Trevor_Roadman Posted April 2 Share Posted April 2 (edited) Trevor Roadman was born Trevor O'Toole in Blueberry, a small farming town in Red County, San Andreas. He grew up in a dysfunctional family of Irish and Dutch Americans. Ronald O'Toole, Trevor's father, was born in Hoboken, Liberty City, in 1945. His family had immigrated from County Clare, Ireland, in the early 1900s. Ronald’s upbringing was tough. His mother passed away during childbirth, and his father, Conan, was a drunk and opium addict who worked in the assembly factories. The struggles his family faced made it difficult to adjust to city life. Conan passed away from his addictions in 1961 when Ronald was just 16, a member of a rough Irish-American gang in Hove Beach, Liberty City. At 18, Ronald was arrested for armed robbery in Newport and was offered the chance to join the United States Marine Corps to avoid prison. He took the deal, underwent training at Marine Corps Base Quantico (now located in Easter Bay, San Andreas), and served in the 1st Marine Division during the Vietnam War from 1966 to 1968. During the war, he earned the nickname "Apache" after his brutal tactics against the North Vietnamese Army, including scalping enemies and using a Ka-Bar knife in close combat. He earned a Purple Heart but was injured during the Tet Offensive in 1968. After being honorably discharged in 1969, Ronald moved to Easter Bay, near Camp Pendleton, and resumed his life of crime, specializing in armed robberies and hijacking. He was arrested multiple times but acquitted due to lack of evidence. Effectively the rising cost of living in Easter Bay pushed him to return to Hoboken, where he joined the local police force in 1974. In 1978, he rose to the rank of detective but became involved in corruption, dealing drugs, and exploiting his position for personal gain. In 1979, after his corrupt activities were exposed, he was kicked out of the police force and returned to his family's apartment in Morris Park, San Fierro, to avoid retaliation. Trevor was born in March 1980, and by the age of 12, he was already prone to violence and comfortable with it, influenced by his father’s war stories. His mother, influenced by her own family’s trauma during the Nazi occupation of Europe. Trevor’s early years were marked by violence, including an arrest for attacking a rival gang member in defense of fellow gang member, which led to his brief stint in juvenile hall. By 15, Trevor was drawn into street gangs. He joined the Morris Park Gangster Peckerwoods, a predominantly white street gang operating in San Fierro. At 17, Trevor found himself in jail again for a gang related attack. Once again, he was offered the chance to join the United States Marine Corps as an alternative to incarceration. He accepted and underwent training at Camp Pendleton before being posted with the II Marine Expeditionary Force. During his military service, Trevor's beliefs and views became more extreme, especially after the start of the Afghan War in 2001. He re-enlisted in 2003 and later joined United States Marine Corps Special Operations Command. He served multiple tours in Afghanistan before his reckless behavior and unorthodox methods forced him into early retirement in 2009. Returning to San Fierro, he found himself incarcerated again for an assault & battery charge at a downtown SF bar. After serving a year at San Fierro Correctional Facility, Trevor left San Fierro and affiliated with the Lost and Angels of Death Motorcycle Clubs, hopping between clubs across the East Coast and Midwest. In 2012, Trevor legally changed his name to Trevor Roadman, a nod to his pseudo interest in Native American culture. He was attempting to distance himself from his father and the past that haunted him. Eventually, Trevor made his way to Los Santos. There, he became involved with a local biker gang, eventually rising to the position of Vice President. After the President of the gang was sentenced to prison, Trevor took control of the gang’s operations. In 2014, Trevor and his old friend Randall Hout, Jord Drum founded the White Knights Motorcycle Club in Blueberry, Los Santos County, competing to dominate the methamphetamine trade in the area. However, in late 2014, Trevor was arrested for involuntary manslaughter after an intruder was shot dead at his mobile home. After serving nine months at San Andreas Correctional Facility, Trevor was released on probation. He later relocated to Cardinal Park, a neighborhood with mixed racial demographics in West Los Santos, where he became associated with the Cardinal Park Skinheads. Following a fallout with the Cardinal Park Skinheads, and several high profile shootings including a confidential informant. Trevor with his connections during his last stint became familiar with the Nazi Lowriders (NLR) in 2015. Trevor began expanding his operations in Tierra Robada County, Bone County, and Las Venturas, where he was heavily involved in the production and manufacturing of methamphetamine, armed robbery, contract killings and money laundering. In 2015, Trevor’s criminal activities, particularly his involvement in the methamphetamine trade and a series of violent events, caught the attention of federal law enforcement. A lengthy investigation into his operations culminated in a federal indictment. Trevor was charged with a series of serious offenses, including drug trafficking, organized crime, conspiracy to commit murder, money laundering, and firearms violations. The charges were too numerous to avoid, and despite his attempts to use his connections to fight the case, Trevor was sentenced to a decade in federal prison. During his time at the federal penitentiary, Trevor faced constant battles, both physical and psychological. The harsh conditions of the facility were a reminder of the life he had led and the damage it had done to him. He spent his days brooding over his violent past, the betrayals that came from his criminal network, and his strained relationship with his family. Trevor spent significant time in solitary confinement, an outcome of his violent outbursts and refusal to conform to prison authority. However, the time also gave him the opportunity to reflect on his life, and Trevor began to build a new understanding of himself—far from the impulsive, reckless individual he had once been. By late 2024, Trevor was released on parole after serving nearly 9 years of his 10-year sentence. Upon release, he was determined to make a fresh start, but the world he had left behind had changed. His old allies had scattered or been arrested, and the biker scene he once dominated had fractured. It wasn't long before he reconnected with some of his old associates—people who had been part of the underworld network that once operated throughout San Andreas. The surviving members of his former motorcycle gang, the White Knights, had evolved, with a shift toward larger, more organized criminal activities. These former associates had rebranded themselves, morphing into a more powerful and ruthless force in the criminal world. They had become the Barons Outlaw Motorcycle Gang, a new club that dealt in everything from high-end heists to arms smuggling and drug distribution. The Barons were known for their brutal tactics, high-profile alliances with organized crime families, and the fear they instilled in their enemies. Despite his time away, Trevor's reputation was still feared, and his name carried weight in the criminal world. Recognizing that the Barons could offer him the power and leverage he had long craved, Trevor rejoined the gang but not as a patched member. He was welcomed back with open arms, both for his past accomplishments and his renewed ambition. His return brought a sense of legitimacy to the Barons, and he quickly reasserted his dominance for the organization. As of 2025, now free from parole and out of prison, Trevor's future was uncertain, but one thing was clear: his appetite for power, control, and chaos remained undiminished. The Barons had their sights set on new, lucrative criminal endeavors across the globe, and Trevor was at the center of it all, ready to lead the charge into a new era of lawlessness. With his past as a soldier, gang member, and outlaw behind him, Slayer "Roadman" had once again become a name to be feared in the criminal underworld. Edited April 4 by Trevor_Roadman Concept art 1 Quote Life After Death Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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