Pubdate: May 11, 1998 Source: London Free Press (Canada) Contact: http://www.canoe.ca/LondonFreePress/home.html Author: Greg Van Moorsel -- Free Press Reporter IT'S D-DAY IN WAR ON BIKE GANGS Ontario's top cops will be in London today to show off the new heat they're packing in the war against outlaw biker gangs. The city will play host to the formal launch of a bulked-up police task force aimed at routing the bikers. The recent Ontario budget promised funding to enlarge an existing OPP anti-biker squad and link it closely with 16 municipal forces and the RCMP. London, Toronto and Ottawa-Carleton police are among those included in the alliance, expected to cost $3.4 million in its first year and $2.7 million a year to operate after that. The launch here is a bow to London police Chief Julian Fantino, who pushed for the project. With the slaying of two bikers in London last month, including the head of the London chapter of the Outlaws, Fantino said he may take Solicitor General Jim Flaherty, one of the officials here today, past a gang clubhouse if he wants a first-hand look. FEDERAL HELP Fantino, who heads a national police strategy to deal with biker gangs and crime, said Ottawa could help by tightening criminal laws and sending more money seized from the proceeds of crime to the provinces, which could direct it to front-line enforcement agencies. "We need some significant help to deal with this problem right across the country and beyond," he said, noting bikers have been linked to dozens of Quebec killings in recent years and Ontario is seeing more of the fallout. Bikers, he noted, were implicated in a bomb blast 1 1/2 years ago at Sudbury police headquarters. The OPP's anti-biker squad will be boosted to 20 members from seven. APPLAUDED London Mayor Dianne Haskett applauded the move, saying she's especially concerned about biker gangs trying to "exploit and control," through drugs and prostitution, young women who work in strip clubs. Last month's two killings, for which two London brothers are wanted, were "a wake-up call to the city" that gangs are a problem, Haskett said. OPP have been directed by the Ontario government to rid the province of outlaw biker gangs, especially the Hells Angels. Police say there are about a dozen biker gangs in Ontario with hundreds of known members. 70 DEATHS Biker wars in Quebec, where the Hells Angels dominate, have claimed about 70 lives in recent years, many of the deaths linked to control of the drug trade. Observers have speculated last month's two fatal shootings in London were a response to bikers muscling in on local drug turf. Ontario, with a hot economy and large population, presents a lucrative market for gang crime, said London South MPP Bob Wood, who sits on the Tory government's anti-crime commission. Wood said the expanded task force should give police a better early-warning and detection system to combat gangs. "What we're really doing is putting more money into what we've already got," he said. - ---