Pubdate: Sat, 13 Jan 2007 Source: Richmond Review, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2007 Richmond Public Library Contact: http://www.richmondreview.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/704 Author: Martin van den Hemel Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?241 (Methamphetamine - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Marijuana - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) SHOOTOUT LINKED TO DRUG FEUD Police Had Never Seen This Many Shots Exchanged During a Clash Last Thursday night's brazen shootout at Dover Neighbourhood School Park was just the latest chapter in an on-going war over illegal drugs and unsettled debts, with battlefields mainly in Richmond and North Vancouver. One of the hospitalized victims of the Jan. 4 park shooting, Nikki Tajali, 26, is the younger brother of 30-year-old David Nima Tajali, who was gunned down in the hallway of his Richmond apartment building late last year, on the day he dodged another bullet of sorts. The elder Tajali was shot Nov. 16, on the very day the B.C. Supreme Court sentenced several of his co-accused to between four and seven years in prison for their involvement in a dial-a-dope criminal organization known as Dark Alley. (Dark Alley doled out cocaine, heroin, marijuana and methamphetamine mainly via telephone requests and was shut down by the Langley RCMP following a year-long investigation in 2003.) For some reason, charges against David Tajali were either stayed or dismissed. He was shot repeatedly at Casuarina apartments, a new 246-unit residential high-rise on Hemlock Drive, near Westminster Highway and Garden City Road. An apartment resident, who narrowly avoided a bullet fired in the hallway sliced through his bathroom wall, dragged a heavily-bleeding Tajali into his apartment and called 911. Retaliatory Shot? In the latest violence, young men armed with automatic weapons fired as many as 150 shots at Dover Park, near a Dover Crescent home with links to the Tajali family, sources say. In addition to Nikki Tajali, who remains in hospital recovering from serious injuries, the two other men injured during the gunplay were Vahid Mahanian, 30, and Sahand Askari, 22. All are well known to police, according to Sgt. Shinder Kirk, of the Integrated Gang Task Force, which is one of the police forces assisting the Richmond RCMP investigation. "Certainly from the gang task force perspective, we know these individuals...we're not just aware of them...we know what they do, we know who they associate with, and now it's just a question...of bringing them before the courts." Richmond RCMP Cpl. Peter Thiessen said investigators have received no co-operation from the three men who have been hospitalized with gunshot wounds. All are being treated as suspects first and victims second, he said. As of press time Wednesday, two of the men were still in hospital under police guard. One man, who was recovering in Richmond Hospital, had a police officer stationed at the door to his private room, and a security guard checking the identification of all visitors to the ward. Although some of those involved are of Persian descent, Sgt. Shinder Kirk noted that the criminal organization believed linked to the park shooting has members from all ethnic groups: Caucasian, Asian and Middle Eastern. Kirk said he's never seen this many shots exchanged during a clash. North Shore Link The apartment and park shootings appear to be linked to earlier serious violence in North Vancouver. Last July, a man and a woman were kidnapped after their white SUV was fired at repeatedly at a sports complex in North Vancouver. One of the kidnapping victims was rescued by police in Richmond the following day in the same building in which David Tajali was shot in November. Vahid Mahanian, who suffered a serious gunshot wound to his lower body sustained during the park shooting, also has links to the North Shore. In 1999, he and his girlfriend were sentenced to four years in prison for a 1997 home invasion in North Vancouver in which the pair brandished machine guns and terrorized a young family. Sahand Askari had also previously been charged in connection with a home invasion in North Vancouver in 2002. David Tajali is also well known to police for more than just being a shooting victim. He was charged in Vancouver in October 2003 with carrying a concealed weapon, possession of a weapon for a dangerous purpose and unauthorized possession of a firearm. All those charges were either stayed or dismissed. In June 2005, he was charged with drug trafficking and possession of a controlled substance for the purpose of trafficking, but one charge was stayed and the other dismissed. David Tajali's co-accused weren't as fortunate in the dial-a-dope police investigation. Eric Montgomery was sentenced to seven years and eight months, John Wayne Newson to six years, Philipe Zopf to five years and eight months, and Margit Mikelsons to four years. Their last names suggest they are from various cultural backgrounds, as police have indicated about this crime group. The group David Tajali was linked to, Dark Alley, had a reputation for being brazen. Its members issued business cards with phone numbers for their round-the-clock drug operation. There were managers running each community--from Aldergrove to Abbotsford, Langley to Cloverdale and other Lower Mainland cities--and they created shifts to ensure drugs were available and supplied seven days per week, 24 hours per day. At the time of David Tajali's 2003 arrest--police issued a press release in in which his name was misspelt Talaji--he was also living in Richmond. Thiessen said it was a miracle that those living in the hundreds of homes that border three sides of Dover Park, as well as those strolling through the park, or walking their dogs, avoided the errant gunfire. Some bullets struck homes in six residential complexes, including bedrooms. Thiessen said police are devoting the bulk of their resources to this investigation, including 135 police officers who were called to the park shooting within the first 12 hours. He noted that two semi-automatic assault rifles and four semi-automatic handguns were recovered from the scene of the Thursday's shooting. "We're not talking small arms here. We're talking semi-automatic assault rifles that are meant for one purpose. I think it's clear what the purpose was and what was going on in this park." Violent History A new Middle Eastern integrated crime unit was recently created on the North Shore, involving the West Vancouver Police Department and the North Vancouver RCMP. North Vancouver RCMP Const. John MacAdam said there is organized crime in the Middle Eastern community, but not on the same level as mafia or biker gangs. "There's an element of organized crime they do deal with, with drug dealing, dial-a-doping and fraud rings," he said. Professor Robert Gordon, director of the school of criminology at Simon Fraser University, suspects the Dover Park shooting was actually an attempted hit that went sideways. "(They ran) into problems because the other side...were more canny and better equipped and able to push back more vigorously than they had anticipated," he said. "These guys don't bother with lawyers. They have much less expensive and much more effective ways of dealing with their disputes. And they just use handguns...'You've got to abide by our agreement otherwise we're going to start popping you off.'" Knocking out a drug competitor may also have been a motivation for the shooting, Gordon said. In the early 1990s, the gang Persian Pride operated from the North Shore. It comprised young men, between 16 and 23 years of age, mainly from the Iranian community. With about a dozen people at its core, the gang sold drugs and provided the muscle, and had links to organized crime groups. "It sounds very much as if there's a resurgence of criminal groups operating...out of North Vancouver and one assumes if they're ranging as far as Richmond that they're involved in drugs. I'd put my money on it." Gordon said he wrote an organized crime and gang report for the B.C. Attorney General's ministry in the late 1990s in which he predicted that there would be a resurgence in crime group or gang activity. "I don't think it will be anything like it was last time around because the government learned a hell of a lot from that. But it obviously is resurging." Gordon doesn't believe this is an ethnic-based clash. He likened the violence to that seen in recent years in the Indo-Canadian community, with "warring groups involved in various aspects in (the drug) market." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake