Pubdate: Thu, 14 Feb 2008 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2008 The Vancouver Sun Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouver/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: Neal Hall Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?188 (Outlaw Bikers) PROSECUTOR ALLEGES JOINT VENTURE BY HELLS ANGELS Police Secretly Recorded Conversations At Gang Member's Home VANCOUVER - Conversations secretly recorded by police in 2005 indicate a senior member of the East End chapter of the Hells Angels was involved in a "joint venture" with two co-accused in cocaine trafficking, a federal prosecutor argued Wednesday during final submissions. "It demonstrates they are engaged in business," prosecutor Martha Devlin told B.C. Supreme Court Justice Anne MacKenzie. She pointed out that after police seized eight kilograms of cocaine in April 2005, accused drug trafficker David Roger Revell met with Hells Angels member David Francis Giles at the biker's Kelowna area home on May 2, 2005. Police had installed a covert listening device in Giles' home that picked him up discussing the one-kilogram bricks of cocaine seized by police almost a month earlier. "Giles is in control," Devlin argued about the dynamics of the conversation. "Giles is not deterred by the fact the cocaine is seized and they must pay back the money." She added Giles is heard advising Revell, "We'll get back up," which suggests they're both involved in cocaine trafficking. The Crown contends the drug trafficking was done for the benefit of or in association with Vancouver's East End chapter of the Hells Angels, which the Crown alleges is a criminal organization. The prosecutor also referred to a call between Giles and his common-law wife, who questioned $500 being charged to her credit card for airfares to Calgary. Giles replied that Revell had made the biker "$30,000 in the last couple of months," the Crown alleged. Devlin said Revell had met many senior Hells Angels members, which indicates he was trusted by them. "We say there is a joint venture between Giles, Revell and [Richard Andrew] Rempel with respect to the cocaine," she told the court. "They were totally aware of who they were dealing with and it was this criminal group, the Hells Angels," Devlin said in her fourth day of final arguments at the trial, which began last September. Giles, 58, a Hells Angels member for more than 20 years, is accused of possessing cocaine for the purpose of trafficking "for the benefit of, at the direction of, or in association with a criminal organization, to wit: the East End chapter of the Hells Angels." Alleged Hells Angels associates Revell, 43, and Rempel, 24, are accused of cocaine trafficking and possessing cocaine for the purpose of trafficking in association with a criminal organization -- the Hells Angels. The trial has heard how police offered $1 million to a former Cecil Hotel strip club bouncer to infiltrate the East End chapter. The man, who worked as a police agent, applied to become a Hells Angels member and was "in the program" as an official friend of the club. The $10-million police investigation concluded in the summer of 2005 with the arrest of 18 men, including five members of the Hells Angels and the son of the chapter president. Among the charges laid were cocaine and methamphetamine trafficking, assault, extortion, and weapons offences. Police raided the Hells Angels' East End chapter clubhouses in Vancouver and Kelowna, located in the Interior of B.C. The Crown contends the Hells Angels chapter had expanded to Kelowna to take control of the lucrative illegal drug market. During surveillance of Giles, Rempel and Revell, police seized three kilograms of cocaine from a storage locker and the next day seized another five kilograms of cocaine from a hidden compartment of a car kept on a used car lot operated by Rempel. The same day, Giles was seen meeting Revell in the parking lot of a local gym. The defence will begin its final arguments today at the Vancouver Law Courts. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek