Pubdate: Wed, 18 Oct 2006 Source: Province, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2006 The Province Contact: http://www.canada.com/theprovince/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/476 Author: Matthew Ramsey, The Province BRACE FOR GANG WAR, POLICE WARN Clash Over Drugs, Guns, Power Police Are Bracing for a Gang War in B.C. With the Imminent Release of an Indo-Canadian Mobster From Jail. "There will be shootings for sure. For the most part, it's bad guy versus bad guy but if you interfere in their business, if you are in the wrong nightclub at the wrong time, you're totally at risk," said Vancouver Det. Const. Doug Spencer. "They really don't care. They're not good with verbal skills, these guys." The mobster who police worry will be the flashpoint for the violence is Peter Adiwal, 27. He has been linked to the multi-ethnic Independent Soldiers gang whose nominal leader Paul Dosanjh, 28, was gunned down while Adiwal was in custody in 2004. The Soldiers have been without strong leadership since then. Adiwal is serving seven years stemming from the kidnapping and beating of Sukhjit Singh Basi in 2003. Adiwal is due for release in January. His twin brother Mike Adiwal is already out on parole for the same offence. "Peter's the stronger person of the two. His reputation precedes him," Spencer said. When Peter hits the streets, he will most likely attempt to unite the disparate elements of the Independent Soldiers under his leadership, Spencer said. "A bunch of other guys think they run the [Independent Soldiers] show," Spencer said. "[Peter's] going to completely take control." And, Spencer added, there is concern that Adiwal's pending release will kick off a spate of violence over the unsolved 2004 shooting murder of Adiwal's best friend, Phil Hothi, who died alongside former high-school basketball star Herman Dhillon. The two men were shot dead at accused drug dealer Tommy Chan's East Vancouver home. Chan, 30, was shot in a downtown nightclub last May and died in hospital. The grisly toll will rise when Peter Adiwal is freed, Spencer predicted. Once the Independent Soldiers are unified, Spencer said, the focus will shift to battles with established criminal organizations such as the UN Gang and the Hells Angels as all try to carve out or maintain their place in B.C.'s lucrative drug trade. The expected clash between the UN Gang and the Soldiers is of particular concern because both groups are up-and-coming and eager to establish dominance. "If they run into each other for whatever reason, it's all-out war," Spencer warned. Sgt. Shinder Kirk of the B.C. Integrated Gang Task Force said Adiwal is well known to them. "We're aware of who he is, we're aware of his previous activities and we're aware of what he may get back into when he's released," Kirk said. Two members of the Independent Soldiers were arrested in Kelowna last week with a loaded 9 mm handgun, a crossbow, 18 9-mm gun barrels, cash and paraphernalia related to the gang, police say. It is the first time Independent Soldiers have been arrested in the Central Okanagan. "If they view Kelowna as a place they can make money, they will come here," said Const. Annie Linteau. The reason the Soldiers are branching out to the Okanagan is pretty clear, according to Spencer -- police know them too well in the Lower Mainland. "They're up there setting up grow houses," he said. "There's not going to be enough clients. That's when they're going to collide [with other gangs in the city]." RIVAL GANGS - - The Independent Soldiers are a loosely affiliated group of primarily Indo-Canadian gangsters involved in marijuana grow-ops, cocaine and guns. The gang originated in southeast Vancouver and was once known as the Sunset Boys because they were active around the Sunset Community Centre. Former leader Sukvinder Singh Dosanjh died in a car crash last fall. His brother Gerpal Singh "Paul" Dosanjh died in a hail of gunfire in an East Vancouver restaurant in March 2004. - - The UN Gang is a relatively unknown quantity that surfaced in Chilliwack and Abbotsford about four years ago. The gang takes its name from the United Nations because of its members' diverse ethnic backgrounds, including Indo-Canadians, Persians, Caucasians and Asians. They are known to be violent and well armed. Police sources say the gang has established a chokehold on the drug trade in the Downtown Eastside. - --- MAP posted-by: Elaine