Pubdate: Thu, 25 Sep 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) THE WHEELS OF JUSTICE As the Mega-Trial Draws to a Close, Convicted Bikers Get Light Sentences for Heavy Crimes The Hells Angels mega-trial will soon be over. After nine of the 12 Hells accused of murder, drug dealing and other crimes pleaded guilty to reduced charges last week, the Crown's prosecutor Andre Vincent has asked Judge Rejean Paul for sentences ranging from 20 years for a full-patch Nomad to 15 years for a full-patch Rocker. Vincent, audibly sick with a cold, spent the day on his feet describing the mountains of evidence that the police had gathered against the nine men. While Vincent described the financial details of their multi-million-dollar dope-dealing empire, the nine sat quietly behind the bulletproof glass of the prisoner's box. When Vincent described the killings done by the gang in order to maintain their control over the city's drug trade, one of the bikers, Guillaume Serra, yawned while leaning back into his chair. The nine are all members of the Hells Angels, and most of them belong to the Nomads club, an elite chapter made up of killers loyal to the Hells. Vincent's presentation stressed how murder had to be done if one was to be invited to sit at the Nomads table. "Many were called," he said, "but few were chosen." Vincent described how the Nomads developed their dope business into a wholesale "shopper's drug mart" for the city's entire drug trade. The Nomads "table" controlled the city's drug prices all the way down to the $20 spent for a quarter gram of cocaine sold on the street. At one point, Vincent pointed out how Normand Robitaille met with another gang leader in Montreal North. Both agreed to raise the street price for a "quarter" from $20 to $25. They later had to bring the price back to $20 because dealers were complaining that they had to make change all the time and they had no place to keep all the coins. Vincent described how the Nomads were running a business that made $111-million in gross sales, not to mention the $15-million (net) profit made off those sales. Vincent showed videos of bikers delivering hockey kit bags full of money to a Beaubien Street apartment. When police seized one of the gang's accounting program discs, it showed how the gang kept strict and detailed accounts of all its transactions. At one point, when a dealer overpaid the Angels by $20 on a $50,000 payout, the Angels scrupulously gave him a $20 credit on the next delivery. Vincent made a point of mentioning that the Hells Angels do not pay corporate taxes of any kind. The Nomads, and their "B" team the Rockers, strong-armed any competition on the streets of Montreal. If the competition did not want to play by the Nomads rules, the club would use its available options. The competition would be eliminated. Testimony was quoted, and one witness was cited as saying, "You wouldn't last 10 minutes on the corner of Ste-Catherine and St-Lawrence if you tried to sell dope without their [the Nomads] permission." The Hells used the Nomads (and the Rockers) as their iron fist. Over 164 murders have been directly linked to Montreal's infamous biker war. Not all the victims were linked to organized crime. Daniel Desrochers, 11 years old, was playing on Adam Street deep in the heart of the city's east end when a nearby bomb tore a dealer apart in his Jeep Cherokee. Shrapnel from the bomb tore the top of Desrocher's head off. He died a day later. While a waitress was serving the breakfast shift in a Montreal North restaurant, someone walked in and tried to shoot one of her clients. The client, a biker, reached for her and used her as a human shield as the killers tried to shoot him. They missed him but they did manage to shoot the waitress in the leg. The woman will limp till the end of her days. A car salesman named Serge Hervieux had the bad luck to share the same given name as Serge Boutin, a member of the Rock Machine, the Hells' sworn enemies. When someone walked into a Saint-Leonard car lot and asked for Serge, Hervieux answered and asked the man what he could do for him. The man shot Hervieux through the eye. Boutin, the intended victim, was working in the car lot's office located on the second floor. The list goes on. Murder charges against the nine were reduced to complicity because the Crown realized that it would be difficult, if not impossible, to prove that there was a direct link between the nine bikers and any of the murders that took place during Montreal's infamous biker war. Police do, however, have a strong case against the three bikers who were not included in the deal. Greg Wooley, Pierre Laurin and Jean-Richard Lariviere all stand accused of assorted murders and will be tried for their crimes in separate trials. Of the nine convicted bikers, with time spent in jail since their arrest (March 2001), good behaviour and varied concurrent sentences, the Nomads will serve a maximum of 15 and a minimum of 71/2 years in prison, and the Rockers a maximum of 10 and a minimum of five years. One of the trial's observers was not impressed. "So that's the price of a life in Montreal," he said. "Ten years." Another observer, a policeman who worked with the famous Wolverine investigation squad, did not bother to hide his disappointment. "It's all part of the game," he said. As much as the Nomads are all going away for a long time, the Hells Angels still rule the city's drug trade. Reports say that it's business as usual on the streets of Montreal. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake