Pubdate: Sun, 31 Dec 2000
Source: Montreal Gazette (CN QU)
Copyright: 2000 The Gazette, a division of Southam Inc.
Contact:  http://www.montrealgazette.com/
Forum: http://forums.canada.com/~montreal
Author: Basem Boshra and Paul Cherry

OPP BRACE FOR BLOODY BIKER WAR

Ontario Cops Plan Zero Tolerance

Ontario Provincial Police plan to take a "zero-tolerance" approach to the 
Hells Angels and are hoping the biker gang's expansion into the province 
won't lead to the type of bloody turf war that has claimed more than 150 
lives in Quebec.

"It would appear the Hells are planning to take a more aggressive role in 
managing the province's drug trade and we're promising them an even more 
aggressive fight to ensure their efforts are futile," OPP Inspector Ross 
Bingley said yesterday.

"Obviously, we hope there will not be violence in the province. The fact 
that several large, Ontario-based gangs have become Hells Angels - through 
business dealings, is what it would appear to us - is a good indicator that 
they're putting business first and violence second," said Bingley, manager 
of the Provincial Special Squad, the OPP's anti-biker-gang squad.

Traditionally in Ontario, outlaw motorcycle gangs have coexisted in 
relative harmony, added  Det.-Staff Sgt. Don Bell of the anti-gang squad.

"Having said that, with the presence of the Bandidos and now the Hells 
Angels, the propensity for  violence is there.

"Hopefully, through the efforts of the police and our enforcement actions," 
Bell said, "we won't see the violence."

A police source said 168 members of the ParaDice Riders, Satan's Choice, 
Lobos and Last Chance, all Ontario outlaw-gangs, joined the Hells Angels at 
an initiation ceremony Friday night at the Hells' bunker in Sorel.

The new recruits had the red and white Deathhead - the Hells Angels symbol 
of a winged skull - sewn onto their leather vests or jackets.

The patch-over came as no surprise to Ontario police, Bell said.

"We've been anticipating since the early 1990s that the Hells Angels were 
coming.

"We know they've got a foothold and a presence in the drug market in 
Ontario, which is a very lucrative market, and we know they've been doing 
business here," Bell said.

"It was only a matter of time for them to set up a chapter, and now they've 
done it in a big way. The presence of the Bandidos triggered the move. It 
forced their hand," Bell said.

Friday's mass conversion means the Hells Angels now have 29 chapters, with 
418 full-fledged members in Quebec, Ontario, Nova Scotia, Manitoba, 
Saskatchewan, Alberta and British Columbia.

Quebec's Hells Angels are by far the most powerful in Canada. Police allege 
the Quebec chapter has influence over every chapter east of Manitoba - 
basically because it created all of them.

The mass conversion of the smaller Ontario gangs gives the Hells Angels 
four chapters in the greater Toronto area alone. Chapters were also created 
in Oshawa, Kitchener, Windsor, Sudbury and Thunder Bay.

Most of the chapters in northern Ontario were created by a complete 
patch-over of the Satan's Choice, which had 98 members.

Bernie Guindon, a native of Verdun who left for Ontario in 1977 and 
eventually became a member of the Satan's Choice, was patched over in Sorel 
on Friday night, police said.

According to an RCMP report published in 1999, the Lobos were a very small 
gang, with nine members based in Windsor. The Last Chance were described in 
the same report as having "24 members (who are) active in the Toronto drug 
market."

At the party in Sorel, the Hells Angels also gave out 11 patches to 
prospect members to form what eventually will become a full-fledged chapter 
in Niagara Falls.

That prospect chapter will be run by Wolodumir (Walter) Stadnick, 48, a 
founding member of Maurice (Mom) Boucher's elite Nomad chapter in Quebec. 
Stadnick, who lives in Hamilton, was once the national president of the 
Hells Angels in Canada.

Perhaps the most interesting development in the whole patch-over is that 
the Hells Angels have allowed Paul (Sasquatch) Porter, a former member of 
the Rock Machine, to head their new Nomad chapter in Ontario.

The Hells Angels form Nomad chapters in provinces or states so that their 
members are not confined by internal territorial limits placed on regular 
chapters.

Porter, 37, has been a Hells Angel for barely two weeks. He was part of a 
defection of up to 10 former Rock Machine members and associates who 
defected to the Hells just before Christmas. On Dec. 3, 1998, Porter 
pleaded guilty to two weapons charges and received a suspended sentence.

Being president of a Nomad chapter is considered prestigious among gang 
members. Quebec Nomad president Boucher, 47, is thought by police to be 
perhaps the most powerful Hells Angel in the province.

Porter was seen as one of the most influential members of the Rock Machine 
before he defected. He created three new Rock Machine chapters in Ontario 
this summer.

If anyone should have had an axe to grind against his former enemies, 
Porter fits the bill. He was shot on two occasions while the Hells Angels 
and the Rock Machine fought over drug turf.
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