Pubdate: Thu, 22 Feb 2007 Source: Montreal Gazette (CN QU) Copyright: 2007 The Gazette, a division of Southam Inc. Contact: http://www.canada.com/montreal/montrealgazette/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/274 Author: Catherine Solyom, The Gazette SENTENCES SEND GANGS MESSAGE Pelletier Leader Gets 10 Years. First Time Federal Gangsterism Law Used To Shut Down A Street Gang In Canada Gang leader Bernard Mathieu got a 10-year prison sentence, the "delivery boy" got almost five years, and other members of the Pelletier Ave. gang received something in between for their roles in dealing drugs, arms and fear in Montreal North. With those sentences handed down yesterday, Quebec Court Judge Jean-Pierre Bonin brought an end to a five-month megatrial and the gang's 10-year hold on the neighbourhood, which had left high school students hooked on crack and residents cowering in their homes. It was the first time the federal gangsterism law was successfully used to shut down a street gang in Canada - an example other provinces should follow, crown prosecutor Jean-Pierre St-Jean said. "If I was a member of a street gang in Montreal, I'd try to move somewhere else in Canada," St-Jean said yesterday. "The message (these sentences send) is that if you sell dope in front of a school, you'll have problems with the justice administration. Now the street is calm. ... People are free to go out and they don't have to be afraid of anything." Mathieu was arrested in 2005, along with more than 25 people tied to his network - five of whom were eventually tried and convicted of committing offences for the benefit of a criminal organization. The investigation began after two men delivering drugs in the area were shot dead in 2003. Using wiretaps and surveillance, police gathered evidence that the gang was, in the judge's words, "holding the street hostage," dealing drugs and using violence. Phone calls and secret meetings also showed Mathieu, the small, bespectacled man in the prisoner's box yesterday, was the gang's leader. Prosecutor Eric de Champlain said yesterday it was thanks to the gangsterism convictions, which impose consecutive sentences, that Mathieu and others got relatively severe terms, despite having thin, if any, criminal records. Also sentenced yesterday were Mathieu's cousin, Jean-Robert Pierre-Antoine, who was given six years for trafficking and gangsterism; Hansley Joseph and Jean-Pierre Joseph, who got six years and 41/2 years, respectively, for drug trafficking; and Serge Hadley Mussotte, who leased property on Christophe Colombe Ave. to serve as a cache for drugs and weapons. Mussotte, considered the "delivery boy," was sentenced to four years and nine months for trafficking and conspiracy. But if the Crown was rejoicing in yesterday's developments, defence lawyer Clemente Monterosso and his client were not. Mathieu has always denied being the gang's leader. The defence says it will appeal both the conviction and the sentence for gangsterism - which added three years to Mathieu's overall sentence. "The law on gangsterism is too vague and imprecise. It has to be restricted," Monterosso said. "One has to know beforehand: What do we have the right to do? What is the difference between conspiracy and gangsterism?" Monterosso will also be fighting for his client on another front. Mathieu, 35, born in Haiti but in Canada since age 8, faces deportation. The immigration law enacted in 1999 says a permanent resident sentenced to more than two years in a federal prison faces automatic deportation, with no right to appeal. "Mathieu has been here 27 years. Whatever he became, he became it here in Canada. It has nothing to do with Haiti," Monterosso said. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek