“The Devil Rides Again: Sinner’s MC Reborn Under New Leadership”
- Damien Maddox

- May 8
- 2 min read

ROUTE 68, SAN ANDREAS — You can hear the thunder before you see the bikes. But make no mistake — the Sinner’s MC is back. Only this time, it’s not riding in with gasoline and gun smoke.
After years in the shadows, fractured by infighting, violence, and enough bad headlines to keep Blaine County’s crime desk employed for a decade, the Sinner’s Motorcycle Club has risen from the ashes under new leadership: President Pete Sparks.
And if sources close to the club are to be believed, this isn’t just a patch-over — it’s a total reformation.
“It’s not about rackets and retaliation anymore,” a source tells the Vinewood Journal. “Pete’s done with the chaos. He wants to build something that lasts. Something the club can be proud of.”
From Mayhem to Redemption
The Sinner’s MC was once infamous even by San Andreas standards — a club known for devilish iconography, blood feuds with rival MCs, and a tendency to settle disputes with tire irons, not words. They made headlines for street brawls in Mirror Park, shootouts in Sandy Shores, and even a full-on melee at a downtown charity poker run.
They were wild. They were feared. And eventually, they collapsed under their own chaos.
But Pete Sparks has other plans.
A known figure in the state’s auto scene, Sparks is the owner of 68 Customs, a respected and thriving custom body shop off Route 68. He’s not just a grease-stained mechanic — he’s a businessman, and a damn good one.
And now, he’s bringing that same approach to the club.
Mirroring the Angels of Death
The blueprint is clear: follow the Angels of Death. Under the leadership of Bishop Alvarez, the Angels have become more than an MC — they’ve become a symbol of structured power, brotherhood, and strategic legitimacy. Bishop’s own shop, Grove Street Customs, is widely respected for its work and its professionalism — a far cry from the club’s more lawless days.
Pete Sparks and Bishop Alvarez are reportedly in regular contact. They share more than ink and engines now — they share vision.
“People think ‘biker’ means ‘criminal,’” Pete allegedly said at a recent private meeting. “We’re gonna change that. Brotherhood, business, and respect — that’s the new code.”
Don’t mistake this for a Sunday school revival. The Sinner’s MC still wears the devil’s face on their cuts. They still roar through towns with engines that shake the concrete. But the chaos has purpose now. The fire is controlled.
“You can respect a devil who keeps his promises,” says one anonymous supporter. “And Pete? He don’t make threats. He makes deals.”
Still, some remain skeptical. Is this really a rebrand or just the calm before the next storm?
What’s Next for the Club?
While nothing official has been confirmed, whispers suggest that Sinner’s MC may soon join the table alongside the Lost MC and Angels of Death as part of a historic biker alliance — a coalition of clubs focused on brotherhood over bloodshed.
It’s the kind of headline you’d never believe just a year ago.
But in San Andreas, even devils get second chances. Stay tuned @thevinewoodjournal.com for more updates.

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