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This undated photo provided by his family's attorney on Friday, Oct. 4, 2013 shows Edwin Mieses Jr. after he was struck by an SUV during a motorcycle rally in New York that turned violent on Sunday, Sept. 29, 2013. He suffered a broken spine, fractured ribs, a punctured lung and a torn aortic valve, his defense attorney, Gloria Allred, said Friday. His injuries may have left him paralyzed. (AP Photo/Family Photo via Gloria Allred)In the days since a violent incident on a New York City highway left one man badly beaten and another paralyzed, bikers have gotten a lot of bad press. As authorities sort through the details of that tragic day, many bikers are speaking up to defend their clubs, culture and love for riding. Cameras were rolling as conflict erupted between a group of bikers and the driver of an SUV on the Henry Hudson Parkway a few short weeks ago. Alexian Lien, 33, was reportedly out for a Sunday drive with his wife and two-year-old when witnesses say his Range Rover bumped the rear tire of one in a group of 30 bikers taking part in a bike rally dubbed the “Hollywood Stuntz.”

A chase ensued up the highway, ending with Lien being dragged from his SUV by members of the group and severely beaten.
best 125cc motorcycle for a learnerMieses, the biker run over, is currently hospitalized.
motorcycle clothing toowoombaHis legs were broken in the incident and he has spine injuries that will leave him paralyzed, his wife told reporters. Lien’s wife, Rosalyn Ng, released a statement, saying the couple feared for their lives and her husband had no choice but to speed away in the manner he did. Also See: Harley-Davidson highlights history of black ‘Iron Elite’ bikers The story quickly became headline news with its imagery of dangerous bikers, a family in peril and an accompanying video. Many outlets incorrectly identified the disparate group of bikers as the “Hollywood Stuntz” motorcycle gang.

The New York Daily News described them as a “wild pack of motorcyclists.” The Post dubbed them “motorcycle thugs” and compared them to the infamous Hells Angels bikers that became synonymous with murder, violence and crime in the 1960s. It’s a perception planted firmly in the public imagination since the late 1940s, when the earliest motorcycle clubs were first created. At the same time, outlaw motorcycle gangs like the Hells Angels and Mongols were also formed. These groups, according to definition by the U.S. Department of Justice, “are organizations whose members use their motorcycle clubs as conduits for criminal enterprises. OMGs are highly structured criminal organizations whose members engage in criminal activities such as violent crime, weapons trafficking, and drug trafficking.” “I think that motorcycle clubs today get a bad rap whether it’s by negative depictions in the media or in shows like Sons of Anarchy,” says Andre “Gunny” Green, a member of the Savage Skulls Motorcycle Club, a black Harley-Davidson ambassador and a veteran of the U.S. Marine Corps.

“We are not a ‘gang.’ We are a brotherhood of like-minded individuals. In most cases, we just want to ride, enjoy the open road and be left the f**k alone.” Also See: Bikers rally at Manhattan hospital after SUV dispute Green says his prayers go out to everyone involved in the incident, that he can understand Lien’s actions but also can’t help but question how he would respond to seeing one of his “brothers” run over then watching the vehicle flee. “I must say that as a biker I was furious looking at the video. I can empathize with the plight of being on the road and having some [driver] try to push their way into a lane or even a formation,” says Green. “I don’t think motorist understand that their actions have dire and sometimes deadly results when on the road with bikers. Most of us just want to go home in one piece without worrying about who almost took our life that day and when we ride it’s a daily reminder of what we deal with on these streets.

On the same token as bikers you can’t ride like you own the streets because some guy in a thousand pound vehicle may not like it and decide he’s going to use his car as a bowling ball and us bikers are the pins.” Throughout social media, there has been overwhelmingly negative sentiment expressed toward bikers in response to the incident. In one top-rated comment on a YouTube video of a Hollywood Stuntz event last year, one person writes, “I think we need our very own Range Rover gang. One who specializes on monster trucking these fa***ts to paralysis. Jeremiah Mieses was just the beginning.” And Wednesday, both the Democratic and Republican candidates for mayor vowed to crack down on bikers. “It’s unacceptable to have motorcyclists effectively take over highways inappropriately and illegally. It’s not appropriate for them to make everyone drive slower so they can do their stunts,” said Democrat Bill de Blasio. His Republican opponent, Joe Lhota, took the condemnation a step further saying there was no place in the city for “motorcycle wilding,” borrowing a term that was used in the 1989 case where five youths were wrongfully convicted of going on a rampage that ended with the rape of a woman in Central Park.