In this breaking biker news breakdown, we dive deep into the latest developments in the Pagans Outlaw Motorcycle Club vs. Unknown Bikers confrontation at the West Norriton Wawa on October 17, 2025. A Montgomery County judge just denied severance requests, forcing six Pagans members into a joint trial on charges including aggravated assault, simple assault, recklessly endangering other persons, and riot.
The court ruled that the defendants “will not be prejudiced” by being tried together — but is that total horse crap? When one co-defendant already pleaded guilty and admitted acting as support, and evidence against others could easily spill over, how can these guys get a fair shake? Juries are famous for getting it wrong, especially when outlaw motorcycle clubs like the Pagans MC are involved and the case hits the headlines.
We also cover the positive side: Charges were fully dismissed against two Pagans members (Erik Dixon and Luke Higgins) due to lack of evidence tying them directly to any assault. Their attorneys argued they never engaged, stayed on their bikes, and left after gunfire broke out — and the judge got it right this time.
Plus, details on Jason William Lawless‘ guilty plea to misdemeanor simple assault and conspiracy. He received time served (credit for 145 days) plus probation after admitting he didn’t physically fight but was present to provide support.
This case highlights a bigger issue: Are biker club members getting slammed with bad rulings and prejudicial joint trials just because of their colors and the “big news” factor? Defense lawyers warned about spillover evidence ruining individual assessments — common sense that seems ignored here.
What do you think? Will these six Pagans get a fair trial on May 18, or is the deck stacked against them? Drop your thoughts, opinions, and suggestions for the brothers in the comments.
If you’re into real talk on outlaw motorcycle clubs, biker news, MC trials, Wawa shooting Pagans, and justice system breakdowns, this one’s for you.







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