Pubdate: Mon, 26 Jun 2006 Source: Ottawa Citizen (CN ON) Copyright: 2006 The Ottawa Citizen Contact: http://www.canada.com/ottawa/ottawacitizen/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/326 Author: David Pugliese Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?188 (Outlaw Bikers) EFFECTS OF CRACKDOWN ON BIKERS 'SHORT LIVED' Military Report Warns Outlaw Gangs Extremely Resilient Police operations against outlaw motorcycle gangs have diminished their influence and put a dent in criminal activities, but such successes will likely be short-lived, according to a newly released military intelligence report obtained by the Citizen. The heavily censored report cited successful police operations from 2001 to 2003 against the Hells Angels, the Bandidos and the Outlaws motorcycle gangs. But the 2003 intelligence study also warns that biker gangs are resilient in bouncing back and will use " lower-level criminals and supporters" in the future to expand their influence. The Defence Department report, produced by military police criminal intelligence officers, pointed to a series of raids, including a 2001 operation resulting in the arrest of approximately 40 Outlaws gang members, that left that biker club in a state of "disarray and their criminal influence diminished" in Ontario. "The OMG (outlaw motorcycle gang) world's involvement in illegal and organized criminal activities has certainly diminished to a slow pace; however the national outlook on these successes is believed to be short-lived, and that OMG members will conduct these tasks and 'expand their influence' through their various lower-level criminals and supporters," noted that report called Operation Paramount. The Citizen requested the report under the Access to Information law, but Defence Department officials withheld the records for more than 15 months. The department's access to information branch only released the report after the newspaper filed a complaint with Information Commissioner John Reid. Capt. Mark Giles said while military investigators would still collect information on defence personnel who have affiliations with biker gangs, "Operation Paramount is not the same priority as it was in 2003 and 2004." "Our investigators are not as engaged with it as they were in that time period," he added. Capt. Giles suggested that Operation Paramount, along with media coverage of the fact the Canadian Forces are keeping tabs on military personnel with biker affiliations, contributed to a decline in such cases. He said in the past, such incidents involved small numbers of military personnel and were usually minor affiliations. In 2004, the military reported to the government that it had monitored 62 Canadian Forces personnel suspected of being linked to outlaw biker gangs, according to records previously obtained by the Citizen. The personnel were believed to be involved in a range of activities -- from sporting Hells Angels insignias, to moonlighting as security guards for gang clubhouses, to trafficking drugs. The Forces launched Operation Paramount in the spring of 2002 as a result of an increase in reports of military personnel associating with outlaw motorcycle gangs. Capt. Giles said he did not have details on numbers of military members associated with such gangs, but noted that the Forces would likely not release those figures to the public. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman