Unity on Two Wheels: Black MC Presidents Forge a New Path on the Black MC set in Saint Louis

Sin City Deciples Saint Louis President, Spark Plug, opens up about brotherhood,
history, and the groundbreaking event that brought rival nations together with the
Unity OLS Party at the Omega Center — no bad vibes, just pure positive energy.

The bass was thumping so hard you could feel it in your chest. Cars double-parked on
side streets, engines idling in the cold Saint Louis winter air. Inside the Omega Center it was hot
with energy, the dance floor pulsed—Black, white, young, old, patched and support club alike—
moving as one under a hazy atmosphere of cigar smoke. No shoulder checks. No tension. No
drama. Just music, laughter, women owning the floor, brothers raising bottles in toasts, and that
rare, electric feeling you only get when something historic is happening right in front of you.
For anyone who’s ridden in the Black MC scene for more than a minute, they would
know this wasn’t supposed to happen. Not like this. Not with three dominant 1% nations—Sin
City Deciples, Outcast, and Hell’s Lovers—sharing the same space, the same stage, the same
respect. Yet here it was: thousands strong, security tight, energy clean, and not one fight all
night. Over 1,500 people turned away at the door because the place was already maxed out.
I caught up with Sin City Deciples’ Saint Louis President, Spark Plug, to get the straight
story from the top. What sparked this? How did three presidents pull it off? And is this a one-off
—or the beginning of something bigger?

The Interview

KAOS: This is KAOS with Black Dragon Biker News. I want to sit down and talk about
what I see as one of the most incredible events in Black MC culture in a long time. What was
your role in it, and—without speaking for the club if you’re not comfortable—How did the three
main clubs coordinate as presidents?

Sin City Deciples Saint Louis President, Spark Plug: I’ve known the other presidents
for years—we grew up in the life, we used to work security teams together, all that. We’ve
always been in the same area, always committed to respecting each other. We were in the right positions at the right time. The common ground was getting support clubs involved without
issues from other nations. We don’t have those problems—we understand some do, but we don’t.
It was the right time to come together, and hopefully it spreads nationwide.

KAOS: How about you introduce yourself—who you are, your title, the club you
represent, its role, and how it connects to others.

Sin City Deciples Saint Louis President, Spark Plug: I’m Spark Plug, President of the
Saint Louis chapter of Sin City Deciples (Missouri side, though we’re tied in with East Saint
Louis too—it’s the same family).

KAOS: You guys have a solid membership, right? I saw y’all move as one at our set
night a month or so ago—our president pulled me aside, impressed how you flowed as a unit.
Beautiful.

Sin City Deciples Saint Louis President, Spark Plug: Yeah, we say “one of us, all of
us.” We’re brothers, not just members. We treat each other like blood from the same mother—
more love, honor, respect that way. Being a “member” ain’t the same anymore; too many
weekend riders now days. With Sin City, a brother’s gonna get up at 3:30 a.m. if needed. It’s a
different mindset.

KAOS: How long have you been president of one of the larger chapters? How’d you rise
to it?

Sin City Deciples Saint Louis President, Spark Plug: Size doesn’t matter—if one
chapter needs help, from fundraisers to checking on a kid in college, we all show up. A small
chapter might call and get 100-200 brothers rolling.

KAOS: When watching biker movies or reading books about the club life from back in
the day, you see that brotherhood in white sets for decades. In Black sets, it feels more recent on
the surface, but history goes back to the ’60s—even ’50s with some clubs. How has Sin City
contributed to uniting Black bikers, building that brotherhood? Do you educate brothers on Black
MC history?

Sin City Deciples Saint Louis President, Spark Plug: We take brothers back to school
on the history—Black side, white side. Stay long enough, that line blurs. Either you’re a biker or
you’re not. You gotta sit at the table no matter the color. One wrong move by any biker, we all
get blamed. We govern accordingly to keep all bikers looking good.

KAOS: I’ve been on sets with Sin City—mixed crowds, Black and white chapters rolling
up together, drinking, bonfires, no tension. How do you handle potential racial beefs, politics, or
cultural differences in a blended club?

Sin City Deciples Saint Louis President, Spark Plug: Everyone’s allowed to feel how
they feel, but you might not get your way. You’re safe to speak, but the direction we move is set.
Move with us or move on. Religion and opinions are yours, but you gotta believe in a higher
power—Muslim, Jewish, Christian, whatever. That’s core. God, family, Sin City—that’s the
order.

KAOS: That tracks with the documentary I watched about Sin City. The name evolved,
but God and family were always central, right from the founders.

Sin City Deciples Saint Louis President, Spark Plug: Exactly. I got to know some
founders indirectly through extended conversations—Angel, others. My mentor, Saint Louis
Slim, was in 48 years before he passed three years ago. Being part of something that long… you
gravitate to it, care for it. Club established around ’67 in Gary, Indiana—founded ’65-’67.

