Pubdate: Tue, 23 Sep 2003 Source: National Post (Canada) Copyright: 2003 Southam Inc. Contact: http://www.nationalpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/286 Author: Graeme Hamilton Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?188 (Outlaw Bikers) DRUG SALES MADE MILLIONAIRES OUT OF OUTLAW BIKERS Sentencing Hearing Offers Rare Glimpse Into Hells Angels MONTREAL - The cavernous courtroom, so big video screens are needed at the back to allow spectators to follow the proceedings, could be mistaken for a university lecture hall. And yesterday it was a lesson in Organized Crime 101 that Crown prosecutor Andre Vincent delivered at the sentencing hearing of nine Hells Angels members. Mr. Vincent provided a rare glimpse into the workings of the criminal biker gang, showing how they followed a meticulous, if ruthless, business plan to establish a virtual monopoly over the Montreal drug trade and rack up sales of $111-million a year. "It was a very well-structured business," Mr. Vincent said, while talking about a computer diskette seized by police that provided details of the gang's accounts in 2000. All large-scale purchases and sales were noted, with buyers and vendors identified by nicknames. Alongside cocaine purchases worth millions of dollars, the gang's diligent accountants listed expenses for stationery, hydro and rent. Investigators found one instance where a buyer settling a $50,000 drug debt had mistakenly included an extra $20. The next time he did business, he had a $20 credit. The dealings provided members of the Nomads chapter $5,000 a week base salary, and there was evidence that they could take in as much as $1-million a year. But while the gang functioned in some respects like a typical small business, its leaders interpreted too literally the notion of cutthroat competition. When the Hells Angels talked about "eliminating" their competition, they acted with bullets. "Drug trafficking cannot be done without violence," Mr. Vincent said. "It is impossible to survive in this world without having people with business sense, and other people capable of maintaining complete control." Between 1995 and 2001, the Hells Angels maintained control in the Montreal regions at a cost of 53 killings. Since 2001, when police rounded up the bulk of the gang, Mr. Vincent said, the biker war has claimed just three more victims. The nine men before the court pleaded guilty on Sept. 11 to charges of conspiracy to commit murder, drug trafficking and gangsterism, abruptly ending a trial that began last Oct. 21 and was expected to last into 2004. In exchange for the guilty pleas, the Crown agreed to drop charges of first-degree murder. Three of their co-accused were not offered the deal and will face new murder trials. The conspiracy to commit murder charges relate to the killings of 13 men, all associated with the rival Rock Machine, killed between 1996 and 2000 during a war for control of Montreal cocaine and hashish sales. Mr. Vincent yesterday asked Quebec Superior Court Justice Rejean Paul to impose 20-year sentences on Rene Charlebois, Denis Houle, Gilles Mathieu and Normand Robitaille, who were members of the Nomads, the gang's highest-ranking chapter in Quebec. He asked for an 18-year sentence for Guillaume Serra, who was a Nomad prospect, and he asked for 15-year sentences for Jean-Guy Bourgoin, Daniel Lanthier, Sylvain Laplante and Pierre Provencher, all members of the lower-ranking Rockers. Mr. Vincent also requested that the judge order the accused to serve half their sentences before being eligible for parole. Yesterday, the nine men, ranging in age from 35 to 54, followed the hearing from behind bullet-proof thick glass in a $16.5-million courthouse built next to a north-end jail to hold the biker trials. A second trial of nine men facing similar charges continues in another courtroom down the hall. They were largely stonefaced as the prosecutor traced a portrait of their misdeeds. The one point at which they appeared genuinely transfixed was when Mr. Vincent played a video from a camera police had hidden inside an apartment where the Hells Angels received substantial drug payments. From an angle near the floor, the camera showed a sparsely furnished apartment with a large TV on a stool. After punching a secret code at the building's entrance, a man entered carrying sport bags filled with stacks of money. The apartment's resident -- who was not identified -- set to quickly counting the stacks. Mr. Vincent said the money was then moved to a safe one floor down before being taken in boxes to another address where money-counting machines ran non-stop. When police raided the first building in 2001, they seized $5.6-million from the safe. Business practices were at times unorthodox. When the bikers were negotiating a huge cocaine purchase from Colombia, they did not send cash or a bill of lading, Mr. Vincent quipped. They sent one of their senior members to stay with the Colombians for three months as a form of deposit and a sign of their good faith. Despite the lengths the bikers went to to shield themselves from the police, in the end they were done in by their own. Police succeeded in recruiting two well-placed Hells Angels as sources. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom