American outlaw biker gangs; Israel’s mercenaries in Gaza
An investigation by a British media outlet reveals that senior members of this Islamophobic biker gang were hired by American contractors and sent to Gaza to oversee security at U.S.- and Israeli-backed food distribution centers.
The investigation found that over ten members of Infidels MC were recruited by UG Solutions and stationed at aid distribution sites run by the so-called Gaza Humanitarian Foundation.
Infidels MC is an American biker gang that uses the Crusader cross (a symbol of Christian wars against Muslims during the Crusades) as its emblem, with members bearing Islamophobic tattoos.
According to reports, seven members of this gang serve as senior officials within the so-called Gaza Humanitarian Foundation.
Among them is Johnny “Taz” Mulford, the gang’s leader, who also heads UG Solutions’ country team and had recruited others to work for the contracting company in Gaza. He bears a tattoo of the number 1095 across his chest—the year Pope Urban II launched the First Crusade.
Mulford, whose ties to the so-called Gaza Humanitarian Foundation were public, accidentally sent an email to a British news outlet instructing fellow leaders not to comment on inquiries. In doing so, he unintentionally revealed the identities of several senior Infidels members working for UG Solutions.

One contractor, Josh Miller, posted a photo from Gaza showing these bikers holding a banner at an aid distribution site that read: “Make Gaza Great Again”—a play on Donald Trump’s slogan.
The operations of the so-called Gaza Humanitarian Foundation have come under intense scrutiny, as the U.S.- and Israeli-backed group has effectively replaced nearly every major humanitarian organization previously active in the Gaza Strip. Critics describe this as a deliberate attempt to politicize humanitarian aid. The U.S. government has granted at least $30 million in funding to this foundation.
Areas surrounding these facilities have become dangerous for Palestinians seeking food.
According to a UN report released in early August, hundreds of Palestinians have so far been killed near these U.S.-Israeli aid centers. Former UG Solutions employees told media outlets that contractors opened fire on Palestinians at Gaza foundation sites—even in the absence of any direct threat.
UG Solutions has denied that its contractors shoot at civilians, stating: “Mulford is trusted and respected, and we stand by his reputation, record, and contributions to the success of complex missions.” The company has, however, previously admitted that warning shots were used to disperse crowds.
A recent Guardian investigation highlighted how four members of a single Palestinian family were killed in one day by gunfire from foreign-hired fighters under Israeli command, underscoring a recurring pattern of unarmed civilians being deliberately targeted.
Islamophobia has long been entrenched within both major U.S. parties—Republican (red) and Democrat (blue).
The Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), the largest Muslim civil rights and advocacy organization in the U.S., has called for the immediate removal of Infidels MC gang members from Gaza.
Meanwhile, the gang continues to host Islamophobic hate speech on its Facebook page and has a history of carrying out and publicizing anti-Muslim actions.