Pubdate: Thu, 21 Aug 2003 Source: Hour Magazine (CN QU) Copyright: 2003, Communications Voir Inc. Contact: http://www.hour.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/971 Author: P.A. Sevigny Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?188 (Outlaw Bikers) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/drugs+prison TRADING PLACES Hells Angels: Business is booming behind Bordeaux bars Almost two years ago, when the police put Operation Printemps into play, most of Quebec's "full patch" Hells found themselves behind bars in their own special wing at the Bordeaux jail. While the police are still boasting as to how they pulled the city's Hells off the streets, others are not so sure. Some prison officials believe that the Hells are still in business, and that business is very good. Nickolas Gagnon is the vice-president of the Syndicat des Agents de la Paix en Services Correctionnels du Quebec. "Whoever controls the drugs within the prison controls the prison," said Gagnon. "We just count the heads and lock the doors." He says that the morale among his members has dropped to an all-time low and that the turnover among the province's prison guards has gone through the roof. The guards at Montreal's Bordeaux jail have told him that the flow of drugs through the north end jail has become a tidal wave, and that there is not much that they can do about it. Last month, over a pound of pot and a quarter pound of hashish were found hidden in the prison chapel. Authorities soon determined that the inmate in charge of cleaning the chapel was hiding the drugs for the Hells Angels. "The Hells are taking over the province's prisons," said Gagnon. "The administration knows it but they don't know what they can do about it." More than a few prison insiders agree with Gagnon. Peter Paradis, a former full-patch leader of Montreal's Rock Machine, believes that organized crime has seeped into almost every level of the government's judicial system. "It's all about money," he said, "and there's far too much of it floating around the jails for OC [organized crime] to ignore it." Paradis should know. While doing a stretch of his own in Bordeaux, he admits that he was making far more money inside than he ever did while he was running drugs on the streets of Verdun. He said that inmates are ready and able to pay up to $40 for a gram of pot. "With over 440 grams to a pound of pot, you can make a net profit of nearly $15,000 per pound in less than a week." Paradis estimates that there must be at least five pounds of soft drugs coming into Bordeaux each week. The favoured method of bringing dope through the gates is to have returning inmates swallow well-greased condoms full of the drugs. "I had one guy who could bring me up to half a pound of hash every time he came back to jail," said Paradis. "He would swallow the packages, while others would stuff their 'hot dogs' up the other way." Guy Samson, a spokesman for the province's correction service said that Paradis may be exaggerating. He said that the situation is not as bad as it seems. "We know what's going on," he said. "We have good links with the police, the guards keep their eyes open and every jail has its informers." Samson said that anyone suspected of bringing dope into the prison is locked in a special cell for up to 72 hours. "That usually does the trick," Samson said. "If they have anything they shouldn't have, we'll eventually find it." Gagnon isn't so sure. "They still have running water in those cells," he said. "If anything 'comes up,' the guy just cleans it off and swallows the package for a second time." Paradis said that most of the guards have a "live and let live" attitude. "Jails aren't a good place to get into somebody's face," he said. "A problem can become serious trouble in a flash." However, both Paradis and Gagnon agree that there is very little corruption in the province's jails. "A dirty guard doesn't last for long," said Gagnon. "There are too many people in the jail for that kind of thing to go on for long without somebody finding out about it." Still, he doesn't believe that the government is serious about finding solutions to the problems within its prisons. "The guards are losing control of the prisons to the dope dealers, and the government doesn't seem to care," he said. "[The government is] just asking for trouble." Prison spokesman Guy Samson does not agree. He said that the government is well aware of what's going on in its prisons and that measures were being taken to deal with the illicit drug flow. He also said that the problem was not so much about the time being done in the province's jails, but more about who was doing the time. Samson was referring to the fact that most of Quebec's full-patch Angels were arrested back in 2001 when police put Operation Printemps into action. "We're talking about a higher level of criminal," he said. "These people are a serious danger to society. They're not in jail for parking tickets." Paradis said that the Hells are making the best of a bad situation and are still close enough to Montreal to take care of business. "You always have to remember one thing about the Hells," he said. "Wherever they go, they always end up running the show." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin