Pubdate: Thu, 03 Feb 2005 Source: Daily Courier, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2005 The Okanagan Valley Group of Newspapers Contact: http://www.kelownadailycourier.ca Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/531 Author: Don Plant, The Daily Courier Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?188 (Outlaw Bikers) GOING TO HELL? The Hells Angels are "immersed" in Kelowna, operating legitimate businesses as well as marijuana grow-ops, says Solicitor General Rich Coleman. In a face-to-face interview Wednesday, the province's top enforcer told The Daily Courier his ministry is trying to win legal authority to publish the names of businesses owned by the outlaw motorcycle gang and other criminal organizations "They (Hells Angles) are immersed here, no question about that. They've been immersed in Canada since the mid-1970s. They own businesses here (in Kelowna)," Coleman said "We know of a lot of them. It wouldn't hurt for the public to know who owns businesses in organized crime." Members or associates of the Hells Angels motorcycle club also own a residence at Ellis Street and Roanoke Avenue, which they use as a gathering place when members are in town. The rich and powerful club is expanding across the province, boosting its multimillion-dollar network and assuring its territorial stake in organized crime About 100 members are spread across seven chapters in B.C. - Vancouver, East End, Haney, White Rock, Mission, the Nomads and Nanaimo. They have plans for a new Kelowna chapter, and there's talk of another chapter in Surrey "These are disrespectful, uncaring criminals who want to destroy your community. And they're tied in with the Vietnamese gangs and the Indo-Canadian gangs and the Russian gangs," Coleman said "Sometimes the fight crosses over, but there's a certain structure of crime that takes place in this province." A key source of the club's cash flow is the money it earns from grow-ops, which are prevalent in the Central Okanagan. Members have created an infrastructure of supply, demand, shipping and receiving, said Coleman. "Don't kid yourself that they're some little motorcycle club that goes for a teddy-bear drive once a year," he said "The grow-op business . . . trades kilo for kilo for cocaine in the U.S. It comes back into here as cocaine. It funds the meth labs that we're dealing with; it funds the gun trade "We know of guns that have been paid for by B.C. marijuana that have been used to shoot at our troops overseas in peacekeeping missions. It's that simple." Prosecutors have recently laid charges against "significant parties" in the Hells Angels. Coleman attributes the development to him investing $4 million worth of crime proceeds into special prosecutions "They're expensive files; they take a long time," Coleman said "I don't want to piece off members of the gang or organization. I want to go after the organization itself." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek