmonton Rebels MC patch.gif
Rebels Motorcycle Club
Founded1968
Founding locationRed Deer, Alberta, Canada
Years active1968–2004
TerritoryNorthern Alberta and Saskatchewan
AlliesSatan's Choice, and, later, the Hells Angels
RivalsGrim Reapers, Warlocks, EPS, RCMP, Canadian Airborne Regiment

The Rebels Motorcycle Club was an outlaw motorcycle club based in Western Canada that was founded in Red Deer, Alberta in 1968.[1]

Along with the Grim Reapers, the Warlords, and King's Crew, the Rebels became one of the four dominant outlaw motorcycle clubs operating in Alberta prior to 1997. By 1997, when the Grim Reapers became part of the Hells Angels in a patch-over ceremony held in Red Deer, Alberta,[2] and after merging with the Loners of Saskatchewan, the Rebels had become a support club of the Hells Angels with four chapters: Edmonton, Calgary, Moose Jaw, and Saskatoon.[3]

In the late 1970s and early 1980s (the golden era in western Canada for independent one-percenter clubs), the Rebels were the dominant club in the Edmonton area, while the Reapers were the alpha club in Red Deer and Calgary.[4][5]

In 1975, the Rebels gained a certain level of notoriety (respect in some circles) due to their publicised conflicts with Francophone unit of Canadian Airborne Regiment known as "One Commando". In one of these infamous clashes, about 40 members of the Airborne showed up with nunchaku, steel bars, baseball bats, and blackjacks, and ambushed 23 Rebels at the club bar in Edmonton. After a skirmish, the bruised and battered paratroopers retreated and the Rebels went back to their business.[6][7] This event came to be known as "Battle of the Kingsway" in Rebel Folklore.[8]

In the early eighties, as the Reapers grew more powerful and the Rebels less so, the Rebels were warned by the Reapers not to fly the "Alberta" lower rocker on threat of club warfare, so members of the Rebel's Calgary chapter used "Southern Alberta" for the lower rocker and Edmonton members flew "Northern Alberta". King's Crew, meanwhile, were tolerated in their use of "Calgary" as the lower rocker, while the Saskatchewan Rebels, at that point being the dominant club in that province, flew "Saskatchewan" as their lower rocker.[4] In September 1998, the Saskatoon Rebels were patched over to the Hells Angels and the Apollos of Regina became the primary Hells Angels support club there.[9]

The Edmonton chapter of the Rebels folded in 1997, soon after the arrest of secretary-treasurer Scott Jamieson. In 2004, Joey "Crazy Horse" Morin, a.k.a. Joey Campbell, a former associate of the Edmonton chapter of the Rebels, and Robert Charles Simpson were gunned down outside an Edmonton strip club. At the time of the murders, the Bandidos website identified Morin as a probationary member and Simpson as a hangaround. Sources close to the investigation speculated at the time that Morin and Simpson were in Edmonton to set up shop and the murders were committed by a group opposed to that happening. To date no arrests have been made and the file is still officially open and active.[10]

The Rebels were listed as an Outlaw Motorcycle Gang by Criminal Intelligence Service Canada.[11]

References[]

  1. ^ The Rebels: A Brotherhood of Outlaw Bikers, by Daniel R. Wolf, University of Toronto Press, 1991, p. 322
  2. ^ Fallen Angel: The Unlikely Rise of Walter Stadnick in the Canadian Hells Angels, by Jerry Langton, John Wiley & Sons Canada Ltd, 2006, pp 180-184 Archived 2011-02-01 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ "Hell to Pay: Hells Angels Vs. the Million-dollar Rat", by Neal Hall, John Wiley & Sons Canada, 2011
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b The Rebels: A Brotherhood of Outlaw Bikers, by Daniel R. Wolf, University of Toronto Press, 1991
  5. ^ Understanding Organized Crime, by Stephen L. Mallory, Jones & Bartlett, 2007, p. 161
  6. ^ Edmonton Journal, 13 March 1976
  7. ^ Daniel R. Wolf (1 January 1991). The Rebels: A Brotherhood of Outlaw Bikers. University of Toronto Press. pp. 203–209. ISBN 978-0-8020-7363-1.
  8. ^ Reshetylo, Daniel A. (29 September 1981). Reconciling identity and diversity in an outlaw motorcycle club (Thesis). University of Alberta. pp. 296–307.
  9. ^ "Outlaw Motorcycle Gangs, Criminal Intelligence Service Canada (CISC) Annual Report, 1999 (pdf file)" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-04-26. Retrieved 2012-08-03.
  10. ^ "joey morin aka joey campbell > old case files > deadmonton > edmonton > last link on the left". Archived from the original on 2012-04-21. Retrieved 2012-08-17.
  11. ^ Outlaw Motorcycle Gangs, Criminal Intelligence Service Canada (CISC) Report, 2000
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