The jovial 450-pound Hells Angel and his petite, quiet girlfriend may
have seemed an unlikely couple.
But Laurence "Large Larry" Lajeunesse and Tammie Ann Brannigan
apparently adored each other. The pair lived in a cluttered converted
industrial garage in Chatsworth, where they worked on cars together, took
drugs together--and one night in December 1998 died together when both were
shot execution-style.
Their alleged killer, Daniel Ray Waring, 44, is on trial in San
Fernando Superior Court. The case figures to highlight the culture and ways
of the biker gang that authorities say deals drugs and engages in illicit
activity.
In opening statements Wednesday, Deputy Dist. Atty. Jeff Jonas said
Waring was a Hells Angel "wannabe" who had been angry for years at the group
because he was never allowed into its inner circle. After Waring and
Lajeunesse had a falling out over methamphetamine dealing, the Santa Clarita
man shot Lajeunesse five times in the head and then killed Brannigan to
eliminate her as a witness, Jonas said.
In his opening statement, defense attorney Mark P. Brandt said Waring
only witnessed the killings that he said were committed by John Kopp, who
later killed himself. Prosecutors contend that Kopp was a witness to the
slayings.
Brandt told jurors Kopp was also a drug user who owned many guns, and
that after the killings Kopp had tried to get rid of several weapons at a
pawn shop.
Kopp's pretrial testimony ended when his body was found with a noose
around the neck and the coroner's office determined his death a suicide.
Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Shari Kreisler Silver has yet
to rule on whether Kopp's partial testimony will be allowed into evidence.
Kopp died before he could be fully cross-examined.
The trial, expected to last five weeks, will feature up to 70
witnesses, including Hells Angels as well as a gang expert expected to
testify on the behavior of the group. If convicted, Waring, who turned
occasionally to wave at his 13-year-old son in the courtroom, faces a
maximum penalty of life in prison without possibility of parole.
Prosecutors plan to highlight the defendant's 15 years as a paid
informant for the California Highway Patrol. Waring was so filled with
hostility toward the Hells Angels, Jonas said, that he repeatedly tried to
provide information that would get the group into trouble.
The CHP investigator for whom Waring worked refused to cooperate with
prosecutors but is scheduled to testify under subpoena, Jonas said. He said
the case also will demonstrate how Waring "abused" the paid-informant
system.
The Hells Angels--who Brandt suggests "sanctioned" the killings--has
refused to cooperate with either side in the case, and members will only
testify because of subpoenas, prosecutors said.
"They are very hush," Brandt said. "They will not tell what happened."
But hundreds of Hells Angels showed up in 1998 to bury Lajeunesse, a
10-year veteran of the group. He was buried a few yards from where Brannigan
was laid to rest.