After emerging victorious in the Toronto Biker War of 1995, the Loners remained a prominent biker gang. This continued until early 1997, when the Loners split into two factions. A split emerged between Jimmy Raso and Frank Grano. The pro-Hells Angel faction led by Grano joined the Para-Dice Riders while a rump remained under Raso. The split a breach with the Hells Angels. Stadnick had cut off the Loners supply to narcotics. Without a supply of drugs from the Hells Angels, the journalist
Jerry Langton that the Loners "faded into obscurity. Bikers gangs without a steady supply of drugs to sell generally don't make headlines". This was due to the Loners Italian roots and at times they would subcontract for them. By late 1999, the Loners had built up moderate strength, beside Nomads they had chapters in Richmond Hill, Woodbridge, Vaughan, Toronto, Hamilton, London, Windsor, and Amherstburg. In June 1999, had established its Chatham chapter (based near St. Thomas), when they absorbed the
Annihilators Motorcycle Club led by
Wayne Kellestine and
Giovanni Muscedere. Kellestine did not like how the Angels had treated the Loners under Raso. He was also adamantly against joining the Hells Angels, but he also did not want to align with the Outlaws, so he chose to join the Loners. This merging of the Annihilators along with other clubs into the Loners was done in an attempt to increase the clubs membership and strength to deal with the incoming threat of the Hells Angels. One Loner, Irish immigrant Glenn "Wrongway" Atkinson, was heard to remarking the low quality of the Annihilators after meeting Kellestine and his group for the first time: "Can you believe the type of people we're attracting?" Unlike most Canadian outlaw bikers who were barely literate, Atkinson was a
bibliophile who especially loved the work of
James Joyce, which led some other bikers to consider him strange. Atkinson was well regarded as a diplomat. He had connections with many group in Ireland, including the Irish Alliance. In 1999, the Loners' International secretary Glenn "Wrongway" Atkinson and another full-patch Loner, Wayne Connor were sent to Ireland to try persuade the biker clubs of Irish Alliance to join the Canadian Loners, an offer that was respected but refused. Atkinson told Peter Edwards that there were many parallels between the world of Irish politics and Canadian outlaw biking, and to grow up following Irish politics was the best preparation for Canadian outlaw biking. Atkinson stated that both Canadian outlaw biking and Irish politics were based on a sense of identity formed around a sense of rebellion, fierce clannish loyalties and a professed strongly held moral code, while at the same time being inhabited by strange, cartoonish men given to making outlandish statements who frequently engaged in sordid intrigue and betrayed their friends, as greed and ambition outweighed their professed moral code.
Ontario Biker War From 1999 to 2002, the club was a participant in the
Ontario Biker War. One of the members of the London chapter of the Loners, Jimmy Coates, had a brother, John Coates, who was an associate of the Hells Angels'
Sherbrooke chapter. John Coates was a 6'7 man who weighted 300 pounds while younger brother Jimmy was not as large, but still intimidating. Through his brother, Jimmy Coates opened a secret pipeline for buying drugs from Sherbrooke. The president of the St. Thomas chapter,
Wayne Kellestine, like
Bernie Guindon was a firm Canadian nationalist and was adamantly against having the Loners join the Hells Angels, as he didn't want to "answer to a club based in another country". He once even pistol-whipped a member of his chapter who expressed a desire to join the Angels. Together, the Coates brothers worked to encourage a mutiny in the area against Kellestine, with the promise of joining the Angels as the reward. On 22 October 1999, an assassination attempt was made against Kellestine as he stopped in his truck for a red light in his hometown of
Iona Station. A car driven by Philippe "Philbilly" Gastonguay of the Angels' Sherbrooke chapter, together with a pro-Angel Loner, David "Dirty" McLeish of the St. Thomas chapter, pulled up and one of the two men in the car opened fire with a shotgun, spraying Kellestine's truck with bullets He would survive this attempt unscathed. To the authorities in Ontario it had been made clear that the Loners and Hells Angels were now at war. The Outlaws would also join the conflict, fighting in the cities of London and Hamilton. In April 2000, Montreal Rockers member,
Dany Kane traveled to Toronto on the orders of Hells Angel,
David Carroll. He was there to meet the leaders of the Para-Dice Riders gang for another of Carroll's murder plots. Kane in a report stated that Carroll wanted him to kill
Gennaro Raso, the international president of the Loners Motorcycle Club, as part of a bid to have the Para-Dice Riders join the Hells Angels. On 19 April 2000, Kane met in Toronto several Para-Dice Riders to discuss who he was to kill besides Raso. Kane reported that Carroll had devised a plan under which Kane would use his bomb-making skills to build a powerful bomb to destroy the Loners' clubhouse in Woodbridge with the aim of killing the entire chapter. Kane, who was an informant, sabotaged his mission by encouraging the Para-Dice Riders under the influence of alcohol to speak very loudly in public at a Toronto bar about the murder plot, which led Carroll to declare with disgust that the Para-Dice Riders were "idiots" as now the murder plot could not go forward. In May 2000, Ontario
Provincial Police in conjunction with local law enforcement dealt a blow to the Loners ability to fight the Angels. They launched Operation Hilltop against the club. It saw over 150 law enforcement officers raided around 15 locations in Ontario, many in the Greater Toronto Area, targeting chapters of the Loners Motorcycle Club in Woodbridge, Richmond Hill, Toronto, Vaughan and Windsor. The 6-month sting project led to the seizures of drugs and guns, the arrests of 21 members of the Loners and several associates, this included Raso, president Loners and leader of the clubs Richmond Hill chapter, which at the time acted as its mother chapter. During this period authorities stated that the Loners had controlled most of the drug distribution North of Toronto and in York Region and their territory extended from the Greater Toronto Area thought to London and to Hamilton. Collectively the group faced more than 250 criminal charges, with around 75% of those charges being narcotics related. With the rest involved mostly charges relating to weapons, the distribution of weapons and theft. The narcotics seized included large amounts of cocaine, hash, marijuana and mushrooms. Their street value is estimated to be about $1.5-million (modern equivalent of $2.6 million). This caused temporary issues within the Loners Motorcycle Club. The
Rock Machine Motorcycle Club, the club was currently engaged with the Hells Angels in the bloody
Quebec Biker War that was occurring at the same period. They had begun to establish themselves in Ontario during 1999. By 2000, the Loners Motorcycle Club aligned themselves with fellow Canadian motorcycle club. RCMP Staff Sergeant, Jean-Pierre Levesque also commented on the situation in Ontario. "New alliances have changed the balance of power in the province. The only gang affiliated with the Hells Angels in Ontario is the Para-Dice Riders. The Vagabonds and Satan's Choice are apparently neutral, while the Outlaws, Loners and now the Rock Machine have traditionally rivalled the Hells Angels. The Hells Angels to enter in Ontario -- want total control, nobody escapes them. By setting up alliances, other gangs are better able to resist a takeover of their drug territories by the Hells Angels. The Loners held a party in Toronto that was attended by dozens of "machinists", as the Rock Machine are known in outlaw biker circles. On December 1, 2000, the Rock Machine Motorcycle Club became an official probationary club of the Bandidos. At the ceremony in on Jane Street in
Vaughan, Ontario. Bikers from the Rock Machine, Bandidos and Loners gathered at a local banquet hall. As 45 members of the Rock Machine Ontario receive their probationary patches, Rock Machine allies, the Loners Motorcycle Club provided security for the event. In December 2000, the Hells Angels entered Ontario by "patching over" 168 members from a number of Ontario biker gangs. When it came to the patch-over in Ontario, the Loners were not given an invitation to join the Hells Angels, as by this point the latter was considered an enemy. The only ones who had were the former Loners who had joined the Para-Dice Riders or the ones from London who participated in the attempted coup. On January 17, 2001, Bandidos Canada national vice-president, Alain Brunette travelled with US Bandido,
Edward Winterhalder to Toronto to meet with the new Bandidos chapter there. The Bandidos Toronto (North) chapter had patched over from the Rock Machine in February 2001. This made sense, as the Loners maintained long-time relationships with Bandidos in Europe. On May 22, 2001. After a rift between now imprisoned Loners international president, Gennaro Raso and Toronto president, have the Loners ot join the Bandidos. This included himself, plus eleven other members of the Loners Toronto chapter. Some members from Richmond Hill, along with the entire memberships of the St. Thomas and Amherstburg chapters. The Woodbridge chapter of the Loners continued to operate as the Mother chapter. Most members of the London chapter of Loners had chosen to join the Hells Angels instead. Jimmy Coates became the first president of the Angels'
London probationary chapter in 2001. Most of the others members in the new Hells Angels London chapter were also former members of the Loners.
