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Created page with "== Background/History == Joey Hunt, born as '''Patrick Jones''' was born in 1983 in New England, United States, to English immigrants. His mother was a dancer—graceful, disciplined, and demanding of herself—while his father worked as a street seller, hustling odd jobs and often away from home to keep the family afloat. Growing up poor in a relatively wealthy school district made Patrick an easy target for bullying. He never wore the latest clothes, and his slight ac..."
 
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== Background/History ==
== Background/History ==
{{Infobox Character
| name = Joey Hunt
| image = Joey_Portrait.png
| fullname = Joey Hunt
| alias = El Calvo
| gender = Male
| nationality = American (New England)
| birth = 1983
| birthplace = New England, United States
| status = Alive
| related = Jane Jones
| associated =
<ul>
<li>[[Jack Donovan]]</li>
<li>[[Hector Sánchez]]</li>
<li>[[Alexa Morrison]]</li>
<li>[[Edward McHaggis]]</li>
<li>[[Billy McBardigael]]</li>
<li>[[Giuseppe Marcano]]</li>
</ul>
| factions = <ul>
<li>Hunt Corp</li>
<li>[[The Big Three]]</li>
<li>[[FIB]]</li>
<li>[[J.J. Holdings]] (formerly)</li>
</ul>
| factionstatus = Operating
| rank = <ul>
<li>Member of Big Three</li>
<li>FIB Field Operative</li>
| first = The First Biker War
| last = N/A
| arcs = [[First Biker War]]
| writer = [[User:Qocean|Qocean]]
}}
Joey Hunt, born as '''Patrick Jones''' was born in 1983 in New England, United States, to English immigrants. His mother was a dancer—graceful, disciplined, and demanding of herself—while his father worked as a street seller, hustling odd jobs and often away from home to keep the family afloat.
Joey Hunt, born as '''Patrick Jones''' was born in 1983 in New England, United States, to English immigrants. His mother was a dancer—graceful, disciplined, and demanding of herself—while his father worked as a street seller, hustling odd jobs and often away from home to keep the family afloat.


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After completing his studies, Patrick volunteered for the grueling selection process to become a Navy SEAL. He passed.
After completing his studies, Patrick volunteered for the grueling selection process to become a Navy SEAL. He passed.


It was years earlier, during his time training in a rundown boxing gym, that Patrick had met the man who would become his closest friend. Marcus Cole—known simply as "MJ"—was from Davis, a rough neighborhood in Los Santos. Raised around the Families, he deliberately walked away from gang life in pursuit of something more American, more structured, and more civilized. Like Patrick, he was disciplined, introspective, and driven by the need to become better than where he came from. Their bond, forged through sweat, violence, and mutual respect, would follow Patrick through his military career and long after.
It was years earlier, during his time training in a rundown boxing gym, that Patrick had met the man who would become his closest friend. [[MJ|Marcus Joe]]—known simply as "MJ"—was from Davis, a rough neighborhood in Los Santos. Raised around the Families, he deliberately walked away from gang life in pursuit of something more American, more structured, and more civilized. Like Patrick, he was disciplined, introspective, and driven by the need to become better than where he came from. Their bond, forged through sweat, violence, and mutual respect, would follow Patrick through his military career and long after.


He served as a SEAL for six years, operating in high-risk covert missions across the globe. One of the most notable was his involvement in the operation that led to the assassination of Osama Bin Laden. During that same period, tragedy struck at home—his younger sister was killed in a car crash. The loss reached him while he was deployed. It was devastating, yet unresolved, grief buried beneath duty and silence.
He served as a SEAL for six years, operating in high-risk covert missions across the globe. One of the most notable was his involvement in the operation that led to the assassination of Osama Bin Laden. During that same period, tragedy struck at home—his younger sister was killed in a car crash. The loss reached him while he was deployed. It was devastating, yet unresolved, grief buried beneath duty and silence.
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Within a year, they married. Not long after, they welcomed a daughter called Jane and settled into family life. For a time, everything felt earned and complete. Life was stable. Patrick was attentive, affectionate, and present—a devoted husband and father. For the first time, he believed the past was behind him.
Within a year, they married. Not long after, they welcomed a daughter called Jane and settled into family life. For a time, everything felt earned and complete. Life was stable. Patrick was attentive, affectionate, and present—a devoted husband and father. For the first time, he believed the past was behind him.


==== The hunt on the Sanchez Cartel ====
==== The hunt on the Sánchez Cartel ====
That stability shattered when MJ—his closest friend and brother in all but blood—was murdered in a back alley in Leonida. The killing was carried out by members of the Sanchez Cartel, the most powerful Mexican drug cartel operating in the region. Despite the brutality and clear indicators of cartel involvement, the investigation was rushed and quietly buried. The police dismissed it as an unfortunate but ordinary gang-related murder—one they showed no real interest in solving. It was clear to Patrick that money had changed hands.
That stability shattered when MJ—his closest friend and brother in all but blood—was murdered in a back alley in Leonida. The killing was carried out by members of the [[Sánchez Cartel]], the most powerful Mexican drug cartel operating in the region. Despite the brutality and clear indicators of cartel involvement, the investigation was rushed and quietly buried. The police dismissed it as an unfortunate but ordinary gang-related murder—one they showed no real interest in solving. It was clear to Patrick that money had changed hands.


Patrick questioned everything: the timelines, the missing evidence, the indifference. Unsatisfied with the official conclusions, he began investigating on his own. What started as a search for truth quickly became something darker. Grief hardened into obsession, and obsession into a need for revenge. He followed financial trails, street rumors, and old contacts, slowly uncovering how deeply the cartel’s influence ran. As the reality set in, Patrick changed. He grew colder, quieter, consumed by purpose.
Patrick questioned everything: the timelines, the missing evidence, the indifference. Unsatisfied with the official conclusions, he began investigating on his own. What started as a search for truth quickly became something darker. Grief hardened into obsession, and obsession into a need for revenge. He followed financial trails, street rumors, and old contacts, slowly uncovering how deeply the cartel’s influence ran. As the reality set in, Patrick changed. He grew colder, quieter, consumed by purpose.
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Using old SEAL contacts and carefully leveraged ties within the financial world, Patrick began mapping the Sanchez Cartel’s presence across Vice City. Shell companies, money mules, laundering fronts, logistics hubs—he identified them patiently and dismantled them surgically. Individuals vanished without noise. Assets collapsed overnight. The pattern was obvious to those who knew how to look, but the man behind it was impossible to trace.
Using old SEAL contacts and carefully leveraged ties within the financial world, Patrick began mapping the Sanchez Cartel’s presence across Vice City. Shell companies, money mules, laundering fronts, logistics hubs—he identified them patiently and dismantled them surgically. Individuals vanished without noise. Assets collapsed overnight. The pattern was obvious to those who knew how to look, but the man behind it was impossible to trace.


Around this time, Patrick shaved his head completely, adopting the stark, functional look that would later become synonymous with him.
Around this time, Patrick shaved his head completely, adopting the stark, functional look that would later become synonymous with him. As the pressure mounted, he extended his campaign beyond Vice City. He traveled to Mexico, deep into cartel territory, where he targeted infrastructure and senior figures directly. One of the most notorious strikes came when Patrick eliminated the entire family of a high-ranking cartel member, Hector Sanchez, using a car bomb. The blast left little forensic evidence. Even the cartel struggled to piece together how it had been done—only that it had been done by the same unseen hand.
 
Within cartel circles, whispers spread. They didn’t know his name, his face, or where he came from. They only knew one detail. They called him “El Calvo", The Bald Guy. Eventually, the cartel struck back. One night, after Patrick returned home in Vice City, fourteen armed cartel members ambushed his house. Armed with AK-pattern rifles and sent to make an example of him, they believed they had finally cornered their target. Patrick was surprised—but ready. The fight was fast, controlled, and merciless. He surgically exterminated all fourteen men.
 
Knowing the cartel would never stop hunting him, Patrick set his house ablaze, erased what little evidence remained, and vanished. Patrick Jones was declared dead by the cartel and the instances. But there was one person within the cartel that always had his doubts, which was [[Hector Sánchez]], who would continue to be the only one believing "El Calvo" was still alive.
 
==== The birth of Joey Hunt ====
After his disappearance, Patrick laid low. He moved carefully, avoided patterns, and lived between safe houses and transient spaces—cheap motels, industrial outskirts, places designed to be forgotten. Hiding kept him alive, but it wasn’t sustainable. Every day increased the odds of a mistake.
 
The approach came without warning. Late one evening, while Patrick was exiting a dockside warehouse district on the outskirts of Vice City, a man stepped into his path as if he had always been there. No backup in sight. No weapon drawn. Calm, deliberate.
 
His name was [[Jack Donovan]]—an FIB agent assigned to a task force focused on large-scale drug trafficking and transnational criminal organizations. Jack made it clear he wasn’t there to arrest Patrick. He had heard the stories coming out of Mexico. The infrastructure failures. The unexplained deaths. The whispers of a man called El Calvo. He was impressed—but more importantly, he saw opportunity.
 
Jack told Patrick the truth plainly: he couldn’t stay in hiding forever. The cartel would keep hunting. Eventually, they would find him. Refusing the offer wouldn’t mean freedom—it would mean a slow, inevitable death. The offer was simple: A new life. A new name. A clean identity, protected under the authority and rules of the FIB. In return, Patrick would become an asset. He would hunt, infiltrate, and dismantle criminal organizations—first domestically, and abroad if necessary. He would operate in the gray spaces where the law couldn’t openly go. His successes would strengthen Jack Donovan’s portfolio, giving Jack leverage and upward momentum within the Bureau. Patrick understood the deal for what it was. He wasn’t being saved. He was being used. But he also knew he couldn’t refuse. Patrick accepted and from that moment forward, his life no longer belonged entirely to him. He vanished once more—this time not into the shadows, but into a system.
 
When he emerged again, it would be under a name the world had never heard before. That name was Joey Hunt. The first name, Joey, was chosen deliberately—drawn from the final letter of his murdered friend’s name, MJ. A quiet reminder, carried forward. The surname Hunt required no symbolism. It was simply what he did. From that point on, Patrick Jones ceased to exist.
 
Joey Hunt spent the following years operating under the direction of the FIB, answering to Jack Donovan. He took on a wide range of assignments—deep-cover infiltrations, financial dismantling of criminal networks, intelligence gathering, and targeted destabilization operations both within the United States and abroad. Joey didn’t love the leash, but the arrangement offered something he couldn’t achieve alone: protection, plausible deniability, and a clean slate. Mistakes could be buried. Records could be altered. In return, Donovan’s career flourished on the back of Joey’s results.
 
Despite the structure, regret followed him. Joey missed his ex-wife and his daughter Jane—an absence that never dulled. On a handful of occasions, he broke protocol and visited them. Each time ended in anger. Eleanor told him he was dead, that he had forfeited the right to be present, and that he should leave them alone. She had moved on. A new man had stepped into the role Joey abandoned, raising his daughter as his own. His daughter however still asked about her real father, his stories and his legacy. Joey watched from a distance. He sent letters and money whenever he could—acts that angered Eleanor and eventually drew the attention of Jack Donovan, who warned him that attachments were liabilities.
 
==== The founding of J.J. Holdings ====
By the time Joey turned forty—born in 1983—Joey did not have a formal FIB assignment in Los Santos. However, ongoing work in the surrounding region frequently brought him close enough to operate on the city’s edges.
 
Jim was a quiet, but respected cowboy from Texas, a man whose reputation was growing in the underworld. The two recognized something familiar in one another—discipline, restraint, and a shared sense of loss. Jim had lost his wife, and though he rarely spoke of it, her death drove everything he built and wanted to figure out what happened.
 
Together, and partly as a means for Joey to establish a legitimate side income independent of the FIB, they founded [[J.J. Holdings]], Jim & Joey Holdings. The company began as a discreet investment platform designed to launder and manage underworld revenue. One of their first major acquisitions was [[The Palace]] nightclub, which became the backbone of Jim’s social influence and money-laundering operations. Jack Donovan turned a blind-eye and covered this action by Joey in the records as "growing a ''real'' social status".
 
Jim served as the public face of the company (CEO)—charismatic, visible, and well-connected. Joey remained in the background (COO). He managed the numbers, structured shell acquisitions, negotiated capital movement, and maintained strict oversight of every major account. No one knew who Joey really was or where he came from, not even Jim.
 
At one point, Jim asked Joey to take on a more active role—a field leader, an enforcer, a protector, as Jim knew of his past in the airforce. Joey refused. He told Jim he had already done enough killing. Control, structure, and anonymity were all he wanted now.
 
==== Joey's departure of J.J. Holdings ====
J.J. Holdings was built around a small inner circle, with Jim as its head and Joey as a permanent board member. In the early days, the balance worked. That balance began to shift when Jim helped form what became known as [[Big Four|the Big Four]]—an alliance with three other prominent criminal figures: [[Alexa Morrison]], [[Billy McBardigael]], and [[Edward McHaggis]]. Together, they tackled city-wide problems and coordinated major decisions. In practice, however, the alliance granted Jim greater influence over the criminal direction of the city.
 
As the months passed, Joey’s voice—and the voices of other independent board members—began to matter less. Jim grew increasingly reliant on the perspectives of the Big Four, whose philosophy was aggressively anti-competition: dominance through consolidation, exclusion, and control. Their outlook rejected balance in favor of a Big Four–only ecosystem, and it appealed to Jim’s increasingly emotional, opportunity-driven, and optimistic approach to growth. Quietly, Jim began replacing outspoken or cautious figures within J.J. Holdings with individuals who supported rapid expansion and loyalty over restraint. What had once been a business-first syndicate slowly became entangled in political maneuvering, ego, and mounting instability.
 
Joey pushed back. He valued restraint, structure, and long-term sustainability. Jim insisted Joey trust the process. The breaking point came during the First Paleto Crisis. Jim, Edward, and Tony—Billy’s replacement—made the decision to torture Damian Morrison. Joey vehemently opposed it. He viewed Damian not as an enemy, but as a valuable strategic ally whose removal would destabilize more than it solved. When Jim proceeded without meaningful consultation, Joey understood the balance was gone.
 
After careful consideration, Joey resigned his position and walked away from J.J. Holdings without ceremony. The company did not slow. Jim remained a dominant force in San Andreas, expanding the empire they had built together. But those who understood the organization knew the truth: Joey’s departure removed the logic and restraint that once kept it stable. Jim stood alone at the helm—one of the most insulated and influential figures in the underworld. And while Jim made the public moves, it had been Joey Hunt’s mind—quiet, disciplined, and unforgiving—that once kept everything from falling apart. Joey's departure however, didn't make a large impact on the company, which would still continue to grow, but without the sharp business-focused mind of Joey.


As the pressure mounted, he extended his campaign beyond Vice City. He traveled to Mexico, deep into cartel territory, where he targeted infrastructure and senior figures directly. One of the most notorious strikes came when Patrick eliminated the entire family of a high-ranking cartel member, Hector Sanchez, using a car bomb. The blast left little forensic evidence. Even the cartel struggled to piece together how it had been done—only that it had been done by the same unseen hand.
=== Joey's Interlude ===
In the two years following his departure from J.J. Holdings, Joey Hunt returned fully to covert work under the supervision of Jack Donovan. He carried out multiple assignments for the FIB that never appeared in official records. These operations focused primarily on intelligence gathering, financial disruption, and the quiet destabilization of criminal networks. Joey operated with discipline and restraint, relying on routine, structure, and anonymity. The arrangement offered him protection and a degree of legitimacy, but it also reinforced the reality that his life remained controlled by others.


Within cartel circles, whispers spread. They didn’t know his name, his face, or where he came from. They only knew one detail.
One such assignment brought Joey to Guatemala. His task was to observe and collect intelligence on narcotics shipments entering the Pacific corridor. While conducting surveillance near coastal transit routes, he observed a transaction that stood out even by cartel standards: African men being exchanged as commodities for drugs. The exchange was overseen by a man Joey would later identify as Hans Naumann. Joey did not intervene. The incident was documented, reported, and treated as a secondary detail within a larger operation. Nonetheless, it left a lasting impression.


They called him “El Calvo", The Bald Guy.
After returning to the United States, Joey made a personal decision unrelated to his obligations to the FIB. He purchased a modest home in a quiet suburban neighborhood in San Fierro. The house was located directly across the street from where his ex-wife lived with her new husband and Joey’s daughter. Outwardly, Joey appeared to be nothing more than a polite and reserved neighbor.


Eventually, the cartel struck back.
Eleanor did not see coincidence. To her, the man across the street was unsettling. She instructed her husband and daughter to avoid him entirely. Patrick Jones, in her mind, was dead, and Joey Hunt was an unwelcome reminder of a life she had closed.


One night, after Patrick returned home in Vice City, fourteen armed cartel members ambushed his house. Armed with AK-pattern rifles and sent to make an example of him, they believed they had finally cornered their target. Patrick was surprised—but ready. The fight was fast, controlled, and merciless. He surgically exterminated all fourteen men.
Despite her objections, Joey maintained limited and discreet contact with his daughter. These interactions were brief and carefully timed—short conversations, handwritten notes, and small sums of money intended for school and basic needs. Eleanor noticed the changes and grew increasingly suspicious, though she lacked proof.


Knowing the cartel would never stop hunting him, Patrick set his house ablaze, erased what little evidence remained, and vanished. Patrick Jones was declared dead by the cartel and the instances.
Joey’s daughter was around ten years old at the time. Over time, she began to recognize patterns adults ignored: the resemblance, the quiet attention, the consistent presence. While searching through stored belongings, she found a photograph of her biological father, Patrick Jones. The similarity was unmistakable. She did not confront Joey, nor did she inform her mother. The realization remained private.


==== The birth of Joey Hunt ====
Tensions eventually surfaced openly. At a nearby gas station, Eleanor’s husband confronted Joey, accusing him of watching the family and refusing to leave them alone. Joey attempted to disengage. When the confrontation became physical, he responded with controlled force—ending the encounter quickly and without unnecessary escalation. No further confrontations followed.
After his disappearance, Patrick laid low. He moved carefully, avoided patterns, and lived between safe houses and transient spaces—cheap motels, industrial outskirts, places designed to be forgotten. Hiding kept him alive, but it wasn’t sustainable. Every day increased the odds of a mistake.
 
From that point forward, Joey kept his distance. He continued to observe the house across the street, applying the same vigilance he once reserved for operational targets. The threat he guarded against was not violence, but absence. Living so close to his daughter underscored what he had lost and could never openly reclaim, making restraint more difficult than any assignment Jack Donovan could give him.
 
== Events of the GTA RP ==
 
=== Return to Los Santos ===
Jack Donovan’s position within the FIB had begun to weaken. The Bureau’s board was dissatisfied with recent results and questioned the continued protection of Joey as an asset. Jack was given an unspoken ultimatum: deliver something significant, or lose both his leverage and his career.
 
He framed the assignment as his last and most ambitious case. Success would secure his standing and close Joey’s file permanently. Failure would end the arrangement altogether. The objective was clear: infiltrate the criminal underworld of Los Santos and dismantle it from within. Jack knew Joey had history in the city and prior involvement in questionable business dealings. Familiarity, in his view, was an asset.
 
Joey’s cover was an auto repair shop in Strawberry—close enough to street-level crime to attract attention without raising suspicion. From there, Jack directed his focus toward a newly formed motorcycle club, [[Black Shuck MC]], believed to function as a connective layer within the underworld. Jack suspected the club had ties to Edward McBane—also known as Edward McHaggis—and possibly to Alexa Morrison, though no evidence had ever been sufficient to act. Joey accepted the assignment without objection, seeing this as a chance to finish being tied to the FIB.
 
==== Getting in contact with Black Shuck MC ====
When Joey Hunt established his auto repair shop in Strawberry, he understood that visibility would invite friction. That friction came sooner than expected.
 
Before any violence occurred, Joey made a point of establishing light, harmless contact with Black Shuck MC. He did not rush the approach. Instead, he played the part of a struggling but capable mechanic—asking around for spare parts, favors, and basic assistance. On more than one occasion, he approached club associates for something as mundane as spark plugs, explaining supply issues and offering fair payment. The interactions were brief, practical, and deliberately unremarkable. They served their purpose: Joey became familiar, non-threatening, and known. They did suspect his increased contact, but shrugged it off.
 
One night, the shop was attacked by local gang members. Joey later claimed he had fought them off on his own. The story held. In reality, the incident had been staged—carefully planned to create the appearance of vulnerability while reinforcing the image of someone capable of defending himself. It served its purpose.
 
Rather than pursue retaliation alone, Joey escalated in a way that felt natural. He reached out to Black Shuck MC. Arthur and Tyler Nelson brought him to their clubhouse. Tyler led the conversation, methodical and probing, while Arthur remained openly skeptical. Joey presented himself as a former Navy SEAL who had defended his business and was now looking to resolve the situation properly. Arthur doubted the story. Tyler, however, saw value in assisting a fellow businessman who appeared competent, familiar, and discreet.
 
Joey asked Black Shuck MC to handle the gang responsible for the attack. They agreed. The retaliation against the Rancho gang was swift and decisive. With the matter concluded, contact information was exchanged. Joey remained present, useful, and unassuming.
 
Once a little bit of trust existed, Joey introduced a far larger proposition: the robbery of the Union Depository.
 
The proposal was met with immediate skepticism. For Black Shuck MC, the jump from handling local street matters to robbing a major federal bank was a radical escalation. Arthur and others questioned the exposure, the consequences, and Joey’s intentions. Despite the doubts, the club was under financial pressure and in need of cash. Joey understood the hesitation. He pointed to his conduct in the neighborhood and the way he had handled himself during the earlier conflict as proof of reliability. He made his position clear—he needed significant capital to establish a larger operation, and he was prepared to share the reward. A portion of the proceeds would go directly to the club.
[[File:Black Shuck ft Joey Union Depo robbery.png|thumb|Camera footage with Arthur, Tyler and Joey in the elevator going to the vault]]
This choice directly conflicted with Jack Donovan’s instructions. Jack had explicitly ordered Joey to keep a low profile and avoid actions that would draw national attention. Joey chose to proceed regardless.
 
Preparation took weeks. Joey handled the planning, logistics, and contingencies, involving Black Shuck MC only where necessary. When the robbery was executed, it succeeded. Approximately $15,000,000 was taken. Joey retained $10,000,000, with the remainder distributed among the club.


The approach came without warning. Late one evening, while Patrick was exiting a dockside warehouse district on the outskirts of Vice City, a man stepped into his path as if he had always been there. No backup in sight. No weapon drawn. Calm, deliberate.
The heist attracted national attention. With capital secured, Black Shuck MC expanded rapidly. Cocaine storage and counterfeit-cash operations were established at former business locations once controlled by Edward, consolidating their presence at the Los Santos docks. Despite this growth, Joey noted unresolved tensions—particularly with another biker gang, calling themselves the Alamo Hellraisers.


His name was Jack Donovan—an FIB agent assigned to a task force focused on large-scale drug trafficking and transnational criminal organizations. Jack made it clear he wasn’t there to arrest Patrick. He had heard the stories coming out of Mexico. The infrastructure failures. The unexplained deaths. The whispers of a man called El Calvo. He was impressed—but more importantly, he saw opportunity.
=== The Founding of the Big Three ===
The success of the operation had earned him credibility within Black Shuck MC, but it had also created a level of attention he considered dangerous. He avoided unnecessary contact, limited movement, and allowed the aftermath to settle before taking any further steps.


Jack told Patrick the truth plainly: he couldn’t stay in hiding forever. The cartel would keep hunting. Eventually, they would find him. Refusing the offer wouldn’t mean freedom—it would mean a slow, inevitable death.
When the immediate pressure eased, Joey began converting the proceeds into something durable. Using the ten million dollars he had retained from the robbery, he moved quickly to establish a legitimate foundation for a larger operation. His first acquisition was deliberate: the old venue of The Palace, the former crown jewel of Jim’s business empire. The location, layout, and financial model were already proven. Joey renovated and reopened it as a new nightclub, preserving many structural and operational similarities to the original design. The goal was not innovation, but stability. The model had worked once. It would work again.


The offer was simple: A new life. A new name. A clean identity, protected under the authority and rules of the FIB. In return, Patrick would become an asset.
With the business established, Joey altered his personal circumstances as well. He relocated to a residence in Vinewood Hills and adopted a more visibly affluent lifestyle.  


He would hunt, infiltrate, and dismantle criminal organizations—first domestically, and abroad if necessary. He would operate in the gray spaces where the law couldn’t openly go. His successes would strengthen Jack Donovan’s portfolio, giving Jack leverage and upward momentum within the Bureau.
Jack Donovan noticed and summoned Joey for a private meeting and confronted him directly. He accused Joey of abandoning the agreed plan and ignoring explicit instructions to remain inconspicuous. Joey argued that the nightclub and expanded presence gave him deeper access to the criminal ecosystem Jack wanted mapped and dismantled. From Joey’s perspective, it was progress. Jack disagreed and warned Joey that every step further into public influence made the arrangement harder to protect. Covering financial irregularities was one thing. Explaining investment flows tied to major crimes—and concealing the deaths of law enforcement officers—was another. Jack made it clear that if Joey continued escalating, there would come a point where the Bureau could no longer shield him. Joey acknowledged the warning and told Jack to trust in him.


Patrick understood the deal for what it was. He wasn’t being saved. He was being used.
==== Meeting Giuseppe Marcano ====
[[File:Meeting between Arthur Giuseppe Joey.png|thumb|Meeting with Giuseppe Marcano]]
Shortly after reopening the former Palace as his own nightclub, Joey noticed the venue drawing attention beyond its intended clientele. Among the visitors was [[Giuseppe Marcano]], a prominent Italian mobster with long-standing influence in organized crime.


But he also knew he couldn’t refuse. Patrick accepted and from that moment forward, his life no longer belonged entirely to him. He vanished once more—this time not into the shadows, but into a system.
One evening, Marcano arrived with Arthur and requested a private meeting in Joey’s office. There, he spoke openly about the rise and collapse of the old Big Four and argued that Los Santos now required a new alliance to restore stability and limit destructive competition. In his view, cooperation mattered more than expansion. Arthur and Joey later agreed the proposal had merit. Marcano’s condition, however, was explicit: any new alliance would fail without the inclusion of [[Alexa Morrison]]. Joey regarded the meeting as both opportunity and warning.  


When he emerged again, it would be under a name the world had never heard before.
==== The Kortz Center Meeting ====
A few days after Giuseppe Marcano’s visit, Arthur contacted Alexa Morrison and requested a meeting at the Kortz Center. Unbeknownst to her, Arthur also brought Joey along.


That name was Joey Hunt. The first name, Joey, was chosen deliberately—drawn from the final letter of his murdered friend’s name, MJ. A quiet reminder, carried forward. The surname Hunt required no symbolism. It was simply what he did. From that point on, Patrick Jones ceased to exist.
Joey’s presence was unannounced and immediately unsettled Alexa. She confronted Arthur over bringing an unknown third party into what was meant to be a private discussion. Arthur explained that Tyler had been killed by the Hellraisers and that he needed her assistance to dismantle their leadership. He disclosed only limited details about the Union Depository heist, enough to establish credibility but not enough to expose Joey’s role fully.


Joey Hunt spent the following years operating under the direction of the FIB, answering to Jack Donovan. He took on a wide range of assignments—deep-cover infiltrations, financial dismantling of criminal networks, intelligence gathering, and targeted destabilization operations both within the United States and abroad. Joey didn’t love the leash, but the arrangement offered something he couldn’t achieve alone: protection, plausible deniability, and a clean slate. Mistakes could be buried. Records could be altered. In return, Donovan’s career flourished on the back of Joey’s results.
Alexa revealed she maintained a non‑aggression pact with the Hellraisers and was reluctant to violate it. Joey intervened briefly, reminding her of Arthur’s financial value and the leverage he now represented. After careful consideration, Alexa agreed to assist—on the condition that she remained cautious of Joey and his intentions.


Despite the structure, regret followed him. Joey missed his ex-wife and his daughter Jane—an absence that never dulled. On a handful of occasions, he broke protocol and visited them. Each time ended in anger. Eleanor told him he was dead, that he had forfeited the right to be present, and that he should leave them alone. She had moved on. A new man had stepped into the role Joey abandoned, raising his daughter as his own.
Arthur then informed her of Giuseppe Marcano’s proposal and of Billy’s return from retirement. Alexa, aware that she would eventually require strong partners for her own long‑term plans, agreed in principle to the formation of a new alliance, but only after the Hellraisers were neutralized. The following morning, Arthur, Alexa, Billy, and Joey met again in Alexa’s office at Maze Bank Tower. The first matter was operational: the elimination of Aiden, the de facto leader of the Hellraisers. Arthur insisted on carrying out the act himself.


As the years passed, his daughter still asked about her father. Joey watched from a distance. He sent letters and money whenever he could—acts that angered Eleanor and eventually drew the attention of Jack Donovan, who warned him that attachments were liabilities.
The second discussion concerned the structure of the new alliance. Billy demanded trust and personal loyalty. Alexa demanded an end to scheming and internal betrayal. All present agreed. After the meeting, Alexa requested a private conversation with Joey. She questioned his background and motives directly. His answers were deliberately vague, particularly regarding his claimed service with the Navy SEALs. Alexa remained unconvinced, but allowed him to leave without interference. In the days that followed, Alexa and Arthur quietly finalized the plan to trap and eliminate the Hellraiser leadership.


By the time Joey turned forty—born in 1983—an FIB assignment brought him near Los Santos.
[[Category:Major Characters]]
[[Category:Syndicates]]

Latest revision as of 17:04, 19 January 2026

Background/History

[edit | edit source]
Joey Hunt
Biography
Full Name Joey Hunt
Alias(es) El Calvo
Gender Male
Nationality / Ethnicity American (New England)
Date of Birth / Age 1983
Place of Birth New England, United States
Status Alive
Related to Jane Jones
Affiliations
Associated Characters
Faction(s)
Role in Faction
  • Member of Big Three
  • FIB Field Operative
Faction Status Operating
Timeline
First Appearance The First Biker War
Last Appearance N/A
Key Arcs First Biker War
Miscellaneous
Writer Qocean

Joey Hunt, born as Patrick Jones was born in 1983 in New England, United States, to English immigrants. His mother was a dancer—graceful, disciplined, and demanding of herself—while his father worked as a street seller, hustling odd jobs and often away from home to keep the family afloat.

Growing up poor in a relatively wealthy school district made Patrick an easy target for bullying. He never wore the latest clothes, and his slight accent— influenced by his parents’ British roots—set him apart. In his youth, he had noticeably thick hair inlets, another feature classmates latched onto. Still, Patrick was never fragile. He was firm, resilient, and unafraid to stand up for himself.

Academically, Patrick performed well. He earned solid grades and showed an early aptitude for economics and structured thinking. At the same time, he enjoyed the freedoms of youth—partying, socializing, and attention from girls came naturally to him. He was known as charming and warm, the kind of man who remembered small details and gestures. Yet despite his academic ability, money remained a constant obstacle. Higher education immediately after school simply wasn’t realistic.

Instead, Patrick redirected his energy into discipline and control. Martial arts became his outlet early in life—part necessity, part escape. With no money for organized sports or private coaching, he trained wherever he could: rundown gyms, community centers, and borrowed spaces that charged little or nothing. In his youth, he focused primarily on boxing. It was accessible, raw, and practical. He learned footwork, timing, and how to stay calm while taking hits—skills that built both confidence and control.

Joining the military and building a life

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At 18, after graduating from high school, his father encouraged him to join the street-selling business. Patrick refused. Instead, he enlisted in the United States Navy, seeking independence, stability, and opportunity. Military life sharpened him further. Through Navy education programs, he studied economics while serving and earned his college degree.

After completing his studies, Patrick volunteered for the grueling selection process to become a Navy SEAL. He passed.

It was years earlier, during his time training in a rundown boxing gym, that Patrick had met the man who would become his closest friend. Marcus Joe—known simply as "MJ"—was from Davis, a rough neighborhood in Los Santos. Raised around the Families, he deliberately walked away from gang life in pursuit of something more American, more structured, and more civilized. Like Patrick, he was disciplined, introspective, and driven by the need to become better than where he came from. Their bond, forged through sweat, violence, and mutual respect, would follow Patrick through his military career and long after.

He served as a SEAL for six years, operating in high-risk covert missions across the globe. One of the most notable was his involvement in the operation that led to the assassination of Osama Bin Laden. During that same period, tragedy struck at home—his younger sister was killed in a car crash. The loss reached him while he was deployed. It was devastating, yet unresolved, grief buried beneath duty and silence.

Patrick left the military changed but still outwardly functional. Drawn back to numbers and structure, he returned to school around age 27 and pursued a university degree in Business Analytics. By age 30, he graduated with distinction.

After completing his degree, Patrick relocated to Liberty City and accepted a position at the Liberty City Bank as a senior client risk and security advisor—a role that blended his military background with his analytical education. Officially, he oversaw high-value client onboarding, fraud mitigation, and personal security assessments. Unofficially, he was the man brought in when situations felt off. The job paid well, kept him sharp, and still placed him face-to-face with customers.

It was there that he met his future wife, Eleanor Wright, a new client opening a long-term investment account. Their first meetings were professional, then personal. Conversations lingered longer than necessary. On one late evening, alone in the manager’s office, restraint gave way to impulse. They were never caught. What began as secrecy quickly turned into something real.

Within a year, they married. Not long after, they welcomed a daughter called Jane and settled into family life. For a time, everything felt earned and complete. Life was stable. Patrick was attentive, affectionate, and present—a devoted husband and father. For the first time, he believed the past was behind him.

The hunt on the Sánchez Cartel

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That stability shattered when MJ—his closest friend and brother in all but blood—was murdered in a back alley in Leonida. The killing was carried out by members of the Sánchez Cartel, the most powerful Mexican drug cartel operating in the region. Despite the brutality and clear indicators of cartel involvement, the investigation was rushed and quietly buried. The police dismissed it as an unfortunate but ordinary gang-related murder—one they showed no real interest in solving. It was clear to Patrick that money had changed hands.

Patrick questioned everything: the timelines, the missing evidence, the indifference. Unsatisfied with the official conclusions, he began investigating on his own. What started as a search for truth quickly became something darker. Grief hardened into obsession, and obsession into a need for revenge. He followed financial trails, street rumors, and old contacts, slowly uncovering how deeply the cartel’s influence ran. As the reality set in, Patrick changed. He grew colder, quieter, consumed by purpose.

His wife noticed immediately. The late nights, the distance, the silence at home. Eleanor pleaded with him to stop—to let the past go and focus on their family, especially their young daughter, Jane, who was only three years old at the time. But Patrick couldn’t let go. Arguments became frequent, trust eroded, and the man she married seemed to disappear piece by piece. Eventually, the marriage collapsed. Eleanor filed for divorce and took Jane with her to San Fierro, leaving Patrick alone with his fixation.

With nothing anchoring him, Patrick relocated to Vice City—not to disappear, but to get closer to the source and deal with the situation directly.

Using old SEAL contacts and carefully leveraged ties within the financial world, Patrick began mapping the Sanchez Cartel’s presence across Vice City. Shell companies, money mules, laundering fronts, logistics hubs—he identified them patiently and dismantled them surgically. Individuals vanished without noise. Assets collapsed overnight. The pattern was obvious to those who knew how to look, but the man behind it was impossible to trace.

Around this time, Patrick shaved his head completely, adopting the stark, functional look that would later become synonymous with him. As the pressure mounted, he extended his campaign beyond Vice City. He traveled to Mexico, deep into cartel territory, where he targeted infrastructure and senior figures directly. One of the most notorious strikes came when Patrick eliminated the entire family of a high-ranking cartel member, Hector Sanchez, using a car bomb. The blast left little forensic evidence. Even the cartel struggled to piece together how it had been done—only that it had been done by the same unseen hand.

Within cartel circles, whispers spread. They didn’t know his name, his face, or where he came from. They only knew one detail. They called him “El Calvo", The Bald Guy. Eventually, the cartel struck back. One night, after Patrick returned home in Vice City, fourteen armed cartel members ambushed his house. Armed with AK-pattern rifles and sent to make an example of him, they believed they had finally cornered their target. Patrick was surprised—but ready. The fight was fast, controlled, and merciless. He surgically exterminated all fourteen men.

Knowing the cartel would never stop hunting him, Patrick set his house ablaze, erased what little evidence remained, and vanished. Patrick Jones was declared dead by the cartel and the instances. But there was one person within the cartel that always had his doubts, which was Hector Sánchez, who would continue to be the only one believing "El Calvo" was still alive.

The birth of Joey Hunt

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After his disappearance, Patrick laid low. He moved carefully, avoided patterns, and lived between safe houses and transient spaces—cheap motels, industrial outskirts, places designed to be forgotten. Hiding kept him alive, but it wasn’t sustainable. Every day increased the odds of a mistake.

The approach came without warning. Late one evening, while Patrick was exiting a dockside warehouse district on the outskirts of Vice City, a man stepped into his path as if he had always been there. No backup in sight. No weapon drawn. Calm, deliberate.

His name was Jack Donovan—an FIB agent assigned to a task force focused on large-scale drug trafficking and transnational criminal organizations. Jack made it clear he wasn’t there to arrest Patrick. He had heard the stories coming out of Mexico. The infrastructure failures. The unexplained deaths. The whispers of a man called El Calvo. He was impressed—but more importantly, he saw opportunity.

Jack told Patrick the truth plainly: he couldn’t stay in hiding forever. The cartel would keep hunting. Eventually, they would find him. Refusing the offer wouldn’t mean freedom—it would mean a slow, inevitable death. The offer was simple: A new life. A new name. A clean identity, protected under the authority and rules of the FIB. In return, Patrick would become an asset. He would hunt, infiltrate, and dismantle criminal organizations—first domestically, and abroad if necessary. He would operate in the gray spaces where the law couldn’t openly go. His successes would strengthen Jack Donovan’s portfolio, giving Jack leverage and upward momentum within the Bureau. Patrick understood the deal for what it was. He wasn’t being saved. He was being used. But he also knew he couldn’t refuse. Patrick accepted and from that moment forward, his life no longer belonged entirely to him. He vanished once more—this time not into the shadows, but into a system.

When he emerged again, it would be under a name the world had never heard before. That name was Joey Hunt. The first name, Joey, was chosen deliberately—drawn from the final letter of his murdered friend’s name, MJ. A quiet reminder, carried forward. The surname Hunt required no symbolism. It was simply what he did. From that point on, Patrick Jones ceased to exist.

Joey Hunt spent the following years operating under the direction of the FIB, answering to Jack Donovan. He took on a wide range of assignments—deep-cover infiltrations, financial dismantling of criminal networks, intelligence gathering, and targeted destabilization operations both within the United States and abroad. Joey didn’t love the leash, but the arrangement offered something he couldn’t achieve alone: protection, plausible deniability, and a clean slate. Mistakes could be buried. Records could be altered. In return, Donovan’s career flourished on the back of Joey’s results.

Despite the structure, regret followed him. Joey missed his ex-wife and his daughter Jane—an absence that never dulled. On a handful of occasions, he broke protocol and visited them. Each time ended in anger. Eleanor told him he was dead, that he had forfeited the right to be present, and that he should leave them alone. She had moved on. A new man had stepped into the role Joey abandoned, raising his daughter as his own. His daughter however still asked about her real father, his stories and his legacy. Joey watched from a distance. He sent letters and money whenever he could—acts that angered Eleanor and eventually drew the attention of Jack Donovan, who warned him that attachments were liabilities.

The founding of J.J. Holdings

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By the time Joey turned forty—born in 1983—Joey did not have a formal FIB assignment in Los Santos. However, ongoing work in the surrounding region frequently brought him close enough to operate on the city’s edges.

Jim was a quiet, but respected cowboy from Texas, a man whose reputation was growing in the underworld. The two recognized something familiar in one another—discipline, restraint, and a shared sense of loss. Jim had lost his wife, and though he rarely spoke of it, her death drove everything he built and wanted to figure out what happened.

Together, and partly as a means for Joey to establish a legitimate side income independent of the FIB, they founded J.J. Holdings, Jim & Joey Holdings. The company began as a discreet investment platform designed to launder and manage underworld revenue. One of their first major acquisitions was The Palace nightclub, which became the backbone of Jim’s social influence and money-laundering operations. Jack Donovan turned a blind-eye and covered this action by Joey in the records as "growing a real social status".

Jim served as the public face of the company (CEO)—charismatic, visible, and well-connected. Joey remained in the background (COO). He managed the numbers, structured shell acquisitions, negotiated capital movement, and maintained strict oversight of every major account. No one knew who Joey really was or where he came from, not even Jim.

At one point, Jim asked Joey to take on a more active role—a field leader, an enforcer, a protector, as Jim knew of his past in the airforce. Joey refused. He told Jim he had already done enough killing. Control, structure, and anonymity were all he wanted now.

Joey's departure of J.J. Holdings

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J.J. Holdings was built around a small inner circle, with Jim as its head and Joey as a permanent board member. In the early days, the balance worked. That balance began to shift when Jim helped form what became known as the Big Four—an alliance with three other prominent criminal figures: Alexa Morrison, Billy McBardigael, and Edward McHaggis. Together, they tackled city-wide problems and coordinated major decisions. In practice, however, the alliance granted Jim greater influence over the criminal direction of the city.

As the months passed, Joey’s voice—and the voices of other independent board members—began to matter less. Jim grew increasingly reliant on the perspectives of the Big Four, whose philosophy was aggressively anti-competition: dominance through consolidation, exclusion, and control. Their outlook rejected balance in favor of a Big Four–only ecosystem, and it appealed to Jim’s increasingly emotional, opportunity-driven, and optimistic approach to growth. Quietly, Jim began replacing outspoken or cautious figures within J.J. Holdings with individuals who supported rapid expansion and loyalty over restraint. What had once been a business-first syndicate slowly became entangled in political maneuvering, ego, and mounting instability.

Joey pushed back. He valued restraint, structure, and long-term sustainability. Jim insisted Joey trust the process. The breaking point came during the First Paleto Crisis. Jim, Edward, and Tony—Billy’s replacement—made the decision to torture Damian Morrison. Joey vehemently opposed it. He viewed Damian not as an enemy, but as a valuable strategic ally whose removal would destabilize more than it solved. When Jim proceeded without meaningful consultation, Joey understood the balance was gone.

After careful consideration, Joey resigned his position and walked away from J.J. Holdings without ceremony. The company did not slow. Jim remained a dominant force in San Andreas, expanding the empire they had built together. But those who understood the organization knew the truth: Joey’s departure removed the logic and restraint that once kept it stable. Jim stood alone at the helm—one of the most insulated and influential figures in the underworld. And while Jim made the public moves, it had been Joey Hunt’s mind—quiet, disciplined, and unforgiving—that once kept everything from falling apart. Joey's departure however, didn't make a large impact on the company, which would still continue to grow, but without the sharp business-focused mind of Joey.

Joey's Interlude

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In the two years following his departure from J.J. Holdings, Joey Hunt returned fully to covert work under the supervision of Jack Donovan. He carried out multiple assignments for the FIB that never appeared in official records. These operations focused primarily on intelligence gathering, financial disruption, and the quiet destabilization of criminal networks. Joey operated with discipline and restraint, relying on routine, structure, and anonymity. The arrangement offered him protection and a degree of legitimacy, but it also reinforced the reality that his life remained controlled by others.

One such assignment brought Joey to Guatemala. His task was to observe and collect intelligence on narcotics shipments entering the Pacific corridor. While conducting surveillance near coastal transit routes, he observed a transaction that stood out even by cartel standards: African men being exchanged as commodities for drugs. The exchange was overseen by a man Joey would later identify as Hans Naumann. Joey did not intervene. The incident was documented, reported, and treated as a secondary detail within a larger operation. Nonetheless, it left a lasting impression.

After returning to the United States, Joey made a personal decision unrelated to his obligations to the FIB. He purchased a modest home in a quiet suburban neighborhood in San Fierro. The house was located directly across the street from where his ex-wife lived with her new husband and Joey’s daughter. Outwardly, Joey appeared to be nothing more than a polite and reserved neighbor.

Eleanor did not see coincidence. To her, the man across the street was unsettling. She instructed her husband and daughter to avoid him entirely. Patrick Jones, in her mind, was dead, and Joey Hunt was an unwelcome reminder of a life she had closed.

Despite her objections, Joey maintained limited and discreet contact with his daughter. These interactions were brief and carefully timed—short conversations, handwritten notes, and small sums of money intended for school and basic needs. Eleanor noticed the changes and grew increasingly suspicious, though she lacked proof.

Joey’s daughter was around ten years old at the time. Over time, she began to recognize patterns adults ignored: the resemblance, the quiet attention, the consistent presence. While searching through stored belongings, she found a photograph of her biological father, Patrick Jones. The similarity was unmistakable. She did not confront Joey, nor did she inform her mother. The realization remained private.

Tensions eventually surfaced openly. At a nearby gas station, Eleanor’s husband confronted Joey, accusing him of watching the family and refusing to leave them alone. Joey attempted to disengage. When the confrontation became physical, he responded with controlled force—ending the encounter quickly and without unnecessary escalation. No further confrontations followed.

From that point forward, Joey kept his distance. He continued to observe the house across the street, applying the same vigilance he once reserved for operational targets. The threat he guarded against was not violence, but absence. Living so close to his daughter underscored what he had lost and could never openly reclaim, making restraint more difficult than any assignment Jack Donovan could give him.

Events of the GTA RP

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Return to Los Santos

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Jack Donovan’s position within the FIB had begun to weaken. The Bureau’s board was dissatisfied with recent results and questioned the continued protection of Joey as an asset. Jack was given an unspoken ultimatum: deliver something significant, or lose both his leverage and his career.

He framed the assignment as his last and most ambitious case. Success would secure his standing and close Joey’s file permanently. Failure would end the arrangement altogether. The objective was clear: infiltrate the criminal underworld of Los Santos and dismantle it from within. Jack knew Joey had history in the city and prior involvement in questionable business dealings. Familiarity, in his view, was an asset.

Joey’s cover was an auto repair shop in Strawberry—close enough to street-level crime to attract attention without raising suspicion. From there, Jack directed his focus toward a newly formed motorcycle club, Black Shuck MC, believed to function as a connective layer within the underworld. Jack suspected the club had ties to Edward McBane—also known as Edward McHaggis—and possibly to Alexa Morrison, though no evidence had ever been sufficient to act. Joey accepted the assignment without objection, seeing this as a chance to finish being tied to the FIB.

Getting in contact with Black Shuck MC

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When Joey Hunt established his auto repair shop in Strawberry, he understood that visibility would invite friction. That friction came sooner than expected.

Before any violence occurred, Joey made a point of establishing light, harmless contact with Black Shuck MC. He did not rush the approach. Instead, he played the part of a struggling but capable mechanic—asking around for spare parts, favors, and basic assistance. On more than one occasion, he approached club associates for something as mundane as spark plugs, explaining supply issues and offering fair payment. The interactions were brief, practical, and deliberately unremarkable. They served their purpose: Joey became familiar, non-threatening, and known. They did suspect his increased contact, but shrugged it off.

One night, the shop was attacked by local gang members. Joey later claimed he had fought them off on his own. The story held. In reality, the incident had been staged—carefully planned to create the appearance of vulnerability while reinforcing the image of someone capable of defending himself. It served its purpose.

Rather than pursue retaliation alone, Joey escalated in a way that felt natural. He reached out to Black Shuck MC. Arthur and Tyler Nelson brought him to their clubhouse. Tyler led the conversation, methodical and probing, while Arthur remained openly skeptical. Joey presented himself as a former Navy SEAL who had defended his business and was now looking to resolve the situation properly. Arthur doubted the story. Tyler, however, saw value in assisting a fellow businessman who appeared competent, familiar, and discreet.

Joey asked Black Shuck MC to handle the gang responsible for the attack. They agreed. The retaliation against the Rancho gang was swift and decisive. With the matter concluded, contact information was exchanged. Joey remained present, useful, and unassuming.

Once a little bit of trust existed, Joey introduced a far larger proposition: the robbery of the Union Depository.

The proposal was met with immediate skepticism. For Black Shuck MC, the jump from handling local street matters to robbing a major federal bank was a radical escalation. Arthur and others questioned the exposure, the consequences, and Joey’s intentions. Despite the doubts, the club was under financial pressure and in need of cash. Joey understood the hesitation. He pointed to his conduct in the neighborhood and the way he had handled himself during the earlier conflict as proof of reliability. He made his position clear—he needed significant capital to establish a larger operation, and he was prepared to share the reward. A portion of the proceeds would go directly to the club.

Camera footage with Arthur, Tyler and Joey in the elevator going to the vault

This choice directly conflicted with Jack Donovan’s instructions. Jack had explicitly ordered Joey to keep a low profile and avoid actions that would draw national attention. Joey chose to proceed regardless.

Preparation took weeks. Joey handled the planning, logistics, and contingencies, involving Black Shuck MC only where necessary. When the robbery was executed, it succeeded. Approximately $15,000,000 was taken. Joey retained $10,000,000, with the remainder distributed among the club.

The heist attracted national attention. With capital secured, Black Shuck MC expanded rapidly. Cocaine storage and counterfeit-cash operations were established at former business locations once controlled by Edward, consolidating their presence at the Los Santos docks. Despite this growth, Joey noted unresolved tensions—particularly with another biker gang, calling themselves the Alamo Hellraisers.

The Founding of the Big Three

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The success of the operation had earned him credibility within Black Shuck MC, but it had also created a level of attention he considered dangerous. He avoided unnecessary contact, limited movement, and allowed the aftermath to settle before taking any further steps.

When the immediate pressure eased, Joey began converting the proceeds into something durable. Using the ten million dollars he had retained from the robbery, he moved quickly to establish a legitimate foundation for a larger operation. His first acquisition was deliberate: the old venue of The Palace, the former crown jewel of Jim’s business empire. The location, layout, and financial model were already proven. Joey renovated and reopened it as a new nightclub, preserving many structural and operational similarities to the original design. The goal was not innovation, but stability. The model had worked once. It would work again.

With the business established, Joey altered his personal circumstances as well. He relocated to a residence in Vinewood Hills and adopted a more visibly affluent lifestyle.

Jack Donovan noticed and summoned Joey for a private meeting and confronted him directly. He accused Joey of abandoning the agreed plan and ignoring explicit instructions to remain inconspicuous. Joey argued that the nightclub and expanded presence gave him deeper access to the criminal ecosystem Jack wanted mapped and dismantled. From Joey’s perspective, it was progress. Jack disagreed and warned Joey that every step further into public influence made the arrangement harder to protect. Covering financial irregularities was one thing. Explaining investment flows tied to major crimes—and concealing the deaths of law enforcement officers—was another. Jack made it clear that if Joey continued escalating, there would come a point where the Bureau could no longer shield him. Joey acknowledged the warning and told Jack to trust in him.

Meeting Giuseppe Marcano

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Meeting with Giuseppe Marcano

Shortly after reopening the former Palace as his own nightclub, Joey noticed the venue drawing attention beyond its intended clientele. Among the visitors was Giuseppe Marcano, a prominent Italian mobster with long-standing influence in organized crime.

One evening, Marcano arrived with Arthur and requested a private meeting in Joey’s office. There, he spoke openly about the rise and collapse of the old Big Four and argued that Los Santos now required a new alliance to restore stability and limit destructive competition. In his view, cooperation mattered more than expansion. Arthur and Joey later agreed the proposal had merit. Marcano’s condition, however, was explicit: any new alliance would fail without the inclusion of Alexa Morrison. Joey regarded the meeting as both opportunity and warning.

The Kortz Center Meeting

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A few days after Giuseppe Marcano’s visit, Arthur contacted Alexa Morrison and requested a meeting at the Kortz Center. Unbeknownst to her, Arthur also brought Joey along.

Joey’s presence was unannounced and immediately unsettled Alexa. She confronted Arthur over bringing an unknown third party into what was meant to be a private discussion. Arthur explained that Tyler had been killed by the Hellraisers and that he needed her assistance to dismantle their leadership. He disclosed only limited details about the Union Depository heist, enough to establish credibility but not enough to expose Joey’s role fully.

Alexa revealed she maintained a non‑aggression pact with the Hellraisers and was reluctant to violate it. Joey intervened briefly, reminding her of Arthur’s financial value and the leverage he now represented. After careful consideration, Alexa agreed to assist—on the condition that she remained cautious of Joey and his intentions.

Arthur then informed her of Giuseppe Marcano’s proposal and of Billy’s return from retirement. Alexa, aware that she would eventually require strong partners for her own long‑term plans, agreed in principle to the formation of a new alliance, but only after the Hellraisers were neutralized. The following morning, Arthur, Alexa, Billy, and Joey met again in Alexa’s office at Maze Bank Tower. The first matter was operational: the elimination of Aiden, the de facto leader of the Hellraisers. Arthur insisted on carrying out the act himself.

The second discussion concerned the structure of the new alliance. Billy demanded trust and personal loyalty. Alexa demanded an end to scheming and internal betrayal. All present agreed. After the meeting, Alexa requested a private conversation with Joey. She questioned his background and motives directly. His answers were deliberately vague, particularly regarding his claimed service with the Navy SEALs. Alexa remained unconvinced, but allowed him to leave without interference. In the days that followed, Alexa and Arthur quietly finalized the plan to trap and eliminate the Hellraiser leadership.