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		<title>Coastal Cruizin Magazine Article, September 2009</title>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 08 Dec 2009 19:42:34 +0000</pubDate>
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		<title>Lake Mary Life Article &#8211; July/Aug 2009</title>
		<link>http://www.wildpigsorlando.org/wp/?p=119</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 2009 13:45:42 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Cops In Hog Heaven Peter Reilly If you see a herd of Wild Pigs roaming around Lake Mary, Sanford, or Oviedo this September, don’t panic and don’t call law enforcement – the hog-riding “Pigs” are the police! In case you haven’t heard of them, the Wild Pigs Motorcycle Club of Central Florida is a group [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong><span class="title">Cops In Hog Heaven </span><br />
</strong><span class="writer">Peter Reilly</span></p>
<p class="small">If you see a herd of Wild Pigs roaming around Lake Mary, Sanford, or Oviedo this September, don’t panic and don’t call law enforcement – the hog-riding “Pigs” are the police!</p>
<p>In case you haven’t heard of them, the Wild Pigs Motorcycle Club of Central Florida is a group of active and retired law enforcement officers who love to ride. Their chapter is hosting 38 other chapters of the Wild Pigs from across the country at the 2009 national rally this September (23-27) in Seminole County.</p>
<p>Up to 150 Wild Pig Motorcycle Club members, from as far away as San Jose, California, will roll into our area to take part in a series of fun events for the week and hang out with other motorcycleloving members.</p>
<p>“It’s going to be great,” says club president Tom Artingstall, a chief investigator with the State Attorney’s Office in Sanford. “We’re going to have a good time.” He wasn’t so confident during the early planning stages, however. When the Central Florida members stood up at the last national rally in Memphis in 2008 and volunteered to host the 2009 event, they didn’t realize what they were getting into.</p>
<p>“It’s a large endeavor with your chapter’s reputation on the line. You want to put on a great event for these guys,” says Tom, a Lake Mary resident. “Never having hosted an event like this, we weren’t sure what to do. We’re a bunch of cops and biker types who are not very good at decorating and organizing events.” Tom turned to the Seminole County Convention and Visitors Bureau for help. Sharon Sears, the agency’s executive director, came to the rescue.</p>
<p>“She was our unsung hero,” says Tom. “I met with her and she went through a whole bunch of ideas we hadn’t even considered.</p>
<p>She turned us on to lots of venues and a bunch of vendors, restaurants, and facilities.” It will be a first visit to Florida for many of the members from across the country.</p>
<p>“I’m originally from Chicago,” says Tom. “A lot of the guys from our Chicago chapters have never even seen an alligator, so we’re going to have their pictures taken with baby alligators at Black Hammock.” The group also plans to visit Seminole Harley-Davidson in Sanford and take scenic rides around Central Florida. One trip they’ve planned is a day trip out to the Space Center.</p>
<p>Sharon was happy to help the Wild Pigs organize their events. She estimates that hosting the law-enforcing bikers will result in a significant economic boost to Central Florida businesses.</p>
<p>Some estimates place the amount in the tens of thousands of dollars. Tom’s group has already spent $2,000 just on T-shirts and patches to commemorate the event.</p>
<p>Sharon would love to help other groups hold their events here, too.</p>
<p>“The Wild Pigs are a perfect example of a resident of the county bringing an organization to the visitor’s bureau for help in hosting an event,” she says. “We’re encouraging other groups to do the same. Whether it’s a family reunion, a school reunion, a club or business meeting, we want people to look at Seminole County first. We have several great hotels and venues to hold events and we’re a third cheaper than other locations in Central Florida. We have so much to offer and we’re 30 minutes from the attractions and 30 minutes from the beach. It’s a prime location.” “They’re the type of group any community would love to have,” says Sharon. “Any time we can attach Seminole County’s name to an organization that is so well-known and respected; it’s a win for all of us. We are very excited that Seminole County is hosting the event.</p>
