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Crime & Justice

Hells Angels Leader Confesses to Ordering Retaliatory Violence Including Assault on Woman

Shawn Ryan Show · #303 Mel Chancey - Youngest President in Hells Angels History · May 11, 2026
Hells Angels Leader Confesses to Ordering Retaliatory Violence Including Assault on Woman
Shawn Ryan Show
Shawn Ryan Show
#303 Mel Chancey - Youngest President in Hells Angels History
"That unwritten rule was like we saved it for the street. They beat up one of our guys' girlfriends that was a bartender. They walked into a bar and busted her nose. We didn't want to do it. The last thing I wanted to do was go sock up some girl but you brought us there and I was the one that wanted to do it and I was the one who did it. I did it to one of their girls."
Chancey admitted to personally carrying out a retaliation attack on an Outlaws member's girlfriend at a strip club after the rival gang assaulted a Hells Angels associate who worked as a bartender. He described the unwritten rule against targeting families being violated by both sides as the six-year war escalated beyond street confrontations into bombings and targeted killings. The confession illustrates how the conflict descended into attacks on civilians despite initial boundaries.

About this episode

Host Sean Ryan sits down with Mel Chancey, the youngest president in Hells Angels history, who ran the Chicago chapter during one of the bloodiest biker wars in American history before finding Christianity in federal prison. Chancey provides a detailed chronological account beginning with his strict Catholic upbringing in suburban Chicago, where at 16 he was both expelled from school for assaulting the principal and became a father. He describes meeting Hell's Henchmen members at a gym, prospecting for the club, and becoming a full member at 20 before the chapter merged with the Hells Angels in 1994—a move that ignited a six-year war with the rival Outlaws motorcycle club. The conflict escalated from bar brawls with ball-peen hammers to highway shootings, bombings including a 100-pound C4 device (the third largest domestic bomb in U.S. history at the time), and multiple murders on both sides. Chancey reveals that undercover ATF agent Chris Bayless infiltrated the chapter through a member who knowingly vouched for him, attending meetings and feeding intelligence that interdicted planned attacks. Arrested on RICO charges in 2004, Chancey describes a spiritual conversion in his holding cell where he surrendered to God, ultimately serving 49 months and cooperating with prosecutors without implicating others. He explains his philosophy of 'full surrender' to Christ, contrasting his violent past with his current work running Core Medical Foundation, hosting the John 3:16 Devotional Team, and partnering with Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson and Jon Bernthal on an upcoming biopic. The interview includes extensive discussion of motorcycle club structure, the economics of the drug trade that funded his lifestyle, his simultaneous relationships with multiple women, and specific violent incidents including the removal of an unauthorized Hells Angels tattoo. Chancey closes with prayer and a mission statement that no one is too far gone for redemption, citing examples of former Pagans Sergeant at Arms members and other one-percenters who've reached out after hearing his testimony.

Key takeaways

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