After the conflict In 2007, several members of the Loners in Ontario and Western Canada joined the California-based
Mongols Motorcycle Club. When the Mongols Canada collapsed soon after, these former Loners would be involved in the reconstruction of the
Rock Machine Motorcycle Club. The Loners would bounce back from these setbacks. By the late 2000s, they had reopened some of their chapters and they had established new chapters in
Lindsay,
Peterborough,
Sarnia, totaling 8 in Ontario. They had also expanded outside of Ontario, establishing chapters in
Alberta,
Saskatchewan, and
Nova Scotia and several other counties in
Europe and
Oceania. In 2013, the Loners would establish a chapter in rural
Stratford, Ontario. A popular area for the manufacturer of methamphetamine. Producing such drugs emits a foul odor, so motorcycle clubs will set up manufacturing sites in rural communities where the population is less dense. "The Loners MC has regained strength following several episodes of departures and betrayals within the club. Over the past 10 years, the club has experienced a significant increase in membership and is present in several countries around the world and its influence has never been stronger."
Conflict with the Vagos The
Vagos Motorcycle Club, which is one of the largest motorcycle clubs in America, attempted to expand North into Canada in 2007. Their plan was to set up their first chapter in
Toronto, Ontario, but the chapter fell apart before it really got going. By October 2011, They had returned to Toronto, the Vagos Motorcycle Club established a new probationary chapter in
Peterborough, Ontario, by patching-over 9 members of the Rock Machine. The chapter would become full-patch Vagos in October 2012. The Loners Motorcycle Club had possessed a chapter in Peterborough for sometime so this caused some territorial tension. In mid 2012, it was announced by the Loners that former Satan's Choice and Bandidos member, Robert "Bob" Pammett had been kicked out of the Loners Motorcycle Club in "bad standing" after a unanimous vote by the club's Peterborough chapter. Pammett was a close associate of club founders, Frank Lenti and Gennaro Raso. He had left the Satan's Choice in the 1980s to join the growing Loners, where he remained an influential member unil he joined the Bandidos in 2001, as a member of their Toronto chapter. After the collapse of the Bandidos in Canada, Pammett would rejoin the Loners in 2007. He had a decent amount of influence within Peterborough's underworld so police feared that this could cause tensions. The Loners released several statements issuing warnings during the Vagos Motorcycle Club's setup in Peterborough that left authorities concerned. The Loners were determined to compete the American-based club that exile Pammett was now aligning with. They also stated that Peterborough was Loners territory and they would ready to defend it. "The club is a strong brotherhood and will be steadfast in remaining in Peterborough, Robert Pammett AKA Peterborough Bob is no longer a member of or affiliated with the Loners MC and is out in bad standings!! Peterborough is remaining a Loners MC Canada B&W stronghold and will always be a Loners MC town. All others tread lightly!" In late August, the Vagos clubhouse located on the corner of Park and Perry Streets, was firebombed by
Molotov cocktails causing minor damage. A current Vagos member, Bob Pammett's property was also subject to arson, however little damage was caused to his truck as it seems the Molotov cocktail missed. Police were not able to confirm who was responsible for the arsons, but they assumed it was the Loners based on the ongoing issues between the groups. Staff Sgt. Larry Charmley stated:"Pammett's crew and the Loners haven't resolved their differences in the past few months." Police seized the remains of the cocktail and are still investigating. By late October, the Loners Peterborough chapter had increased its strength. By absorbing the local Vigilantes Motorcycle Club, which had acted as their support club, this was done in a patch over ceremony that happened in September 2012. This increased the chapters numbers to over 30 members, giving them a significant advantage over the Vagos. After this the Vagos Peterborough clubhouse was subject to a massive arson attack. The inside of the building was almost completely "gutted" by the flames. Authorities presume that they will have to tear the building down due to extensive damage, even causing portions of the roof to collapse. No one was present inside at the time but it took firefighters several hours to put out the blaze. The Loners-Vagos conflict would come to a close due to the patch over of the Vagos Peterborough chapter to the Outlaws Motorcycle Club in 2015. A club that had historically good to moderate relations with the Loners. == Chapters/charters worldwide ==