Pubdate: Fri, 20 Aug 1999 Source: Reuters Copyright: 1999 Reuters Limited. Author: David Ljunggren CANADA SAYS ASIAN CRIME GANGS POSING THREAT OTTAWA - Canada said Friday that violent Asian-based crime gangs were posing a major threat to public safety as they strove to increase their domination of the heroin and cocaine markets. The Criminal Intelligence Service Canada (CISC) also said in its 1999 report on organized crime that East European-based criminal gangs were spreading through Canada and increasingly trafficking in drugs. It also focused on the Hells Angels motorcycle gang, which it said was the one of the most powerful and well-structured criminal organizations in Canada. A major concern is the Asian-based gangs that dominate the heroin trade and are increasingly participants in cocaine smuggling. They are also involved in migrant smuggling and violent crimes such as shootings and kidnappings. "Asian-based criminal groups, especially the Dai Huen Jai (from south China) and Vietnamese-based gangs, continue to pose a significant threat to public safety across Canada," the report said. "Vietnamese groups are known for their extreme violence and use of automatic weapons. Asian-based street gang violence is on the rise in several cities. Many of these gangs have direct (links) to more sophisticated Asian organized crime groups." The report said the CISC had dealt a major blow to the Asian gangs earlier this year when a two-year operation ended in the arrest of 32 suspects in British Columbia, where many of the gangsters are based. But it said there was no room for complacency, since the Asian gangs were establishing alliances with other groups both in Canada and abroad. "Since Asian-based criminal organizations continue to function as tightly-knit groups, they will remain a challenge to police and law enforcement operations," the CISC said. The report also identified a gradual increase in activity by East European-based gangs, some of which had close links to U.S. and European criminal organizations. These gangs were involved in drug smuggling, murder, prostitution, car theft, currency counterfeiting and various other types of financial crime. The CISC said the gangs -- some with access to significant financial resources in the former Soviet Union -- would increase their involvement in smuggling stolen goods and in the drugs trade. "(They) will expand their networks to include other ethnic-based and domestic criminal organizations, including Asian-based and traditional organized crime groups and outlaw motorcycle gangs," it said. Foremost among the motorcycle gangs are the Hells Angels, whose 249 members are known for their drugs smuggling and frequent use of violence. "(They) remain a national priority for law enforcement in Canada," the CISC said. Despite successful police operations against the Sicilian Mafia, traditional Italian-based organized crime gangs were still a major problem, particularly because of their involvement in drug-smuggling and money-laundering. "(These gangs) remain a real threat to Canada. They have enormous power, given their cooperation with other criminal organizations, and pose a major challenge," it said. The CISC also expressed concern over technological crime and the sexual exploitation of children, especially involving use of the Internet. The smuggling of tobacco, alcohol and firearms was also a concern. "There is no doubt that organized crime is a central fact of Canadian life, one with the potential to touch each one of us, sometimes with disastrous consequences," CISC Chairman Philip Murray wrote in the introduction to the report. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea