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John stinson aryan brotherhood

          In a racketeering indictment unsealed this week, longtime California prisoner John Stinson was charged with two counts of conspiracy to commit murder as well.

        1. Blood In Blood Out is the first book to give the full inside story of its incredible rise to power.
        2. Authorities say they have traced seven homicides — two in a California prison, five on the streets of Los Angeles County — to three men.
        3. The Nazi Lowriders, also known as NLR or the Ride, are a neo-Nazi, white supremacist organized crime syndicate, and prison and street gang in the United.
        4. Robert Lee "Blinky" Griffin, 59, and John William “Youngster” Stinson, 52, were convicted on January 9 of conspiracy to commit racketeering.
        5. Authorities say they have traced seven homicides — two in a California prison, five on the streets of Los Angeles County — to three men..

          LOS ANGELES — They died inside and out of prison, stabbed beneath the sweltering Central Valley sun and gunned down on darkened streets in Pomona, Lomita and Lancaster.

          One was a pimp, another an extortionist with ties to Israeli organized crime.

          Two victims were members of a white supremacist gang. An imprisoned robber was killed by his cellmate. Another man was found dead in a stolen truck.

          What they had in common, authorities say, was that they'd run afoul of three reputed members of the Aryan Brotherhood.

          Kenneth Johnson, Francis Clement and John Stinson will stand trial beginning Wednesday on charges of racketeering and murder.

          This article traces the rise and decline of the Nazi Low Riders (NLR), which began in California as a racist juvenile prison gang that has been heavily.

          The defendants have pleaded not guilty and denied being affiliated with the Aryan Brotherhood, a gang formed nearly 60 years ago by white inmates at San Quentin.

          Prosecutors say they have traced seven homicides — two behind bars, five on the streets of Los Angeles County — to Johnson, Clement and Stinson.

          The case has been cloaked in secrecy. Prosecu