
AUGUSTA COUNTY, Va. (WHSV) — Hell’s Angels member Dominick Eadicicco took a plea deal in Augusta County Circuit Court on Tuesday.
He will serve eight years in prison for malicious wounding by a mob and use of a firearm in commission of a felony.
As part of the plea deal, the U.S. Attorney’s office will not prosecute Eadicicco on the federal level.
Eadicicco was one of two men originally charged with attempted first degree murder for his role in the attack of a rival gang at the Hometown Inn in Augusta County in September 2018.
Last month, the four other men involved in the attack took plea deals.

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Nathaniel Villaman, Joseph Paturzo and Richard West ach pleaded guilty to one count of malicious wounding by a mob, and will serve four years in prison.
Anthony Milan, who, like Eadicicco, originally faced a charge of attempted murder, will serve eight years.
According to Augusta County Commonwealth’s Attorney Tim Martin, the deals were a positive outcome because the victim, a member of the Pagan Motorcycle gang, was not cooperative with law enforcement.
The Hells Angels are based out of New York, while The Pagans are based out of Virginia.








3 responses to “Final Hell’s Angels member agrees to plea deal in Hometown Inn shooting involving Pagans MC”
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[…] Final Hell’s Angels member agrees to plea deal in Hometown Inn shooting involving Pagans MC In seeking justice, ABATE contacted the FBI, WGN TV, Chicago, for a segment on the Phil Donahue Show, CBS 60 minutes, Representative John Conyers, Jr., Committee on Civil Rights, and Senator Herb Kohl, Wisconsin. ABATE State Coordinator Tony Sanfelipo, and Free Riders MC president, Dave Zien, met with then Attorney General Jim Doyle for 45 minutes to discuss the case. His conclusion was nothing could be done without a “smoking gun.” In other words, one of the cops had to confess or tell on those guilty. Just like what happened in the Daniel Bell case, a 1958 murder of a young black man by police. Years later, one of the two officers in that case came forward to say his partner planted a weapon on Bell in order to justify his shooting of the man as he ran in fear of the police. He had committed no crime. The Lyons’ case was reported in Biker Newsmagazine, Choppers, Easyriders, Motor Magazine (Germany), The Bugle (Milwaukee underground newspaper), and the Milwaukee Journal and Milwaukee Sentinel daily newspapers. Lyons was a personification of everything that is going on today, with regard to profiling and extreme enforcement practices used against bikers. He is relevant because he symbolizes the dangers we face when confronted by a rogue cop, the prejudice of society, and the judgmental pontification of the media. As Marty Rosenblum wrote in his song about Lyons, “I Just Blame Everybody. Lyons “died on the barroom floor, he died in the street, he died in the paddy wagon, but we will not retreat, from fear and injustice, from secrets held until now…” […]
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