![]() “I wish there was some shade,” she tells New Times, her eyebrows scrunched in a look of worry. Robin Green, the last of Mora’s official “ol’ ladies,” as a principal girlfriend is called in the biker world, looks down at Chico’s grave and weeps. Mora, who died January 1, 2014, at age 58 of complications from diabetes, has a flat stone marker engraved with two fearsome winged skulls facing each other: a double image of the outlaw biker group’s trademarked emblem.Īt the bottom of the headstone are the letters “AFFA,” short for the motto, “Angels Forever, Forever Angels.” ![]() In death, he resides in what seems to be the cemetery’s cheap seats, an area up against the butte where no grass grows and where many of the graves are marked with little more than white wooden crosses. One section of the 17-acre property near 48th Street and Broadway Road is lush and green, lined with trees beneath which visitors might spy local fauna, rabbits, or an indigenous kit fox on the prowl.īut no shade shields the desert grave of Hells Angel Robert “Chico” Mora. Tempe’s historic Double Butte Cemetery is one of the area’s oldest, dating back to the 1890s, before Arizona was a state.
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