Pubdate: Sat, 21 Jul 2007 Source: Calgary Herald (CN AB) Copyright: 2007 Calgary Herald Contact: http://www.canada.com/calgary/calgaryherald/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/66 Author: Jason van Rassel, Calgary Herald Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?188 (Outlaw Bikers) CRAZY DRAGONS HEAD LIST OF ALBERTA CRIME THREATS At a time when Hells Angels are gathering outside Calgary to celebrate the group's 10th anniversary in Alberta, law enforcement agencies are identifying another gang -- the Crazy Dragons -- as the province's top criminal threat. The Criminal Intelligence Service Alberta's annual report, obtained Friday by the Herald, identifies 54 criminal groups of varying sophistication operating in the province. Four groups are identified as "mid-level" threats, meaning they have demonstrated some level of sophistication and are linked to multiple criminal groups. The remaining 50 were classified as "lower level" threats focused on a limited amount of activities and fewer links to other criminal organizations. "The most noticeable criminal group in Alberta -- with cocaine operations throughout the province as well as in parts of British Columbia, Saskatchewan and the Northwest Territories -- is known to police as the Crazy Dragons," says the report, a collection of intelligence from Alberta's law enforcement agencies. In another passage that doesn't refer to the Crazy Dragons by name, the document says nearly every law enforcement agency that contributed to the report has encountered the gang. "Among competing groups there is one that surpasses all the others with their drug products being provided in some measure to virtually every reporting city and town, even in the midst of activities by other criminal groups," the report says. Nothing is said about any specific activity in Calgary, but police in the past have linked the Crazy Dragons to the deadly feud between two street gangs, Fresh off the Boat (FOB) and FOB Killers (FK). A previous Criminal Intelligence Service Alberta report said the Crazy Dragons may have supplied guns to one of the gangs. Violence between FOB and FK has killed nine members or associates since 2001. This year's report said a second group, led by a Vietnamese organized crime figure, "is involved in the large-scale production of marihuana (sic) in southern Alberta." The report bleakly predicts the province's booming economy will allow organized crime groups to maintain their grip on the underworld while police deal with the fallout among the working poor and drug addicted. "It is suggested the bulk of police intervention will become increasingly necessary at the street level where social network breakdowns (domestic and labour-related) as well as competition among lower level criminals will manifest themselves with greater frequency," reads the report. The Hells Angels, meanwhile, are identified as being involved in the street-level drug trade. The worldwide biker gang arrived in Alberta 10 years ago when it took over locally based independent gangs such as the Grim Reapers in Calgary. Despite that history and three chapters in Alberta -- Calgary, Edmonton and a "Nomad" chapter based in Red Deer -- Criminal Intelligence Service Alberta says the gang has failed to make significant inroads in the province's criminal underworld. "Without making light of their propensity for extreme violence -- augmented by loyalty to the club's name -- members of the Hells Angels continue to lack in criminal business savvy," the report says. "They have proven themselves to be an available source of 'muscle' either for their own endeavours or for other criminal organizations. They are preoccupied with the supremacy of their name within the criminal biker sub-culture." The Hells Angels' Calgary chapter has suffered some highly publicized setbacks, notably having to abandon a fortified clubhouse under construction in Bowness because it violated building codes. The chapter's then-president, Ken Szczerba, was jailed in 2001 for trying to arrange a plot to bomb the homes of Ald. Dale Hodges and a community activist involved in getting construction halted. Nevertheless, police agencies underestimate the Hells Angels in this province at their peril, said the author of several books on the gang. "They weren't the best and brightest of the bikers, but they're still part of an international organization and they're dangerous," said Yves Lavigne. More than 50 Hells Angels from different chapters pulled up to the local clubhouse southeast of Calgary Friday evening as RCMP cruisers patrolled nearby roads. Neighbour Nancy Gunn said the motorcycle gang has met at the clubhouse next door before, and she's never had any concerns. "Rush hour traffic is worse than having a few bikes go by," she said. Monitoring Hells Angels parties has dubious value, Lavigne added, considering they take great care to behave in public. "When the Hells Angels socialize, they know they're under scrutiny," he said. Although there are only three chapters in Alberta, the Hells Angels involvement in the drug trade is widespread, said Lavigne. "Who do you think supplies Fort McMurray and Grande Prairie?" Those boomtowns are evidence Alberta's robust economy has a downside, Criminal Intelligence Service Alberta says -- growing demand for illegal drugs that will enrich organized crime groups and stretch police resources. "The problems associated with harmful lifestyle choices facilitated by increased incomes may predominate law enforcement attention," the report says. - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath