Pubdate: Fri, 09 Dec 2005 Source: Prince George Free Press (CN BC) Copyright: 2005 BC Newspaper Group Contact: http://www.pgfreepress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2135 Author: Arthur Williams Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) COPS CONTINUE CLAMPDOWN The recent sentencing of Richard Allan Scurr, 23, alleged leader of The Crew - a Prince George organized crime group with links to the Vancouver Hell's Angels Nomads outlaw motorcycle gang -for possession of narcotics for the purpose of trafficking has put the city's organized crime problem into the spotlight. Scurr was sentenced, Dec. 5, to seven months in prison and two years probation. Judge Weatherly ordered the Surrey native to stay out of Prince George for those two years. Scurr's co-accused - Bernard Joseph Schneider, 43, of Prince George - is scheduled for trial at a later date. "The Crew are a group of young guys from the lower mainland. They literally came up here to rape, loot and pillage. They've used intimidation and violence and have just taken over houses," Sgt. Tom Bethune said. "The jailing of Robert Scurr will have a minimal effect on The Crew. They'll just replace him." Bethune leads a Prince George RCMP task force which targets drugs and property crimes. Fighting organized crime is a major part of their job, he said. The high-profile arrest of Renegades leader William James Moore - along with nine other Renegades and Hell's Angels Nomads members - in January, however, did significantly hurt the Renegades, Bethune said. The arrests were the result of a 20-month undercover investigation between Prince George RCMP and Vancouver Police. In March, Moore was found murdered near his Salmon Valley home after being released on bail. The Crew are a relatively new addition to the organized crime scene in Prince George, Bethune said, and selling crack cocaine is their primary business. "They could only do that with the agreement of the Renegades," he said. "The Renegades is a puppet organization of the Hell's Angels. It all flows back to the Hell's Angels in Vancouver." The Renegades' core business is selling marijuana and powder cocaine, he said, but both organizations are directly and indirectly involved in prostitution, theft and money laundering. Both have ruthlessly driven competitors out of the Prince George market. "No one in Prince George can sell [illegal] drugs without permission of the Hell's Angels," he said. "There was five homicides last year that are tied to organized crime out of seven." Both groups answer to a single Hell's Angel in Vancouver through a series of middlemen, Bethune added. The Crew sell directly to the street, which increases the profit margin and the risk of getting caught, Bethune said. The Renegades use intermediaries to actually sell the drugs and hence take less risks. Drugs is a multi-million dollar business in Prince George. "It's a very low amount what we actually confiscate and seize. At street level, a single dose of crack cocaine goes for $20. We had given to us from the airport [security] a seven kilogram shipment of crack cocaine," Bethune said. "Are they making money? Sure they are. It's huge." There are challenges which make it difficult for police to investigate and break up organized crime, he said, and criminal groups are very good at exploiting them. "Money is being laundered through legitimate businesses here in Prince George," Bethune said. "We can't put up a sign saying, 'This business launders money.'" Criminal gangs prey on people's greed, fear and desperation to prevent them from speaking out to police, he said. "We can only enforce the tools and laws we have - from Ottawa right down to the municipal level," Bethune said. "We need people to help us. They can't run a crack shack unless they have a landlord who turns a blind eye." The higher up in the chain a person is, the harder it is to catch them, he said. "These investigations can be very time consuming and it takes a long time to get a search warrant. It can take weeks of surveillance and developing sources to get a warrant," Bethune said. "The criminals know that and by the time we bust a crack shack, they already have another one." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake