Hells Angels Motorcycle Club (HAMC) founder Sonny Barger is
suing US TV company HBO, claiming that the pay cable network cut him out of a
biker drama he helped to develop, Barger’s attorney said.
Hells Angels veteran filled a lawsuit in federal court in
Los Angeles against the pay cable network HBO, production company White
Mountain Co. and Michael Tolkin, the project’s executive producer. Some of the
objections listed in the lawsuit are: “that some characters introduced by
Tolkin too close resembled or depicted living persons (in particular a
character named `Chief,' which for decades has been a well-known nickname or
alias for Sonny Barger), that some actual place names used in the script were
too identifiably associated with Sonny Barger and the Hells Angels (such as the
primary location being Carefree, AZ, which is the town adjacent to where Sonny
Barger presently resides, and that the principal character has moved from
Northern California, which is exactly what Sonny Barger did),” according to the
Associated Press.
Barger is suing for copyright and trademark infringement and
he claims that HBO’s pilot drama “1%” focuses on a chapter of the fictional
Death Rangers motorcycle club in Arizona,
a book written by Barger. He wants the court to declare the drama’s script as a
project based on his work and the result of a joint effort between Sonny Barger
Productions and Tolkin.
"Basically, Michael Tolkin stole our show and sold it
to HBO," White Mountain Co, Barger’s attorney Fritz Clapp said in a
telephone interview.
The Hells Angels are incorporated as the Hells Angels
Motorcycle Corporation and some of their members nicknamed themselves
“one-percenters” after the American Motorcyclist Association claimed that one percent
of the motorcyclist were troublemakers and this reputation influenced the other
members as well, giving them a bad name. The world-wide motorcycle club’s
members are required to own a Harley Davidson motorcycle, as a fist condition
to be accepted.
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