KAOS: Do you see Saint Louis as the hub for these events since it worked so well, or are
y’all thinking of rotating it to other cities? I noticed crews from all over: Mississippi Outcast,
Hell’s Lovers from Kentucky, guys from way out. How was the vibe with brothers coming from
far away?

Sin City Deciples Saint Louis President, Spark Plug: We like hosting here, but we
could duplicate it elsewhere—as long as the respect is the same. It starts with the three presidents
knowing each other for so long and finding a way to work together. We reached out to all
corners of the Black set. Some thought they fell outside, but we honored them with stipulations
and common ground. No problems. We were all deep—Outcast was deep too.

KAOS: Security and flow were tight. You had to have conversations because the three
main nations were there first, right?

Sin City Deciples Saint Louis President, Spark Plug: Yeah, we had to remind
everyone: let these 99% clubs have space and fun. We encouraged the three nations to
fellowship, meet each other. Don’t take up all the chairs—make room. It was beautiful.

KAOS: All three are 1% outlaw clubs, right? Sin City, Outcast, Hells Lovers—no
diamond patch needed to say it. Under y’all, you’ve got support clubs—clubs with your blessing.

Sin City Deciples Saint Louis President, Spark Plug: Definitely outlaw. We live it.
Support clubs roll under the blessing—female MCs, social clubs, patched-in affiliates with our
colors.

KAOS: Does that “can’t we all get along” energy play into wanting more unity events?
Like shifting focus back to rides, parties, racing, brotherhood instead of conflict—especially with
99% clubs wanting peace?

Sin City Deciples Saint Louis President, Spark Plug: Definitely. We wanted the
support clubs to intermingle and feel safe. With three nations there, we introduced everyone,
encouraged them to support each other. The goal was understanding and business continuing
without issues.

KAOS: Future plans? Any cross-country peace ride for urban/multiracial MCs, stop-theviolence
style? Or how big could this unity grow?

Sin City Deciples Saint Louis President, Spark Plug: We take it day by day—keep the
three strong first, maybe expand later if the vibe holds. The entire nation is welcome if respect
stays the same. Maybe we can expand to some other ones at some point, but it depends on our
uppers say. We’re planning more intense events, like races at tracks—get back to what biking
started as: racing, fun, competition. Get kids involved too—family events.

KAOS: Sounds like it’s rooted here in Saint Louis for now, but could spread if the three
presidents’ unity holds.

Sin City Deciples Saint Louis President, Spark Plug: For now, yeah. Communication
is key—we knew each other long enough to make this happen. If others want the same, we can
replicate it.

KAOS: Anything else to add on the OLS Unity Party or other last thoughts?

Sin City Deciples Saint Louis President, Spark Plug: We can all do better. These
events help, but there’s no room for negativity. We keep pushing unity.

KAOS: I heard from Outcast Saint Louis President, Gunho, in an interview on Black
Dragon Biker News podcast that there might be another event in May or June. Is that true? And
you mentioned a meet-up Monday with all three presidents can you elaborate?

Sin City Deciples Saint Louis President, Spark Plug: Yeah, we are talking about doing
another one in the summer. Bigger and more events maybe family there too. Next Monday we
going to meet up. Could be a good spot for Black Dragon TV interview— cameras, lights,
whatever works. The other two: Gunho (Outcast) and Straightforward (Hells Lovers) will be
there.

KAOS: Appreciate you, brother. This was groundbreaking event in my opinion —what
y’all put together. Much respect. I’ll bring the camera idea to Black Dragon; we’re here to
support.

Sin City Deciples Saint Louis President, Spark Plug: Gratitude. Much love, Kaos.

End of Interview

As the conversation wound down, Spark Plug’s final words hung in the air: “We can all
do better. These events help—no room for negativity. We keep pushing unity.”
In a world where MC history is often written in blood and beef, this Saint Louis gathering
felt like a reset button. Three presidents who’ve known each other for years proved that
communication, mutual respect, and shared love of the life can override old static. Support clubs
mingled safely. Out-of-state chapters showed up honored. And, in if the future events hold true,
kids, families, and future generations of bike riders could get a glimpse of what the scene could
be—races, rides, fellowship, no drama.

Is this the start of nationwide unity rides, cross-country peace runs, or even track days
where the throttle decides the winner instead of fist, or even worse, the bullet? Maybe. For now,
it’s rooted right here in the Midwest, built on real relationships and real talk. But the door is open
wider than it’s been in years.

One thing’s clear: when the music hits, the bikes roll, and the colors fly together without
a single bad vibe, that’s not just an event. That’s a statement.

Much respect to Spark Plug and the other brothers, Gunho, and Straight Forward, who
made it happen. The road ahead looks a little brighter.

Ride safe. Stay united.