The Hells Angels chief is set to leave as part of a contract extension.

Former Hells Angels leader explains why he left the outlaw motorcycle club: I don’t miss going to prison.

George Christie vividly recall the moment he decided to leave the Hells Angels.

“I walked into the outlaw motorcycle life because it was a live-and-let-live society,” the former club president told Fox News Digital. “Many things had changed. I came into the meeting and informed everyone what I was planning to do. It was an extremely difficult decision. I stated we had become the people we were rebelling against, and I’m walking away. It is time for me to move on.

“I thought, foolishly, that I would be able to walk away because of my position in the club and the 40 years I had given to them,” she said. “But the bottom line is you’re either in or you’re out.”

Christie is sharing his account in a new A&E series, “Secrets of The Hells Angels,” which examines the history of the notorious biker club. It features new interviews with former chapter presidents, as well as law enforcement officials, undercover agents and victims.

The 77-year-old resigned his presidency of the Ventura chapter and left the club in 2011. Christie said he became disillusioned by the club, which had transformed from a brotherhood to an all-out war, fighting every major outlaw bike club in the United States – as well as law enforcement.

“I miss the camaraderie, the brotherhood,” Christie explained. “I miss the good times. I even miss the bad times. But I’m a realist. I don’t live in the hypothetical world. It is what it is. I gave them 40 years of my life. I walked away when I thought it was an appropriate time to do so. And I think I am where I’m supposed to be in life right now.”

The organization has a long history in California, dating to its founding in 1948 by returning World War II veterans in the dusty town of Fontana. It includes a notorious incident during a Rolling Stones show in Altamont in 1969 in which a spectator was stabbed by a Hells Angel working security. A jury later acquitted the killer, finding he had acted in self-defense.

For decades, federal, state, and local authorities have pursued the club, infiltrating it with undercover agents, pursuing individuals on heavy charges once reserved for the Mafia, and indicting members on counts ranging from narcotics trafficking to mortgage fraud.

Still, the club has grown over the years. It has since expanded to open chapters around the world and vigorously enforced its trademarks in court. It has also achieved high-profile acquittals and other legal victories against law enforcement.

Christie, the sole child of a Greek immigrant family in Ventura, grew up captivated by motorcycles. Despite his father’s misgivings, he purchased his first bike, a 1957 Panhead, for $200 in 1966. He quickly became a regular at local clubs.

“I think America has a romance with outlaws – they always have, and they always will,” he explained. “As a young kid, I always identified with the outlaw guys. And when I got out of the Marine Corps, I was still looking for that camaraderie. I drifted into the outlaw motorcycle world and ultimately wound up riding with the Angels.”

Christie became a full-patch Hells Angel in the Los Angeles chapter in 1976. Six months later, he became president before becoming a club leader of the Ventura Chapter in 1978.

“What you have to do is make your presence known,” Christie explained about what it takes to join the Hells Angels. “Back in the ‘60s when I started, you had to build your custom motorcycle. It becomes an extension of your personality. If you had a cool-looking motorcycle, the majority of these guys would think you were probably a pretty cool guy. That’s how I established myself. My bike was an extension of myself. This may sound abstract to some people, but it was a work of art for me.”

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