<p>We’re thrilled to have the Wild Pigs here.” Lake Mary Life first profiled the Wild Pigs Motorcycle Club in 2008. The article focused on the group’s many charitable endeavors and their emphasis on promoting road safety. Since then they have added to their long list of good deeds. They rode in support of Orange City police officer Sheriff Sami, who was shot at and lost an eye in the line of duty. They participated in a benefit for Kids House of Seminole and they sponsored an event that raised $7,000 for the family of veteran Seminole Deputy Craig Magee, who died suddenly, leaving a wife and two sons.</p>
<p>With all the good work they are doing, it’s no surprise that their membership has doubled to more than 20 within the past year. And who knows how many more law enforcement officers will join up after they see what a great party the Central Florida Wild Pigs throw this September.</p>
<p>“All I know is that people are going to see Wild Pigs from all over the country,” says Tom. “And it’s going to be really cool.”</p>
<p>Local charities benefit from wine tasting</p>
<p>The Mother Cabrini Circle of Annunciation Church recently held their annual “Bless Me Father, For I Have Zinned” wine tasting at The Legacy Club at Alaqua Lakes. More than $32,000 was raised to fund charities such as SafeHouse of Seminole County, Kids House of Seminole, and The Russell Home. In addition to showcasing several varieties of wines, the event featured a silent auction and raffle for exciting items of jewelry and spa services, sports memorabilia, and restaurant gift certificates.</p>
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		<title>Lake Mary Life Magazine, July/August 2009 Edition</title>
		<link>http://www.wildpigsorlando.org/wp/?p=116</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 14 Jul 2009 17:41:24 +0000</pubDate>
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		<title>Going Hog Mild</title>
		<link>http://www.wildpigsorlando.org/wp/?p=3</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 01 Sep 2008 06:08:31 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Wild Pigs police motorcycle club promotes safety and charity Lieutenant Bernie Erwin, of the Seminole County Sheriff’s Department, is proud to be called a Pig…with a capital “P.” For him and the 20 other members in the local Wild Pigs motorcycle club, PIG stands for Pride, Integrity, and Guts. They may look like outlaw bikers [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Wild Pigs police motorcycle club promotes safety and charity</p>
<p>Lieutenant Bernie Erwin, of the Seminole County Sheriff’s Department, is proud to be called a Pig…with a capital “P.”<br />
For him and the 20 other members in the local Wild Pigs motorcycle club, PIG stands for Pride, Integrity, and Guts. They may look like outlaw bikers in their black leather and three-piece colors on their backs, roaring down a ribbon of highway on their Harleys, but these bad-looking biker dudes are, in fact, all members of law enforcement agencies from across Central Florida.</p>
<p>The group meets monthly in Sanford at the Disabled American Veterans Hall to promote safe motorcycle riding and work on charitable causes. On weekends they go on group rides to celebrate the open road and foster camaraderie among members.</p>
<p>“We want to encourage safe cycling and camaraderie, and give back to the community what it’s given to us,” says Bernie, the club’s president.</p>
<p>The only requirements for membership are that you have to be an active or retired law enforcement officer in good standing who owns a Harley Davidson or other American motorcycle.</p>
<p>These Pigs only ride hogs. But they’re not chauvinist Pigs.</p>
<p>They welcome women members like Jan Kloth of Longwood, a sergeant with the Seminole County Sheriff’s office.</p>
<p>“I enjoy riding with the guys and doing things for the community,” she says.</p>
<p>In November the Wild Pigs rode in the March of Dimes run in Palm Bay, where they were voted best new motorcycle group. They raised money for a firefighter in Apopka who lost his hand and arm in a fire. And in December they adopted a dozen needy families from Starlight Baptist Church in Winter Springs. They bought Christmas dinner for each family, toys for kids, and a new bicycle for one disadvantaged boy.</p>
<p>“We went to Pastor Glen Riggs in December and told him that we wanted to help,” says Wild Pigs member Steve Walthers, a Lake Mary resident who is retired from the Seminole County Sheriff’s Department.</p>
<p>“He said they had 12 families that needed help, so we went ahead with the 12, prepared complete turkey dinners, and put them in wrapped boxes. Then we made arrangements for them to come to the church, where we handed out the meals.”</p>
<p>During the course of that afternoon, one woman mentioned that her four-year-old son wanted a bike, but she couldn’t afford one. When the members heard about it, they got the boy a bicycle, then got on their Harleys and rode to his house a a group to present it to him.</p>
<p>“He was just unbelievably happy,” says Steve. “He couldn’t speak. But I don’t know if he was more happy about the bicycle or seeing all those big, loud motorcycles and getting a chance to sit on one.”</p>
<p>In the future, the Wild Pigs want to do more to help the families of disabled officers or the families of those killed in the line of duty.</p>
<p>The Orlando-area chapter was founded about a year-and-a-half ago, but the national organization has been around since 1987. At the peak of the organization, there were 60 chapters and 1,200 members nationwide.</p>
<p>Surprisingly, despite all the good work that the local club does, they’ve had difficulty in attracting members because some in law enforcement view any motorcycle group that wears a three-piece patch on their backs as a “one-percenter” group of outlaws. The term derives from a 1947 riot in Hollister, California, that was blamed on two rival motorcycle clubs. The incident became the inspiration for the 1950s Marlon Brando flick, The Wild One, a movie about rebellious bikers.</p>
<p>In a bid to change the public’s view of motorcycle clubs as havens for thugs, the American Motorcyclists Association issued a statement saying that “99 percent” of motorcycle riders are law-abiding citizens and only “one percent” are troublemakers. Unfortunately, some groups like the Hells Angels took that label as a badge of honor. Many outlaw bikers have a “1%” diamond patch they wear on their leather jackets or have “1%” tattooed on their arms, according to an article in the Austin Chronicle newspaper of Austin, Texas. And instead of wearing a single patch on their backs, these groups break it up into three pieces as a sign of rebellion and nonconformity.</p>
<p>The local Wild Pigs group is actively seeking members and wants to assure the public and fellow law enforcement officers that they are good guys. Just as the group took “Pigs,” the derogatory term for cops popularized by protestors in the 1960s, and made it a positive term, they hope to take the stereotypical tough-guy motorcycle club image and transform it into a symbol of good in the world.</p>
<p>“We have a love of riding motorcycles and a commitment to our community,” says Tom Artingstall, a Longwood resident, who is employed by the state attorney’s office. “Wild Pigs is a law enforcement motorcycle club, a law-and-order motorcycle club. Everybody here is committed to doing the right thing and helping people.</p>
<p>“Sometimes people see the organization in a negative light. We are not an outlaw group. We are definitely a do-gooder motorcycle club. But because of the connotation of a one-percent club, because of the three-piece patch, sometimes the community may look at it differently. Sometimes administrators in law enforcement agencies may look at us negatively. Even our fellow law enforcement motorcycle clubs like the Blue Knights may view us with suspicion. They wonder, ‘Are they walking the line? Are they associating with bad guys? Are they bad people?’</p>
<p>“No, what makes the club are the people who wear these colors and are committed to doing the right thing.”</p>
<p>But Tom is the first to admit that perceptions are hard to change, even among their members.</p>
<p>“We have a number of members who didn’t want to have their pictures taken with the group for the article because of this connotation,” he says.</p>
<p>Fortunately, that’s not how Darrell Brewer of Sanford feels. The retired lieutenant with the Sanford Police Department is currently a judicial deputy with the Seminole County Sheriff’s office and proud to be a Wild Pig.</p>
<p>“I’ve known most of these people for years. We have similar interests and enjoy the camaraderie,” he says.</p>
<p>Jay Summers of Lake Mary, a sergeant with the Seminole County Sheriff’s office, agrees. “This is a great bunch of people and everybody in the organization is very professional. We have a lot of fun.”</p>
<p>So if you’re out driving and you see the Wild Pigs on their motorcycles, you don’t have to worry about anything…unless you run a stop sign. Then you might get a ticket from an unorthodox-looking motorcycle cop.</p>
<p>“We’re just a close-knit bunch of guys,” says Steve. “We worked together as cops and we love to ride together.”</p>
<p>For more information about the Wild Pigs, visit their website at www.wildpigsorlando.org</p>
<p>by Peter Reilly</p>
<p>Posted 2008-02-21 10:19:05</p>
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