Pubdate: Mon, 05 Jun 2006 Source: Ottawa Sun (CN ON) Copyright: 2006 Canoe Limited Partnership Contact: http://www.ottawasun.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/329 Author: Paul Turenne Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?188 (Outlaw Bikers) DRUGS AND VIOLENCE, THE COMMON THREAD Street gangsters in Winnipeg come in all shapes and sizes - from aboriginal teens in disadvantaged neighbourhoods to white bikers born and bred in the suburbs. But despite their differences, two things bind them: Drugs and violence. Manitoba's gangsters and organized crime members - last estimated at more than 1,500 - are lured to the criminal underworld for reasons including a sense of belonging, personal protection and status. But it's the money made from selling gang-controlled drugs that keeps them coming. It's impossible to estimate the money that sales of cocaine, crystal methamphetamine, marijuana and less common drugs put into pockets of Winnipeg gangsters, though police have said the city's cocaine trade alone is worth more than $5 million a month. A large portion of that trade can be traced to the city's two biggest outlaw motorcycle clubs: The Hells Angels and the Bandidos. "I've heard them referred to as motorcycle enthusiasts and certainly they are that and more," Sgt. Rob Harding, a supervisor in the Winnipeg police organized crime unit, told Sun Media last fall. "Probably the main part of their business is the drug trade. It's a money-making venture. And that's what they do. They make money in the drug trade." In February, Winnipeg police arrested 13 people with alleged ties to the Hells Angels - including Manitoba chapter president Ernie Dew - after an undercover police informant bought more than $400,000 worth of cocaine and meth from the bikers in less than a year. That headline-grabbing sweep is the kind of bite Mayor Sam Katz wants to take out of organized crime more often, but much of the fight against gangs is coming in smaller measures. After the provincial government provided the city with $4 million in gaming revenue over two years to recruit an additional 48 cops, Katz and police Chief Jack Ewatski launched Operation Clean Sweep last November to clamp down on street crime - much of it gang-related - mainly in the troubled West End. "We're moving in the right direction. We need to do more," Katz said. "And we're going to put in more energy and as many resources as we need to make sure we can deal with gang violence." Clean Sweep was initially estimated to cost $1.6 million with 45 officers for three months. Katz has since pledged it will run indefinitely, and he denies the Winnipeg police union's charges the operation will run with as few as four officers this summer due to other staffing demands. Besides the biker gangs and their puppet clubs - groups of mostly suburban, mostly white young men who run drugs and weapons for the bikers in order to insulate their superiors from evidence - Winnipeg is home to Asian-based, aboriginal-based and African-based crime groups, as well as European-based groups including the Mafia. "We've got European connections here. We've got Italian connections here connected to eastern Canada and eastern states, Chicago. There's some of everything," Harding said. "There's connections here from almost anything you can think of." Some of the better known Winnipeg gangs include native groups such as the Indian Posse, the Manitoba Warriors and the Native Syndicate. These gangs have a large presence at Manitoba prisons as well. The Native Syndicate, in fact, was started behind bars. Last month inmate Sheldon McKay was asphyxiated to death in a cell at Stony Mountain Institution, just north of Winnipeg. A source told Sun Media McKay, serving a life sentence for manslaughter, was a high-ranking member of the Indian Posse. RCMP have not said whether the killing appears gang-related. One of the newest gangs in Winnipeg made national headlines last October when Phil Haiart, a 17-year-old bystander, was killed by a stray bullet allegedly fired as a result of in-fighting between the Mad Cowz and splinter group African Mafia. The Mad Cowz, which Winnipeg police became aware of in 2004, is composed mainly of teenage African immigrants who live - and sell cocaine - in the city's West End. The gang has become known for ruthlessness and a lack of hesitation to use violence, but has managed to keep itself out of the news since a flurry of attention appeared shortly after Haiart's shooting. - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath