Pubdate: Tue, 14 Dec 2010 Source: Province, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2010 Canwest Publishing Inc. Contact: http://www.canada.com/theprovince/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/476 Authors: Sam Cooper And Cheryl Chan MURDER TRIGGERED GANG WAR Source also links bloodshed to contracted attack The Sunday morning shooting of 10 people outside a Vancouver west-side restaurant was triggered by the murder of gangster Gurmit Dhak in a Metrotown mall parking lot on Oct. 16, police said Monday. Const. Jana McGuinness said all the victims had gang affiliations and no one outside of their group was shot. The gunfire erupted when a party of about 30 people left the Best Neighbours Restaurant after closing time. Bullets from an automatic weapon were sprayed at the group of men and their girlfriends. A gun was later found by police just a block from Mayor Gregor Robertson's home. Meanwhile, a police source told The Province that the shooting was linked to a home invasion in Vancouver that had been contracted out to four hired thugs from Reno, Nev. "[Sunday's shooting] looks like an immediate retaliation for the home invasion," said the source. "All those injured in the shooting are associates of the Independent Soldiers and their girlfriends." McGuinness would not confirm the Reno link. "We're not making the connection that's suggested by that source," said McGuinness. "We haven't made that connection." McGuinness did say that three men from Nevada were charged with weapons offences and a man from Surrey has charges pending against him after the group tried to force their way into an apartment on Melville Street in Vancouver on Dec. 10. A large quantity of drugs were seized in the apartment and an occupant was arrested for drug offences, she said. Vancouver police Deputy Chief Const. Warren Lemcke said the people shot Sunday range in age from 20 to 36 years old. They suffered wounds ranging from critical to bullet grazes. Vancouver police Chief Jim Chu said the spate of violence could be triggered by several factors. "This is an ongoing part of the gang war that has been going on for some time now," said Chu. "It started with Gurmit Dhak. "Sometimes, it's just the hostility towards rivals, sometimes they shoot each other even if they have no reason to shoot each other." Prof. Rob Gordon, a Simon Fraser University criminologist, said a drug rip-off retaliation "sounds exactly like what you'd expect to be behind this. This is competing groups looking for drug-market share or it's retaliation for a previous incident. "Unfortunately, it looks like we can expect more of this [gang warfare.]" Lemcke would not say what weapons were involved in the Oak Street shooting, except to say an assault weapon was used. The shooting hit close to home for Robertson, who lives a block away and was at home with his wife and daughter when he heard gunshots. "It was a lot of gunfire. It was very disturbing to hear. You get that rotten, sinking feeling in your stomach when you realize what is going on," he said. Robertson said the city and the VPD will pull out all the stops to deal with this "brazen gang violence." "It's absolutely unacceptable. It's despicable to see an outburst like this in a neighbourhood," he said. Lemcke said the "primary issue" is that the shootings are occurring in public places. "The major concern here is that these shootings are occurring in public and there is a potential for the public to be hurt," said Lemcke. Police vowed to step up their presence in places where gangs are known to congregate and to work with other police forces. "There is no doubt you are going to see an increase in uniformed Vancouver police presence in the next little while," said Lemcke. Sunday's shooting came as Metro Vancouver's gang scene appears to be increasingly unstable, as violent street gangs vie for dominance in the void left by the exit of powerhouses such as the Red Scorpions and United Nations gangs, whose leaders have been arrested over the past several years. Const. Ian MacDonald of the Abbotsford police said the Duhre Group, with 50 to 100 street soldiers, has surged to dominance in the Fraser Valley and is trying to expand across Metro Vancouver. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt