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HomeCRIME & PUNISHMENTRomanian Chapter of Hell’s Angels Founder Marius Lazar Jailed 300 Months for...

Romanian Chapter of Hell’s Angels Founder Marius Lazar Jailed 300 Months for Racketeering, Drug Trafficking, Plotting to Assassinate U.S. Officers, Rival Gang Members

A foreign national who founded the Romanian chapter of the Hell’s Angels motorcycle gang was sentenced on January 15 to 25 years in federal prison for his role in a transnational racketeering and drug trafficking scheme that included attempts to hire assassins to murder U.S. law enforcement officers and rival gang members.

Marius Lazar, a 51-year-old Romanian national, was sentenced in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas to 300 months in federal prison for conspiracy to commit racketeering, conspiracy to import cocaine into the United States, and conspiracy to commit money laundering.

Lazar was convicted on November 17, 2023, by a federal jury in Beaumont.

According to court documents and evidence presented at trial, Lazar was a “founding member” of his local chapter of the Hells Angels Motorcycle Club, a transnational outlaw motorcycle gang that was founded in the United States and is now active on six continents.

Through his relationship with a fellow Hells Angels member from New Zealand, Lazar joined a conspiracy to purchase more than 400 kilograms of cocaine from a person in the United States, who the conspirators believed was a powerful drug trafficker but who was actually an undercover U.S. law enforcement officer.

As part of his negotiations for the cocaine purchase, Lazar also solicited the undercover agent to kill two members of a rival motorcycle club in Romania and offered to supply the undercover officer with rifles, grenades, armoured vehicles, and other military-grade equipment that Lazar understood would be used against police officers in the United States.

Members of the conspiracy sent nearly $1 million to the United States via bank wires and Bitcoin transfers as payment for the drugs and murders.

Co-defendants Murray Michael Matthews and Marc Patrick Johnson remain fugitives.

The Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Forces investigation that led to the conviction and sentence was conducted by Homeland Security Investigations Houston; the Drug Enforcement Administration; the U.S. Marshals Service; the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives; and the Internal Revenue Service – Criminal Investigations.

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