News

Since the group was formed in late 1960s, the logo has been a potent element of the Mongols’ identity, which over the years has included an unmistakable penchant for drug dealing and violence by ...
A federal judge on Friday fined the Mongols Motorcycle Club $500,000 in a racketeering case, but denied efforts to strip the group of its trademarked logo.
In a first-of-its-kind verdict Friday, a federal jury ruled the Mongols motorcycle gang should be stripped of its trademarked logo. The jury in U.S. District Court in Santa Ana, Calif., previously ...
A federal jury said last month that the motorcycle gang must forfeit the rights to its trademarked logo. But a judge said it would be unconstitutional.
SANTA ANA, Calif. — For its members, a motorcycle club’s logo is both sacred and hard-earned, the banner under which its brand of rugged brotherhood and individualism exist. But in a setback ...
The motorcycle club, whose members have a history of violence and drug dealing, considers its trademarked logo central to its identity. Federal prosecutors say the logo is linked to criminality.
SANTA ANA, Calif. (KABC) -- A federal jury in Santa Ana has found the Mongols motorcycle club guilty of racketeering and conspiracy. The ruling paves the way for the government to seize the group ...
Yanny, the attorney representing the Mongols, said the group does not commercialize the logo, and people who use it must be members of the club. "These are hardworking members of society," Yanny said.
Women (particularly millennial women) are the country’s fastest-growing group of motorcycle riders. In 1998, the Motorcycle Industry Council reported that only eight percent of riders were female.