Pubdate: Sun, 01 Apr 2001 Source: San Diego Union Tribune (CA) Copyright: 2001 Union-Tribune Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.uniontrib.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/386 Author: Jeffrey Jones, Reuters Note: With additional reporting by Patrick White in Quebec City CANADIAN POLICE CRACK DOWN ON HELLS ANGELS BIKERS AGAIN CALGARY, Alberta - Police swooped down in raids across southern Alberta Friday to arrest 40 Hells Angels and associates on hundreds of drug, weapons and conspiracy charges just two days after a similar massive crackdown on the outlaw biker gang in Quebec. In what was dubbed "Operation Shadow," 200 city police officers and Mounties staged predawn raids at the Hells Angels' Calgary clubhouse and other residences in the region, seizing handguns, rifles, an Uzi submachine gun and about C$1 million ($635,000 U.S.) of illegal drugs, officials said. The C$2.5-million operation, which followed an 11-month investigation, was not conducted in concert with Quebec authorities who collared more than 120 Hells Angels on Wednesday, police said. "This was one of the major operations, we think, in Canada," Calgary police chief Jack Beaton said at a news conference. "What we saw in Quebec the other day, that was certainly a fine operation. But for Alberta this is certainly what we consider to be one of the biggest ones." Forty people, including eight members of the Hells Angels Calgary chapter, face 200 drug trafficking, weapons and conspiracy charges. Beaton said there was no violence when police executed their arrest warrants in Calgary and such surrounding towns as Chestermere, Turner Valley and Okotoks. Just two days earlier, 2,000 Quebec police officers fanned out across that province to make arrests in 75 cities and towns following a two-year investigation. They seized weapons, drugs, vehicles and millions of dollars in cash. The raids came amid rising public anger against the Hells Angels, who are embroiled in a bloody turf war in the mainly French-speaking province for control of the illegal drug trade with the Bandidos biker gang, also known as the Rock Machine. The Hells Angels have been active in southern Alberta since 1997, when they took over such local bike gangs as the Grim Reapers and the Rebels in so-called "patchover" ceremonies. "In the police service's opinion, they are taking over many of our crime problems in the areas of drugs and prostitution," Beaton said. "We feel they're a fairly established organization." Mega trials In Quebec City on Friday, provincial Justice Minister Paul Begin said the 122 Hells Angels-related bikers would face two "mega trials" early this fall to avoid a security nightmare. Begin said the Quebec government would build a C$10 million courthouse at a suburban Montreal jail by September to accommodate the huge number of bikers police hauled in. "For security reasons, we came to the conclusion it would not be wise to conduct the trial in downtown Montreal," he told reporters. Prosecutors had enough proof to convict all the bikers, since 15 CD-ROMs and 2 million pages of evidence had been gathered over the past two years, he said. In Calgary, police chief Beaton said justice officials had not laid any charges under Canada's tough new anti-gang laws that give police sweeping powers to arrest people involved in organized crime. However, authorities did not rule out such charges in the coming days and weeks. While Beaton and Royal Canadian Mounted Police chief superintendent Rick Bowlby congratulated their officers on Friday's operation, they conceded it would only make a dent in the illegal drug trade. "Drugs are a major problem, not only in Alberta and Calgary but in Canada in general. Will it stem the flow of drugs into Alberta? I don't think so," Beaton said. (With additional reporting by Patrick White in Quebec City) - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D