Pubdate: Sat, 28 Nov 2009 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2009 The Vancouver Sun Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: Neal Hall Vancouver Sun JUDGE DELIVERS BODY BLOW TO CROWN IN HELLS ANGELS CASE 'Unexpected' Decision Throws Out Two Charges Alleging Vancouver's East End Chapter of the Angels Is a Criminal Organization A B.C. Supreme Court judge dealt a devastating blow to police and prosecutors Friday, when he ruled the Crown is prohibited from proceeding on criminal-organization charges against two Hells Angels members. Justice Peter Leask decided to grant a defence application that the Crown cannot proceed at trial on charges that allege the East End chapter of the Hells Angels is a criminal organization. "My decision is the Crown is stopped from leading evidence that the East End charter Hells Angels is a criminal organization," the judge ruled. "Well, what are we going to do next?" Leask then said, smiling, after making his six-second decision. The accused, Randy Potts, a Hells Angel member, was also smiling after the ruling. His co-accused, John Punko, was appearing via video monitor, which could not be seen from the public gallery. The two Hells Angels members had faced a total of nine charges at trial, including two that alleged they directed the production and distribution of methamphetamine in association with or for the benefit of a criminal organization, namely the East End charter of the Hells Angels. After the ruling, prosecutor Martha Devlin told the judge the Crown was ready to proceed on the remaining drug charges against Potts and Punko, but the judge suggested defence counsel would be interested in the Crown's position on sentence. Defence lawyers Bonnie Craig and Richard Cairns had previously told the judge that their clients would be agreeable to entering a guilty plea on the other charges if the Crown dropped the criminal-organization charges. The case marked the third failed prosecution on criminal-organization charges against the Hells Angels arising from a $10-million police investigation code-named E-Pandora, which ended in 2005 with the arrest of six Hells Angels and a dozen associates. RCMP Insp. Gary Shinkaruk, a senior officer formerly involved in the investigation that targeted the East End Hells Angels, said Friday after the ruling that Leask's decision was "unexpected." He added that police plan to meet with the Crown to consider if the decision can be appealed. "We'll continue to investigate criminal organizations to the best of our ability and bring the evidence to court," Shinkaruk added. "I believe the Hells Angels will continue to be a criminal organization and will operate as such," he said. Shinkaruk pointed out that despite no ruling in B.C. that the Hells Angels is a criminal organization, such rulings have been made by courts in Ontario, Manitoba and Quebec. Potts and Punko will return to court Dec. 7 to face trial or plead guilty to the remaining charges. The drug trial was scheduled to begin Dec. 14 and to last three months. The defence applied to the judge a day earlier to order the Crown be prohibited from prosecuting the criminal-organization charges, arguing a jury at another trial that ended last summer acquitted Potts and Punko of criminal-organization charges, so they should not be punished twice. Devlin argued that the criminal-organization charges should not be dropped because the judge could not speculate on why the jury came to its verdict on the criminal-organization charges. The 10-month trial ended last July with the jury convicting Potts and Punko on weapons charges. The judge found Potts held the arsenal of weapons for the East End Hells Angels, including grenades, a loaded semi-automatic pistol and three other guns. Potts, 49, was sentenced to seven years but effectively got time served after being granted double credit for four years spent in pre-trial custody. He is now free on bail. Punko, 43, was convicted of the unauthorized possession of a loaded semi-automatic pistol and sentenced to 15 months in jail, plus a consecutive sentence of four years for counselling a police agent to do damage to a Surrey home where Punko was trying to collect a large amount of money from a man. It was effectively a sentence of time served but Punko was recently denied bail by Leask. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake