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Motorcycle rights activist
Sputnik dies at 70
By
Bronwyn Turner Correspondent Published June 29, 2010
Sputnik
Strain, 70, of Alvin, a motorcycle activist who strode through the button-down world of the state Capitol
wearing a Mohawk and with the word “free” tattooed on his forehead, died Thursday in
Elgin.
He had
been working at the state office of the Texas Motorcycle Rights Association when he was apparently felled
by a heart attack. Strain had just finished lobbying this past session for one of the most comprehensive
motorcycle safety bills in the country.
Strain
also will be remembered for his determined push to repeal the motorcycle helmet law in Texas. The
legislature approved the repeal in 1997.
More
than 1,000 motorcyclists from across the country are expected for the memorial service, planned for July
10. His ashes will be carried in a biker casket trailer, pulled by the Black Diamond Motorcycle Hearse, a
1992 Electra Glide converted to a trike.
The
parade of motorcyclists will lead to the Capitol grounds, where a memorial service is planned on the pink
granite steps. It will be a fitting spot to remember the man legislators were hard put to
forget.
“His
appearance was, shall we say, different,” said Texas Land Commissioner Jerry Patterson, who was a state
senator when he met Strain in 1993. “When you saw Sputnik, you remembered him. I recommend all lobbyists
get a Mohawk haircut.”
Patterson authored the
motorcycle helmet repeal law, with Strain’s support.
“He was
just not going to take failure as an option,” Patterson said.
“He was
jovial but determined. He was a friendly, outgoing guy, afraid of talking to no
one.”
Strain,
who kept his Mohawk haircut even into his senior years, taught a valuable lesson, Patterson
said.
“Don’t
be afraid of the first impression you leave because of your appearance because your persistence will
always prevail.”
Bill
Strain had been called “Sputnik” since his days in the National Guard, when an injury put him on
painkillers. Friends joked about him being “high” as the Soviet satellite. Strain later changed his
official name to “Sputnik.”
Strain
was “the Willie Nelson of bikers,” said Terri Williams, secretary-treasurer of the Texas Motorcycle
Rights Association.
“I
cannot put into words how devastating the loss is to the biker community, to his family,” she wrote on
the association’s website.
“Sputnik will go down in history
as the greatest motorcycle rights activist in the history of our nation.”
Williams met Strain when she was
working at a motorcycle injury attorney’s office in Austin. He formed the association in 1992, organizing
bikers to descend on the state Capitol annually to lobby for safety laws and other
issues.
Strain
will be remembered not only as an activist but also as an encourager, Williams
said.
“He
always taught me, no matter what happens to me, I should always have faith and keep going. He had a great
deal of faith in God.”
For
Strain’s 70th birthday, he had additional artwork added to his forehead. Angel wings were placed on
either side of the word “Free.”
+++
Details
•
Strain is survived by his wife, Gwendolyn; three children, Chance, Vernon and Lisa; six grandchildren and
one great-grandchild.
• For
updated information on the memorial service plans, check the website, www.tmra2.org
Rogue
Sturgis Freedom
Fighters
Motorcycle Hall Of Fame
Member 2005
www.bikerrogue.com