Pubdate: Wed, 07 Nov 2007 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2007 The Vancouver Sun Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouver/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Authors: Kim Bolan, and Neal Hall Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?241 (Methamphetamine - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) GANG WARS GRIP METRO Police Form Task Force After Fourth Slaying In Six Days Vancouver homicide investigators are looking for potential links between the four gangsters slain in separate targeted shootings involving different crime groups over six days. And the spike in gangland slayings in the city has led top Vancouver police department officials to form a new gang violence task force that aims to get "in the face" of suspected local gang members. "We're obviously extremely concerned about this escalation of violence and potential for innocent victims to be hurt and killed," Vancouver police Deputy Chief Doug LePard told reporters Tuesday. "I would not say it's necessarily truly a gang war," he explained. "There clearly is a conflict between two or more gangs right now.... It's not a classic dispute between one gang trying to take over the territory of another gang." The Vancouver shootings early Tuesday of 25-year-old Ali Abhari, a well-known Persian gangster, and Ronal Shakeel Raj, a lesser-recognized associate, are just the latest in a series across Metro Vancouver that have shocked residents and left investigators from several municipal and specialized forces scrambling. The two men were in a Silver Mercedes leased by Raj, a trucker who had at one time been linked to the United Nations gang, when they were cut off by two SUVs on Granville Street at 70th Avenue and shot to death. Police sources say Abhari, the passenger and a mid-level drug dealer, was probably the target. Both men are believed to have been in a downtown club and on their way home. A friend of Raj's told The Vancouver Sun that the 31-year-old native of Fiji was not involved in gang activity. "He was a good friend to everyone and always wanted those around him to have a good time," said James Milacic. "As for what the media says about it being a targeted incident, maybe for the other person, I doubt it was for Shakeel," Milacic said. "Shakeel was a very kind and caring person. ... The police are making him out to be a gang member, and I assure you, he is not 'in' a gang." Raj co-owned a Port Moody house assessed at $802,000, according to property records and leased a Cadillac Escalade, in addition to the Silver Mercedes in which he was killed. Abhari, heavily tattooed with Persian script, was known to frequent downtown nightspots and was an associate of a number of Persian gangsters targeted in shootings across the Lower Mainland over the last year. Insp. Mike Porteous of the Vancouver major crime section said it is still early in the investigation of Tuesday's slayings, as well as the Shaughnessy murder Saturday of Hong Chao (Raymond) Huang -- a top crime boss of the notorious Big Circle Boys who was on the radar of the RCMP nationally. This week's flurry of gang killings began Halloween night, when a 51-year-old Richmond man Hiep Quang Do, was fatally shot at a Vietnamese restaurant at 4884 Victoria Drive. Porteous said police need the public to come forward with information. "We take it very seriously. Even though it appears that the victims were specifically targeted, I am not going to downplay the public risk," Porteous said. "It is a super high priority for the police and if anyone has seen anything call us." Deputy Chief Bob Rich said the city's new gang violence task force will redeploy patrol officers to try to stop the outbreak of fatal shootings on city streets. "The public should be aware there is no greater priority right now than to deal with this issue," he said, adding the new patrol squad will be "very much an in-your-face" unit. "We will be confronting people who are gangsters moving about our streets and we will be checking on where they live," said Rich, who is in charge of operations section, including patrol officers. "Today we want to send a very clear message to gang members that we are going to be watching them very closely," he added. "We will be letting them know that these activities are just not acceptable." He promised Vancouverites "we are going to take every step to ensure their safety," he added. Asked how many officers will be assigned to the new unit, Rich said details still are being worked out. "I have placed Supt. Andy Hobbs in charge of putting this task force together," he said. Rich added that Vancouver police Chief Jim Chu was meeting Tuesday with other senior police leaders in Metro Vancouver to consider a regional response to the brazen gang violence problem that has erupted lately. Vancouver police are already part of B.C.'s Integrated Gang Task Force, which was formed three years ago after another rash of gang shootings. There has been increasing tension between a number of crime groups in recent months as battles for drug turf heat up, especially between the UN and another violent gang, the Independent Soldiers. Four of the six men killed in the multiple homicide in Surrey Oct. 19 were linked to the Independent Soldiers. Two other victims were innocent bystanders shot in the head, apparently to prevent them from being witnesses. "The violence that we are certainly seeing today is directly attributable to control of the drug trade," said RCMP Insp. Brian Cantera of the Greater Vancouver Drug Section. The two main local products are marijuana and methamphetamine, Cantera said, which are being sold for cocaine and guns and money, whether by street gangsters or big players such as Huang. "That's how organized crime operates to control that trade." LePard said some romanticize gang life. "I was at the scene this morning," he said of the south Granville scene. "Those who think the gang lifestyle is appealing, looking at these two men, full of bullet holes, they didn't look glamorous at all." He said gang members are making tens of thousands of dollars a week, own fancy cars, live in penthouse apartments and spend a lot of money on drugs and women. "They make a lot of money and spend a lot of money," LePard said. "They live for today." That's because they often don't live long, he said. RCMP Supt. John Robin, head of the Integrated Gang Task Force, said Metro Vancouver is a North American centre for the drug trade and inevitably faces gangland violence. He said police are on top of the issue, but valuable resources are sidetracked by the increasing demands of disclosure once cases go to court. Legislative changes may be needed to deal with the problem, Robin said. Large court cases with multiple defendants are even more difficult to process. "The whole court process is sucking up resources," he said. "So many of our police resources are sucked up with the disclosure process." RCMP Supt. Wayne Rideout, head of the Integrated Homicide Investigation Team, said that in a metropolitan area of 2.6 million, a small number of gangsters are causing most of the problem. "There are 300 or 400 people who are creating all of the crime. We need to get serious about those people. The police are serious ... the community has got to get involved in this and we have got to have a no-tolerance policy." Rideout said most of those involved in organized crime are not rich - -- they are partying away their money and must use violence as a way to maintain their position on the totem pole. "It is all a house of cards. So they stay on top with violence, by intimidation, by this illusion they create," he said. "The violence itself is what creates the hierarchy today, especially among the mid-level guys." But there is also the revolving-door problem -- people prosecuted who get out and are right back at it or even committing violent crimes while on bail. "This is the inherent core problem with what is going on -- the sterile environment of a courtroom versus the reality of the street," Rideout said. "We have got a generation of police officers that say 'Holy, how long do I keep this fight up for?'... They are working night and day and they are giving up time with their families." He also said the disclosure requirements are now so onerous that sometimes the Crown decides not to proceed at all. "You could be disclosing a million pages of documents for one machine gun," Rideout said, adding that defence lawyers often use disclosure requirements as a strategy to bog down cases. He said the murder rates are relatively steady across Metro Vancouver, but the number of shootings related to organized crime is way up. And more people who are critically wounded by gunfire are surviving than just a few years ago because of quality health care. "It is not the murder stats that are up, it is the attempted murder, the aggravated assaults and the shootings that are way up," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom