As you probably already know by now, there was a bloody, deadly shootout in Waco, Texas this past Sunday between five motorcycle gangs — including the Bandidos, Cossacks and the Scimitars — at the Twin Peaks restaurant. When it was all over, nine people were dead, 18 were hospitalized with injuries and about 170 were put in jail.

It’s still unclear how many of the slain gang members were shot by police officers. The deceased have yet to be identified, as the investigation is still ongoing.

The people pictured above are all men, ranging in age from 25 to 45, and have all been charged with engaging in organized crime relating to capital murder. Bail has been at $1 million for each and every one.

According to the Waco Police Department, Texas state law enforcement agencies, the FBI and the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, more than 100 guns and 100 other weapons were collected from the crime scene including knives and “chains with padlocks affixed to one end”.

More from The New York Times:

The rival gangs that battled at the restaurant, part of a busy shopping center just off Interstate 35 in south Waco, first took aim at each other, but officials have said that when officers stationed there tried to intervene, some of the bikers turned their guns on the police, who returned fire.

According to gang leaders and law enforcement officials, a regional coalition of motorcycle clubs, including the Bandidos, one of the nation’s largest biker gangs and the dominant one in Texas, was gathering at the restaurant Sunday for one of its periodic meetings. Motorcyclists showed up from other gangs that had not been invited, including the Cossacks, bitter rivals of the Bandidos, and the Scimitars, a group affiliated with the Cossacks. In all, officials say, five gangs were involved.

Though the rivalry between the Bandidos and the Cossacks dates to the 1960s, when the clubs were established, in the past two years the two groups have had numerous run-ins.

Much of the recent conflict stemmed from members of the Cossacks, a smaller club, refusing to pay tribute to the Bandidos, according to a law enforcement official who asked that his name not be used because he was not authorized to speak publicly. People who study the gangs say the Cossacks had also violated protocol by wearing insignia without approval from the regional coalition dominated by the Bandidos.

The police have said the violence Sunday began as a dispute over parking, and Sergeant Swanton said another element may have been one person running over another’s foot. But he acknowledged that piecing together what happened has been difficult, because of “people not being truthful with us about what went on inside and outside.”