Pubdate: Thu, 06 Dec 2007 Source: Winnipeg Free Press (CN MB) Copyright: 2007 Winnipeg Free Press Contact: http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/info/letters/index.html Website: http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/502 Author: Bruce Owen Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) DEADLY FIRE PART OF GANG WAR? Police Believe House Targeted in Ongoing Battle Over Drug Trade CITY police believe a deadly Mountain Avenue house fire early Tuesday - -- a fire police allege was intentionally set -- was part of an ongoing gang war over the drug trade in the city's North End. But police stressed the 14-year-old boy killed in the blaze was not the intended target and that the youth's own gang affiliation had nothing to do with the fire. "The house was the target," Const. Nick Paulet said. "The youth was not." A 27-year-old man and 16-year-old boy were arrested a short time after the fire and have each been charged with second-degree murder. Both are members of the Indian Posse. The fire was set at about 1:30 a.m. in the home's front porch and spread within minutes through most of the house. Paulet said he could not comment on how the fire was started: by someone throwing gas-filled bottles onto the porch or pouring a flammable liquid and igniting it. By sheer luck, two officers with the street crime unit were on patrol down Mountain Avenue at the same time. Const. Thane Chartrand and Const. Lindsay Cancilla saw two people running west from the house to Salter Street as the front of the house went up in flames. Rather than chasing the two people, the officers instead rescued 10 people inside the house from what could have been certain death or serious injury. An attempt was made to rescue Nathan Starr, who was trapped in an upstairs room, but the smoke, heat and flames were too intense. Starr, 14, was later found and rushed to hospital where he died. A wake will be held for Starr this Sunday at 5 p.m. at the Aboriginal Funeral Chapel, Starr's mother, Kim Daniels, said. He will be buried Monday at the Brookside Cemetery after a service at the chapel. Starr was a member of the MOB street gang. MOB stands for Most Organized Brothers, or Money Over B------. Sgt. Darrin Kruger said that because Chartrand and Cancilla called in the fire as soon as they did, 20 police cars flooded the area, cutting off any escape routes. It also allowed a police tracking dog to get to the scene quickly and, because of the new snow, pick up a scent almost immediately. The fresh snow held the scent from dispersing, making it easy for the dog to lead officers to a house a short distance away on Aberdeen Avenue. On Wednesday afternoon, three police cruisers were idling outside 343 Aberdeen Ave. The one-and--a-half storey home was in a row of four houses with graffiti reading "Indian Posse" and "North Side" scrawled at least 11 times along doors, fences, building walls and garage doors nearby. "There's no justice for us," said one middle-aged neighbour, who said Aberdeen residents were afraid to speak out to the family who lived at 343 about the graffiti with which their walls were repeatedly covered. "Something could come through our window tomorrow." The house was known for drug trafficking, they said. Police also said the house at 400 Mountain Ave. was targeted because it was connected to a rival gang and was competing for drug sales. But Roger Roesler, who lived with his wife, Debbie McKelvey, their children and extended family at the Mountain Avenue address, said Wednesday that's wrong. Roesler told the Free Press he was arrested almost two years ago for selling crack cocaine and got a conditional sentence. He said he has not sold drugs since then. "After the cops came, I stopped," he said. "I have no idea who the hell it is who set the fire." Riel Mitchell, 27, and the 16-year-old boy remain in custody. The boy, who stands about six feet tall and weighs almost 200 pounds, made a brief appearance Wednesday at the Manitoba Youth Centre. He has gang tattoos on both hands. His lawyer, Darren Sawchuk, said it's possible he will apply for bail in the coming weeks. Provincial court Judge Sid Lerner told the boy that if convicted, he could be sentenced as a adult. The boy nodded he understood. Mitchell was on probation at the time of his arrest. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake