Richard "Crow" Émond
Hells Angels Trois-Rivieres Chapter
    Richard Émond, called “Crow” by fellow bikers, was  born  in  the mid 1950s  and  reportedly grew up in Quebec City’s Limoilou district. He was  a  member of  the Missiles biker gang, based in Saint-Gédéon, and  became  a  full-patch Hells  Angel  on  June  14, 1991, when  the Missiles officially  became  the  Trois-Rivieres chapter of  the  famous motorcycle gang.

     Émond was  reportedly very well thought of  and  respected by his biker comrades. In an interview with the
Montreal Gazette, one source described the biker  as  a “gentleman” and  on  a “first name basis with leaders of [Hells] chapters around the world.”

     Émond’s  biker vest  supposedly  donned  the  famous  Filthy Few patch, which  police say  is  awarded to members who have  killed for the  group. His  rap  sheet  included  convictions  for  armed  robbery, assault, and possession of illegal drugs.

     Émond’s neighbours in Trois-Rivieres reportedly  included  Hells Angels Louis “Mélou” Roy  and Claude “Macho” Giguere.

     When Roy, the then-head of the Trois-Rivieres Chapter, became  a  founding member of  the elite Nomads Chapter, led  by  Maurice “Mom” Boucher, Émond  allegedly  replaced him as  head  of  the group.

     On September 15, 1995, Émond  and  his  girlfriend went visited  an east-end  Montreal shopping centre. As the two were  about to get into their car, a man  approached them  and  fired six shots. At least two bullets hit Émond in the chest. He died an hour later in hospital.

     The gunman then fled in  a car driven by an accomplice. Police linked his slaying to the drug war between the Hells Angels and the Rock Machine.

     About 200  bikers from  around  Canada  travelled  to  Quebec City  a  few  days  later  to  attend Émond’s  funeral service. Among  them  was Claude Berger of  the  Hells  Sherbrooke Chapter, who performed Sounds of Silence on his trumpet.