Pubdate: Sat, 11 Sep 2004 Source: Victoria Times-Colonist (CN BC) Copyright: 2004 Times Colonist Contact: http://www.canada.com/victoria/timescolonist/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/481 Author: Lori Culbert and Neal Hall, Vancouver Sun Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?188 (Outlaw Bikers) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) ANGELS EXPAND IN B.C. TO FEND OFF BANDIDOS B.C.'s rich and powerful Hells Angels motorcycle club -- whose members largely eluded criminal charges and flew below society's radar screen for two decades -- is expanding across the province, bolstering its multimillion-dollar business network and cementing its territorial stake on organized crime. The expansion is partly to protect its turf from the Bandidos, a U.S. motorcycle gang that has moved into Alberta and is threatening to set up shop in B.C. Last January, a Bandidos member was fatally shot outside a strip bar in Edmonton where the Texas-based club has established a probationary chapter. Eight years ago, B.C. had 70 so-called full-patch members and five chapters. Today, there are 95 members and seven chapters: Vancouver, East End, Haney, White Rock, Mission, the Nomads and Nanaimo. There is talk of a new Kelowna chapter and another one in Surrey, where a so-called shadow support club was established months ago, while in Prince George, the Renegades is a Hells Angels puppet club. A predominantly white organization, the Hells Angels has roughly 2,000 members in 22 countries. Canada has more Hells Angels members per capita than any other country, including the U.S., which has chapters in about 20 states. Despite portraying themselves as a harmless club of motorcycle enthusiasts, the Angels have a fearsome reputation in the criminal underworld. Last year's trial of contract killer Mickie (Phil) Smith heard evidence that one of Smith's five murder victims was Paul Percy Soluk, 33, who had ripped off Hells Angels marijuana grow-ops. Smith said he was told by an Asian gangster who arranged the murder that it was being done for the East End chapter of the Hells Angels. Smith relayed the details to an undercover policeman including how the body was chopped up by a man he called Yurik. "He's not an Angel but he works with the Angels," Smith said of Yurik. "I know he's done lots of hits." Police said the Smith case underscores how Hells Angels distance themselves from crimes that could put them behind bars for life, by contracting out to other gangsters. So far, Hells Angels in B.C. have avoided the violent and bloody public turf war that erupted on Montreal streets with the rival Rock Machine biker gang, which sparked the political will and funding to target the bikers and prosecute them on charges of murder, extortion, drug trafficking and making money from prostitution. Here in B.C., the Hells Angels have operated largely unopposed by rival biker gangs, allowing them to consolidate operations. "They are disciplined and well led," said RCMP Insp. Bob Paulson, who is in charge of major investigations involving outlaw motorcycle gangs. "Arguably there are a number of murders attributed to the HA in B.C., but they're all kind of within their element ... there was no spillover (to innocent bystanders)," Paulson said. Even if there is little street warfare, ordinary B.C. residents pay a price as increased drug trafficking and related crimes create spinoffs as simple as rising insurance rates to cover house damage caused by marijuana grow-ops, or inflated housing prices because gangsters will pay cash for more than the listed price to launder money. The huge profits reaped from the drug trade, police say, have been used by Hells Angels to establish legitimate businesses where the unknowing public spend their money. And many Hells Angels use nominees - -- trusted associates who register companies in their names -- to hide business assets, police say. Only in the last decade has B.C.'s patchwork quilt of municipal and RCMP police forces reorganized their attack on the Hells Angels, and argue that a dozen or so recent successful prosecutions prove they are finally making inroads. In the past decade, some officers feel their superiors blew two rare chances to turn insiders into informants and bust some top-level Hells Angels and other high-echelon gangsters. One of the most shocking examples was the Western Wind debacle, which is detailed in the recent book The Road to Hell: How the Biker Gangs are Conquering Canada. The book explains how the RCMP had a chance to nail drug dealers for $330 million worth of cocaine when a Vancouver Island fisherman offered to help the Mounties intercept a drug shipment between Colombians and the Hells Angels aboard the vessel Western Wind, which was headed for Victoria. The fisherman wanted to be paid $1 million and placed in witness protection, but the RCMP declined the offer. U.S. authorities intercepted the boat loaded with more than two tonnes of cocaine but no one was ever charged, says the book, which contains sharp criticism of the RCMP handling of the botched case. One of those who worked on the Western Wind file was former RCMP officer Pat Convey, now an inspector with the Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit. Convey was among those critical of how the case was handled. "It happened and I'm not going to go into it again," he said in an interview. "Yes, I got my knuckles rapped [for speaking out in the book]. I'm not in the RCMP any more." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek