Pubdate: Sun, 28 Jan 2001 Source: Edmonton Sun (CN AB) Copyright: 2001, Canoe Limited Partnership. Contact: #250, 4990-92 Avenue, Edmonton, Alberta, T6B 3A1 Canada Fax: (780) 468-0139 Website: http://www.canoe.ca/EdmontonSun/ Forum: http://www.canoe.ca/Chat/home.html Author: Mike D'amour, Calgary Sun ROUGH RIDE FOR JUSTICE HIGH-TECH WARRIORS CALGARY -- How do you fight a criminal organization which has superior high-tech equipment, doesn't have to play by any rules and hires the best lawyers in the land? "I think the Hells Angels will always be here. I mean, who are we kidding?" said Det. Brad Robson of the criminal intelligence section of the Calgary Police Service. "The best we can hope to do is continue to do our job, work hard and continue to knock these guys off - chip away, chip away." But chipping away at the Alberta Hells Angels can be as frustrating as chopping a redwood tree with a hatchet. From Edmonton, Red Deer and Calgary, south to the Montana border, the Hells Angels have their fingers in the lucrative drug trade and other criminal actions. Taking lessons from older, more established clubs, the local Angels have learned to distance themselves from criminal activity by using streetwise lackeys. "You're not just dealing with a Calgary club, you're dealing with a worldwide organization and the Alberta Hells Angels are being well-schooled from Angels on the West Coast and the States," said Robson. "They have friends and associates doing all the work," he said. "We knock them off almost weekly and it does affect them in the pocket book but doesn't affect their criminal record or their image." That doesn't mean the veteran cop is giving up on busting the main players. "A lot of it comes back to funding and long-term investigations and long-term commitment to get these guys," he said. The fight against organized motorcycle gangs doesn't get any easier when the public is largely apathetic to the Angels and easily duped by the Big Red Machine's PR campaign. Calgary Police Chief Jack Beaton remembers when the city closed their clubhouse in Bowness, a suburb northwest of Calgary. "There were some people there who said, 'I want them to stay there. These are good neighbours,' " Beaton recalled. That attitude baffles Robson. "If Joe Citizen's son is hooked on drugs, where do you think the profit is going?" he said. "It's going right to organized groups, including the Angels. "They want the public to think they're just a good ol' boys' club who get together once a week to drink beer and ride their motorcycles," Beaton said. Yet nothing could be further from the truth, he said. "Outlaw motorcycle gangs are an international organization in the area of drugs, prostitution and weapons," he said. "They cause death and destruction and they harm communities." The Hells Angels' Alberta woes began in 1997 when 150 rode to Red Deer to welcome their newest chapter - members of the Grim Reapers, who turned in their colours for those of the Big Red Machine in a patchover ceremony. But they were stopped by 130 cops who delayed them for hours and wrote tickets, mainly for minor traffic and equipment violations. The Angels successfully challenged a dozen of the tickets in court. "It is clear the CheckStops were not motivated by concerns about faulty headlights, expired licenses and the like," Judge Allan Fradsham said in his Aug. 19 decision to dismiss the charges. The judge said the police exercise violated the Angels' constitutional rights under three sections of the Charter - arbitrary detention, search and seizure and security of the person. While the Angels celebrated their courtroom victory, cops had a chance to think about the court decision. The gang spent about $300,000 in legal fees to get 12 tickets tossed. "So, am I disappointed?" Beaton asked, answering his own question with a shrug. The chief said the stops aren't harassment and will continue under the "new guidelines" established by the judge. "I'm very happy to accept those new parameters for future CheckStops," he said, but would not say what those parameters are because he does not want the Angels to know. The Calgary Angels were caught again when their president was arrested Aug. 4, 1999, and charged in a plot against a city alderman and two other people. Police said they received information about a plan to plant an explosive meant to harm alderman Dale Hodges, another city hall staff member and a Bowness resident. Citing non-compliance with building codes, Hodges was instrumental in getting rid of a two-storey Hells Angels clubhouse in Bowness. Kenneth Michael Szczerba, 43, was charged with three counts of "counselling the offence of mischief endangering life" and one count of "counselling the offence of assault causing bodily harm." He was charged later with drug offences. Both cases are still before the courts. The lack of public outrage often means police forces don't get the funding they desperately need to battle the gangs. "There is a lot of intelligence-gathering and we don't have the equipment we need to do the investigations in some cases," Beaton said. "We have to get the equipment because technology moves ahead so fast." Local cops have nothing that compares with the security and surveillance equipment possessed by the Angels. "It's improving though - we're getting closer, " Robson chuckled. If police want to compete with the Angels, they better get a move on to challenge the rapid expansion of the world's biggest outlaw motorcycle group. "Last month there were 21 chapters in the country, now there are 29," Robson said. "Why are they moving into areas they've never been in before? It's for control of the drug trade." The Alberta government was concerned enough about the problem that, in 1998, it established a Criminal Intelligence Service bureau, a joint forces operation made up of police from across the province. But since its inception the multimillion-dollar bureau has yet to point to any tangible successes. "But (CISA) is coming together and I'm very pleased with some of the things I see," Beaton said. "I'm satisfied in the end it will live up to the initiatives." - --- MAP posted-by: Andrew