[20] The structure of the Indian Posse with its three levels of membership, "hang-arounds", "strikers" and "full" members whose status were identified by their tattoos was copied from outlaw biker gangs.
[27] Another girlfriend recalled that Danny was a young man with "beautiful dark soul eyes" who would quietly break into her basement apartment to have sex with her without awakening her grandmother.
[39] Wolfe especially hated the openly racist Hells Angels who have a strict whites only admission policy; use Nazi symbols such as swastikas and the SS lightning bolt runes as their own; and who always treated the Indian Posse in a contemptuous manner.
[53] A prison psychologist who interviewed him wrote: "He states that when he enters the Stony Mountain population, he will go and talk to other members of the gang and find out what they are doing (i.e. selling drugs, taking programs, etc).
[55] Wolfe told Howes "when it first started it was all crime", but he insisted that the Indian Posse was a social movement that promoted the spiritual well-being of First Nations peoples.
[50] Wolfe stated that his father, homeless and drunk while wandering about looking for some discarded hairspray cans to drink from and begging for money, represented everything that he intended to reject.
[60] On 22 April 1998, a team of Royal Canadian Mounted Police officers observed a man throw a baseball over the prison walls, which was picked up by Wolfe, but a subsequent searched failed to discover any drugs on him.
[63] Despite his promises to his parole officer to abandon criminality as a lifestyle, Wolfe had a tattoo with the words Indian Posse written across his back, which he showed he was now a "full" member.
[68] Wolfe's tour was very successful as the unemployment rate was 80% on the northern reserves, and his image of assertive, macho masculinity coupled with the promise of great wealth tied to a Red Power message proved highly appealing.
[74] Lisa recalled of her four months courtship with Wolfe that the couple slept all day and stayed up all night while consuming massive amounts of alcohol and marijuana.
[95] In one of his poems written about a white man, Jeff Giles, killed while resisting an Indian Posse robbery in early 2000, Wolfe wrote: "Because I cause destruction To Your Society/With no sympathy/Fuck your public heroes/Giles who?/pump on his chest/As I sit here and laugh with mad with joy/He never knew the meaning of an AR".
[98] In January 2001, Wolfe was returned to Stony Mountain, only to be expelled on 15 March 2001 as he became involved in a number of violent incidents with imprisoned members of the Manitoba Warriors, most notably a brawl in the prison washroom.
[93] Wolfe also became interested in history and his cell was decorated with photographs of 19th century native leaders such as Big Bear, Crazy Horse, and Sitting Bull.
[107] Wolfe received a letter from a woman who complained about the "pretty disgusting" way that the Indian Posse treated women who went on to tell him "you guys were great.
[110] Matticks served as a surrogate father to Wolfe who recounted to him tales of how the West End Gang had fought off the Mafia to take control of the Port of Montreal.
[122] In another incident shortly after his release from prison in 1999 McKay had beaten to death Adrian Bruyere, a member of a rival gang, the Nine-O's, by kicking in his head.
[129] Wolfe did not speak of the murder to anyone other than a brief comment to an undercover policeman that "the fucker deserved it" as he accused McKay of being power-hungry and stated he was "plotting against brothers, doing greasy things behind other people's backs and spending money from the kitty".
[136] One of the arsonists, a Cree teenager known only as James due to a court order, later testified that Wolfe had told him not to worry about facing charges as he was underage and the police would forget about the arson within five years.
[137] Wolfe talked about sending James to Europe to buy heroin as he maintained that he had connections with the Triads (Chinese organized crime) who were willing to sell to the Indian Posse.
[143] On 20 September 2007, Danny Wolfe was involved in a verbal dispute in a bar in Fort Qu'Appelle with Bernard Percy Pascal, a member of the rival Native Syndicate.
[144] Wolfe was drinking at the Trapper's Bar when Pascal noticed that he had Indian Posse tattoos on his arm and went up to confront him, telling him that Fort Qu'Appelle belonged to the Native Syndicate and that he should leave.
[198] Wolfe expressed much fury at Granbois for turning Crown's evidence, and then told Perron: "I had a .22 [rifle] with a twenty-five shot [clip]...I got rid of it, but still they won't need it...They got this guy talking.
[202] Wolfe then gave his account of his shooting spree as he stated he feared that the incident at the Trapper's Bar would damage his underworld reputation and that the only possible solution in his viewpoint was his murder rampage.
[210] Wolfe was placed in the Regina Correctional Centre and shared his range with his younger half-brother Preston Buffalocalf and several members of the Native Syndicate Killers, a puppet gang of the Indian Posse.
[213] The principle problem for Wolfe was a metal sheet placed inside the wall, which he had to use a drill bit to punch a hole though, a progress that took several months.
[230] Over the protests of the Saskatchewan government, Ross had a press release informing the Canadian people that six prisoners, all charged with murder, had escaped from the Regina Correctional Centre.
[250] Wolfe was a poor witness who made a terrible impression on the jury by calling the murder allegations against him a "bunch of fucking bullshit lies" without providing any reason for that assertion.
[256] Wolfe was anxious to see his girlfriend Shenoa, as he found the prospect of life without sex to be profoundly depressing, which provided him with a motive for good behaviour, as conjugal visits are at the discretion of the prison officials who can grant or deny them as they wish.
[144] At about noon on 4 January 2010, Wolfe was in the common area when several other Indian Posse prisoners were attacked by inmates from the Native Syndicate Killers gang.
[264] The Cree former Saskatoon policeman-turned-author Ernie Louttit criticised efforts to make a "folk hero out of Danny Wolfe", saying he and his brother grew up in "tragic" conditions, but that "it just seemed like they were bound and determined to live fast and die hard, which ultimately they did.