Pubdate: Fri, 01 Oct 2004 Source: Victoria News (CN BC) Copyright: 2004 Victoria News Contact: http://www.vicnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1267 Author: Mark Browne Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) GANGS COMPETE FOR TURF IN CRD The last thing police need is gang members from other Canadian cities coming to the Capital Region to do business. Yet that's precisely what Victoria police are seeing of late. "Over the summertime, we've noticed a real spike in gang members as well as other active criminals moving out west," said Victoria police Sgt. Bob Martin, who heads the department's gang unit. It's becoming quite common for police to run into gang members from Alberta, particularly Edmonton, he said. Two known gang members from Edmonton were arrested by Victoria police in July. Police confiscated a nine-millimetre handgun and some marijuana. The two are members of the Cripps, named after the notorious gang that's associated with large American cities. "These guys were sporting Cripps tattoos," Martin said. "These individuals are pretty bad characters." They are well known to the Edmonton police gang unit and are believed to be violent and involved in drug trafficking, Martin said. "They're certainly not the type of visitors we want to see coming here," he said. The use of handguns isn't restricted to gang members from large Canadian cities. Police are coming across handguns among Greater Victoria gang members more so than in the past, Martin said. "If they can obtain a gun, they will," he said. That said, police are concerned about what could happen if there are any disputes between gang members from other Canadian cities and their counterparts in the Capital Region. One group of Capital Region-based gang members are known as the Esquimalt Cripps or simply the E-Crew. Despite the shared Cripps' name, there doesn't seem to be any relationship with local gangs and gang members from other cities who have been showing up in Greater Victoria, Martin said. "Our concern is that at some point if these guys cross paths there's going to be some sort of violence as a result of it," he said. Two ongoing murder investigations in Saanich with ties to Indo-Canadian gang activity on the Lower Mainland are examples of how gang-related violence from other cities can make its way to the Capital Region, Martin said. The primary activity of gangs - local and imported - in the Capital Region is cocaine trafficking, he said. Gangs are also involved in the marijuana trade, Martin said. It's becoming evident to police that organized crime is on the increase in Greater Victoria. "Organized crime is getting a foothold even more and more here," Martin said. Police have information that "upper level" organized crime members from as far east as Montreal attempting to establish themselves in the Capital Region, he said. "These guys come with pretty good credentials," Martin said. "People need to be aware of the fact that organized crime is here and it's operating at a very high level." A source familiar with the provincial jail on Wilkinson Road said gang activity is common in that institution. Gang members serving time or awaiting trial dates in the facility often fight over territory in the prison, according to the source, who asked not to be identified. "If there's three members from one gang and one member from another gang, you end up with a swarming. They'll get him in the shower or they'll get him in his cell where the officers can't see him and really do a number on him," the source said. That has prompted guards to ensure that they are kept separate from each other, the source said. "Otherwise they end up fighting over what they consider to be their area." Gang members incarcerated in Wilkinson Road jail come from various Canadian cities, although most of them are from the Capital Region and elsewhere on Vancouver Island, the source said. "The people that do come in are really open about who they're affiliated with." Gang members in the jail typically alter their prison uniforms to identify their gangs, the source said. Aside from the Cripps, the jail is also home to another local gang known as the West Coast Players. At the same time, gang members from elsewhere are making their presence known in the Capital Region, local gangs are branching out to other parts of Canada. "We've also been receiving information of our guys stretching their wings out as far east as Newfoundland. So as we import we're also exporting," Martin pointed out. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D