Pubdate: Tue, 28 Oct 2003 Source: Globe and Mail (Canada) Section: Page A15 Copyright: 2003, The Globe and Mail Company Contact: http://www.globeandmail.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/168 Author: Jonathan Fowlie LAX POT LAWS LURE CRIMINALS TO CANADA, POLICE SUGGEST Twins' Killers Likely Part of Increasingly Visible Toronto Underworld, Officer Says After a gang-style weekend shooting left twin brothers dead, Toronto's top homicide officer denounced Canada's marijuana laws, saying they are an open invitation for criminals from around the world to set up shop. "We've got a new cash crop called marijuana where the penalties are slight and the profits are enormous," Staff Inspector Gary Ellis, head of the homicide squad, said yesterday. "We are attracting every serious criminal going, and just like the old Wild West days, you get the violence that goes with it," he said. While he had no direct evidence to link the weekend shootings to marijuana grow houses -- or even to recent shootings involving such operations -- Staff Insp. Ellis said the deaths were yet another example of what he called a continuing "cycle of violence." He said that if laws don't allow police to crack down on marijuana users and growers, gangs in Toronto, such as the one that may have killed the twins on Sunday, will become even more visible as they fight over profits in the city's drug trade. On Sunday morning, two to four men burst into the Hush Karaoke Bar on Ossington Avenue, near Queen Street. Their faces covered with hats and bandannas, the men walked directly to the table where the victims were sitting, pulled out their guns and began "firing indiscriminately," according to Detective Rudy Pasini, the lead investigator on the case. The bullets left 27-year-old twins Phu Hoa Le and Loc Dai Le dead. Three of their friends were injured. Two men, both 26, were treated and released on Sunday. A 24-year-old remains in hospital and was expected to live, police said. The Vietnamese brothers worked together at a marble and granite countertop installation company. Loc Dai Le was married with one child. Police said that although the men had been involved in "minor" offences in the past, they were not considered dangerous and had no known links to any local gangs. Staff Insp. Ellis said he was almost certain, however, that those who shot the men were part of a gang, and were connected to the underworld that is becoming increasingly more visible throughout Toronto. "Those who are involved in this type of trade are a culture unto themselves. They don't leave clues; they're ruthless, and they are very transient," he said. "I'm concerned, because I see the outcome of the bodies on the street and I'm expected to do something about it." At a press conference last week, Staff Insp. Ellis tried to outline the danger of relaxing marijuana legislation after a 22-year-old man was killed in a shootout outside a Scarborough grow house. Staff Insp. Ellis said it was too early to tell if there were any connections between the killings this past weekend and those in the shootout, but maintained that the recent deaths just prove what he was trying to say last week. "It goes with what I predicted," he said. "I'm not saying I'm connecting the two, [but] we've got some gang warfare going on here where people are being executed, and some of them are innocent." While Staff Insp. Ellis thought it too early to draw too close a connection between the incidents, his investigators confirmed yesterday they are already looking for possible links. Det. Pasini said he is comparing the guns used and the descriptions of the suspects. He added that while most witnesses left the karaoke bar after Sunday's shooting, many of the nearly 30 people there have come forward to offer accounts of what they saw. He urged others to do the same, admitting the present descriptions of suspects are vague. He said he hoped that other witnesses could help assemble a better description. Police are looking for up to four Asian men, possibly Vietnamese, and 20 to 30 years of age. Det. Pasini said he was ruling out any connection to the location itself, which changed hands less than a month ago. He said the fact the men came straight towards the victims once they entered the bar suggested they had specific targets in mind. While Det. Pasini searched for witnesses and more clues, Staff Insp. Ellis continued his call for stronger regulations. "On the policy macro level I think its very shortsighted," he said of Ottawa's intentions to relax marijuana legislation. "The outcome is that nice residential neighbourhoods are going to get shot up. These guys [gang members] are soldiers." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake