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(CAN) Inquest into BCC inmate's death extended

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Audio recording aired in court raises questions.

The inquest into the 2012 death of Jean Paul Beaumont — a high-ranking biker gag member found unresponsive while incarcerated at Brandon Correctional Centre — has once again been extended in light of new information.

An investigation by Brandon police and the RCMP determined Beaumont’s death was caused by a morphine overdose.

Beaumont, 39, had been a member of the Zig Zag Crew, a so-called feeder group for the Hells Angels, then a member of the Hells Angels itself.

He later left that gang and emerged as the sergeant-at-arms of the Rock Machine, a rival gang to the Hells Angels.

On Tuesday, the court heard an audio recording of two individuals discussing Beaumont’s death, believed to have been recorded in February of this year, RCMP officer Const. Curtis Christie testified.

At one point, a man can be heard saying he provided the drugs that killed Beaumont, and that Beaumont was "done in by his own crew" because he was allegedly trying to leave the Rock Machine.

Christie attended the home where the recording was believed to have been taken, he testified, but no one was home. He also sent the audio recording to the criminal intelligence unit in Winnipeg who never followed up with him, other than to confirm they had received it.

"The existence of the tape, certainly in my view, creates perhaps a new wrinkle in the investigation as to what happened," Judge John Combs said. "I would like to know, at least in a definitive way, what was done with the tape, was Brandon Police Service informed, and whether or not any steps were taken to interview the people identified in the tape."

The inquest, which started late October last year, is

tasked with exploring how Beaumont accessed the morphine, how it got into his system and if anything could have been done to prevent his death.

If the audio recording reopens the investigation, Combs said the inquest should not continue until that investigation is complete.

"It’s always been accepted that an inquest should not be conducted until the criminal investigation has been completed," Combs said. "If it’s a criminal act, it has a huge impact on what we’re doing here."

Beaumont’s sister, Suzanne Beaumont, one of two family members to be granted standing at the inquest, said she was surprised to become aware of the audio recording and is thankful for the inquest’s continuation.

"I appreciate the court and his honour taking his time. It’s much appreciated that we slow it down and take the time to hear everybody," Beaumont said. "I think everybody does have something to contribute so it’s important for me that everyone gets a chance to contribute."

Beaumont said she hopes the inquest can change how inmates are treated in custody.

"It’s not only about my brother, this is bigger than that for me," Beaumont said. "It’s about how we treat people in custody … We forget that they’re real people with real hearts, real heads, that they have siblings, they have parents, sons and daughters — they’re human beings … It’s important that we remember that when we’re dealing with people’s deaths in custody."

The inquest is expected to continue in August.

https://www.brandonsun.com/local/inquest-into-bcc-inmates-death-extended-484800113.html

(CAN) Burnaby launches investigation into firefighter biker club

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Burnaby has started a formal investigation into a local firefighters motorcycle club linked to the Hells Angels, city manager Lambert Chu said Wednesday.

Chu said the investigation follows Postmedia revelations about the Florian’s Knights attending events with the notorious biker gang.

Postmedia also obtained a recent photo of one of the Knights’ founders, Burnaby firefighter Nick Elmes, posing with Kelowna Hells Angels president Damiano Dipopolo and two other full-patch HA members.

Elmes said he and other firefighters founded the Knights to go on charitable rides and raise funds for various causes. He said there should be no reason for the public to be concerned about his club.

But he also admitted he advised the Hells Angels before starting the Knights because his group is using the same style three-piece patch on their leather vests that the HA wears and exercises proprietorial rights over.

Earlier this year, Elmes and another man purchased a house in the 5400-block Parker Street in North Burnaby for $1.65 million to serve as the Knights’ clubhouse.

Chu said he has “put together an investigation team to look into this matter.”

While the city had some details about the formation of the Knights several months ago, Postmedia’s stories provided additional information of concern, Chu said.“The information you had in your two stories that you wrote shed additional light on this matter,” Chu said. “It is of tremendous concern to the city and to the city organization. That’s why we are undertaking a full investigation.”

He said a city lawyer is on the newly formed committee.

Burnaby Fire Chief Joe Robertson said earlier this week that he had raised concerns about some of the Knights wearing their biker vests known as “colours” as they rode to work. He said he got a legal opinion indicating there was nothing he could do about it at the time.

Chu said that city workers have “freedom of choice to wear certain clothing to work, so we have to make sure that we get all the legal grounds covered.”

“The fire chief at that time took it upon himself and spoke with the individual and he said this organization is doing all the charitable activities and doing a ride and doing good for the communities,” Chu said. “So there was no evidence whatever to suggest that there was even a loose connection between the Flroians’ Knights with the Hells Angels.”

But biker experts with the Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit have been documenting the association between the Knights and the Hells Angels at various “rides” this spring.

CFSEU Sgt. Brenda Winpenny said those officers have “had direct conversations with members of the Florian’s Knights regarding their associations with the Hells Angels.”

Chu said the city’s investigation will involve interviewing people, obtaining information from the RCMP and doing “a little bit of fact-finding.”

They hope to conclude the investigation within a few days, he said.

Three of Florian’s Knights are Burnaby firefighters, two are with the New Westminster Fire Department and one is a retired Vancouver firefighter, Postmedia has learned.

http://vancouversun.com/news/crime/burnaby-launches-investigation-into-firefighter-biker-club

(CAN) LETTER TO THE EDITOR: Banned for a reason

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I would like to voice my support for the Legion’s ban on the wearing of outlaw motorcycle gang’s colours on Legion premises.

I am a 32-year veteran, having served 12 years with the Royal Canadian Navy and 20 years with the RCMP. I recently spoke to Lujma Bond, an Official with Legion headquarters in Ottawa as I wanted to clarify that the ban only applies to motorcycle gangs with a known connection to criminal activity and she confirmed this.


The Legion uses information from the RCMP and other law enforcement agencies to determine who is an outlaw motorcycle club. Bacchus definitely fits this profile and is also known to be affiliated with the Hells Angels Motorcycle “Club”, who also have a presence in Charlottetown. There are also about four other motorcycle clubs on the Island that wear a patch designating that they support Bacchus.

The Legion rightly states that the wearing of outlaw motorcycle “club” colours would be disrespectful of the sacrifices made by our veterans. It is not only the Legion that has taken a stand on outlaw motorcycle gangs. The Department of National Defence has issued a general order banning members of Canada’s military from associating with a variety of groups, including outlaw biker gangs. There are legitimate motorcycle clubs across Canada that are not affected by this ban and will be allowed to wear their colours.

It is important that, as citizens, we not allow ourselves to be misled into believing these outlaw gangs are benign. They actively recruit people with a history of service and put them forward to try to legitimize their organization. They are known as a criminal organization for good reason, and the old saying holds true. You can’t turn a sow’s ear into a silk purse, or perhaps a gang into a ‘Club’.

Rick Marleau,

St Lawrence

http://www.journalpioneer.com/opinion/letter-to-the-editor/letter-to-the-editor-banned-for-a-reason-216236/

(CAN) London may face fallout of Hells Angels-Outlaws tensions: OPP expert

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With tensions rising between the Hells Angels and the Outlaws, the OPP’s top biker cop warns no community, including London, is immune from violence that may result from the jockeying for turf.

The warning comes as the Ontario Provincial Police prepare to launch a campaign to educate the public about outlaw motorcycle clubs and deter people from buying the gangs’ merchandise.

A raid two weeks ago on the Oshawa home of a known Hells Angels affiliate yielded guns, drugs and evidence suggesting the biker gang’s longtime feud with the Outlaws is heating up, said Det.-Staff Sgt. Anthony Renton, the head of the OPP biker enforcement unit.

“Because what our intelligence is telling us now, and what we’re seeing in other parts of Canada, is there is violence occurring between the Hells Angels and the Outlaws. It can happen in London,” he said.

“Everything is about territory and jurisdiction and where can they profit . . . and get ahead of their rival gang.”

London has long been considered territory of the Hells Angels – the club has around a dozen full-patch members here – though the Outlaws have made recent efforts to reestablish their presence in the city.

But that effort was dealt a blow last fall when police charged London chapter’s president with counselling to commit murder. Three other men police alleged to be members of the club were charged with weapons and drug offences, leaving the Outlaws’ footprint in London uncertain.

Renton, a 30-year law-enforcement veteran who cut his teeth with the Peel Region police, is asking the public to help authorities clamp down on outlaw biker clubs.

The OPP will run its awareness campaign during the summer.

“If you’re going to go to Friday the 13th and support the Hells Angels by buying a T-shirt or something, we’re going to try to educate you and show you how you’re now supporting the criminal organization . . . ,” Renton said of Port Dover gathering that attracts motorcycle lovers of all stripes.

Police are also urging motorcycle enthusiasts to take steps to differentiate themselves from their outlaw club counterparts, who sport vests adorned with patches depicting their club’s logo, name, the letters MC and a chapter identification.

“Let people around you know that you’re not part of the criminal element,” said Renton, who took the helm of the biker enforcement unit last year, replacing now-retired detective-sergeant Len Isnor.

With 54 members from 20 police forces and agencies, the biker enforcement unit is one of the largest joint force operations in Ontario.

Biker clubs are involved in the crimes like drug trafficking, extortion, frauds, gambling and human trafficking, Renton said.

“It evolves,” he said of their crime portfolio. “Any crime where there’s money to be made, you’ll find organized crime trying to benefit from it.”

http://lfpress.com/news/local-news/london-may-face-fallout-of-hells-angels-outlaws-tensions-opp-expert

(CAN) Letters, June 12: Firefighter motorcycle club wrong to mix with Hells Angels, reader says

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’m surprised that a group of firefighters would stoop to ask permission of the Hells Angels to create a patch for their club.

The International Association Of Fire Fighters has affiliate motorcycle groups all over North America and each have created a patch that isn’t only respectable, but also depicts the brave members it represents.

How dare the Florian Knights use the firefighters’ Maltese Cross and place it over a skeleton.

Dennis Jensen, Delta

http://theprovince.com/opinion/letters/letters-june-12-firefighter-motorcycle-club-wrong-to-mix-with-hells-angels-reader-says

(USA) Biker rivalry suspected in Elm Mott bar assault

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McLennan County Sheriff's Office deputies are investigating the case of a 45-year-old man who was beaten at a bar in Elm Mott while wearing a T-shirt of a Bandidos support club.

Authorities responded to an assault report just before midnight Saturday at MacDaddy's Pub, at 101 E. Long St., a bar known to be frequented by the Cossacks biker club, Lt. Kevin Ferguson said.

"We received a call of a male who had been assaulted," Ferguson said. "When our deputy first arrived, they immediately noticed a male laying in the street, near the intersection of Leroy Parkway and East Long (Street). Deputies noticed he had a large amount of blood around his face, lacerations and contusions."

Ferguson said it appears the man had a few drinks at the bar, then went outside and was attacked by four or five people. The man was conscious during the assault but said he did not know who attacked him, Ferguson said.

"He was wearing some sort of Bandidos support club t-shirt," Ferguson said. "At this point, we do not have any identities of the suspects."

The man was taken to a local hospital where he was treated for his injuries and released. Chief Deputy David Kilcrease said it was unclear who the assailants are, exactly where the assault took place or if any other biker clubs were involved.

Kilcrease said the attack may be evidence of the ongoing feud between the Bandidos and Cossacks after the deadly 2015 shootout at former Twin Peaks restaurant in Waco, which left nine dead and about 20 injured.

"This is just a reminder that the feud between these two clubs is alive and well in this area," Kilcrease said. "At this point, there is still a danger to our general public."

http://www.wacotrib.com/news/police/biker-rivalry-suspected-in-elm-mott-bar-assault/article_00c7c138-b966-5a0e-ab26-51c0ce33b880.html

(USA) Police: Biker gang member threatens dad with meat tenderizer

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WILKES-BARRE — An intoxicated member of a biker gang threatened his father with a meat tenderizer and spit on police officers as they arrested him Sunday night, according to police.

Justin Martin, 30, of Rear 291 Parrish St., repeatedly threatened officers and warned he would see them again when they didn’t have their badges on, police said.

Officers responded to Martin’s home around 10:25 p.m. Sunday to a report of a fight between Martin and his father, Frank Maloney Sr., who told police Martin was out of control and needed to be arrested.

Another man, Frank Maloney Jr., told police Martin asked him for marijuana or cocaine. When Maloney Jr. told Martin to sober up, Martin began slapping him repeatedly, police said.

Maloney Jr. also reported that Martin threatened to kill him and that he would “get my boys after you” — a reference to his membership in the Pagans Motorcycle Club, according to police.

The altercation moved outside and Martin tried to damage Maloney Jr.’s new car, but Maloney Sr. stopped him, police said.

Police found Martin highly intoxicated and directed him to go inside the house, according to the charges. As officers spoke to Maloney Jr. about filing charges, they heard Martin screaming from inside the home and saw Maloney Sr. run outside saying, “He has a hammer!” police said.

Officers entered the home and found Martin holding a meat tenderizer, which he raised at the police briefly before complying with their commands, the charges allege.

Police said that as they loaded Martin into a transport van, he threatened them repeatedly, warning he would come back when he got out of jail. Martin then spit at police once he was placed into the van, striking two officers with his saliva, police said.

Police charged Martin with aggravated harassment by a prisoner, making terroristic threats, simple assault and disorderly conduct. Magisterial District Judge Joseph D. Spagnuolo Jr. arraigned him on Monday morning and ordered Martin jailed at the Luzerne County Correctional Facility with bail set at $100,000.

A preliminary hearing is June 19.

http://www.citizensvoice.com/news/police-biker-gang-member-threatens-dad-with-meat-tenderizer-1.2348237

(USA) Court documents: fatal shooting between rival biker gangs premeditated

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BAKERSFIELD, CA - New details tonight in a deadly shooting between two rival biker gangs and the evidence that led to three recent arrests.

Initial details painted the fatal confrontation between the rival gangs as an argument that escalated. But court documents allege that several members of the Mongols Motorcycle Club knew exactly what they were doing-and had it planned out to a tee.

It was Cinco De Mayo when the Hells Angels Motorcycle Club held a charity car wash near Zingos Café on Buck Owens Blvd. Court documents say that several members of the Mongols knew about the event days prior and set a plan in motion.

56-year-old Ricardo Viera who was shot and killed at the fundraiser, received a text message from Eliseo Miranda two days prior-saying quote "light em up." He also sent a photo of the flyer for the rival gang's event.

Documents say on the afternoon of the car wash, Mongol members, Eliseo Miranda and Arturo Desiderio showed up, driven by an associate of the gang, Christopher Wilson. They got out of Wilson's car in Mongol attire with tire irons in hand, shouting at the Hells Angels to come fight them.

Once 10 to 15 members of the Hells Angels were lured away from their event and into an adjacent parking lot, Ricardo Viera, who'd recently driven up in his car, got out and fired into the crowd.

That's when police say a man who is not a gang member-fired back with his legally obtained weapon and killed Viera. Police found a sawed off shot gun next to his Viera's body. Documents say that two years ago, Ricardo Viera was stabbed by a Hells Angels member who'd recently been paroled and was believed to be at the car wash that day.

Wilson, Miranda, and Desiderio all face charges of conspiracy, gang participation, five counts of attempted murder, and three counts of assault with a deadly weapon.

http://www.kget.com/news/local-news/court-documents-fatal-shooting-between-rival-biker-gangs-premeditated/1232382118

(AUS) Accused murderer faces SA Supreme Court

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A man accused of a bikie-related killing in Adelaide has less than a month to decide whether he will be tried by jury or judge alone.

Jesse Ray Penhall faced the Adelaide Supreme Court on Tuesday charged with the murder of truck hire businessman David Norris, who had links to the Hells Angels motorcycle gang.

Penhall, who had earlier pleaded not guilty, was remanded in custody and will next appear in court later this month.

Police said Mr Norris was subjected to an extremely violent attack, but haven't disclosed how he died or the motive for the murder.

In 2008, Penhall survived an ambush in which he was shot 15 times when he was confronted by four men in the small SA town of Paskeville.

With wounds to his neck, shoulder, hands and stomach, he managed to stagger into the Paskeville Hotel to get help.

A co-accused, who has pleaded guilty to impeding the investigation, appeared alongside Penhall and had been bailed until his next appearance in July.

https://www.9news.com.au/national/2018/06/12/03/31/adelaide-man-in-bikie-murder-case

(CAN) Arrest warrant issued for Quebec man due in Bathurst court in Hells Angels-linked case

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An arrest warrant has been issued for a Quebec man who failed to appear in Bathurst provincial court Monday on charges related to an investigation into cocaine trafficking in northern New Brunswick that RCMP say is linked to the Hells Angels.

Andrew Boucher of Sainte-Geneviève was scheduled to enter pleas on charges of laundering proceeds of crime and possession of the proceeds of crime.

He is one of 14 people arrested in the past couple of months as part of Operation J-Thunder, which started in November 2016.

None of the accused are members of the Hells Angels outlaw motorcycle gang, but police believe they are linked to outlaw motorcycle gangs in New Brunswick and Quebec, RCMP have said.

Two other men from Quebec and a New Brunswick man, who also had scheduled court appearances in Bathurst on Monday, are due back on July 16 at 9:30 a.m. to enter pleas.

Simon Dupuis, 43, of Sainte-Anne-de-Bellevue is charged with laundering proceeds of crime and possession of the proceeds of crime.

Raymond Bertrand, 72, of Saint-André-d'Argenteuil is charged with conspiracy to traffic in cocaine, trafficking in cocaine, conspiracy to possess cocaine for the purpose of trafficking, possession of cocaine for the purpose of trafficking, laundering proceeds of crime, and possession of the proceeds of crime.

Normand Godbout, 59, of Grand Falls is charged with conspiracy to traffic in cocaine, trafficking in cocaine, conspiracy to possess cocaine for the purpose of trafficking, and possession of cocaine for the purpose of trafficking.

Meanwhile, a preliminary inquiry for ​Cédrik Cazzetta-Parent, 24, of Montreal has been scheduled for Jan. 8 at 9:30 a.m. Four days have been set aside.

Cazzetta-Parent is charged with laundering proceeds of crime and possession of the proceeds of crime.

The RCMP investigation, conducted with assistance from the Edmundston Police Force, targeted the sale of cocaine on the Acadian Peninsula and in Restigouche, Madawaska and Victoria counties.

During the course of the investigation, police seized about $900,000 in cash and about 5.5 kilograms of cocaine.

Quebec police conducted a simultaneous investigation into outlaw motorcycle groups and the police agencies shared information.

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/hells-angels-cocaine-new-brunswick-quebec-court-1.4701067

(NZ) ‘Outlaw’ interception a joint effort

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The Outlaws motorcycle gang member who was refused entry to the Cook Islands late last month was intercepted as part of a joint effort from New Zealand authorities and the Pacific Transnational Crimes Coordination Unit based in Samoa, says principal immigration officer Kairangi Samuela.

Answering written questions from CINews regarding the incident, which was highlighted in Saturday’s newspaper, Samuela said airline ground handlers had been advised while the aircraft was on its way to Rarotonga on May 29 that the 27-year-old man would be refused entry to the Cook Islands and would be sent back to his country of origin.

She would not identify which airline had been involved or the aircraft’s port of origin, but added staff had been “very cooperative and professional” in managing the process of sending the man back on the same aircraft he arrived on.

“Airlines have their own processes in place should these types of requests occur,” she said. “The airline managed the process, and he (the gang member) had a return ticket.”

Samuela said she was unable to provide specific information on the nature of the serious crimes the bike gang member was revealed to have committed in the past.

Asked why the man had been allowed to fly to Rarotonga in the first place, she said authorities were unable to stop their citizens from leaving their borders or country without a court order.

“Similarly, with the Cook Islands, we cannot prevent people from leaving our country without a court order.

“But we can prevent a person from entering our borders under immigration law.”

Asked whether immigration officers had to discuss refusing entry with their superiors, or whether they could make their own decisions, Samuela said the Immigration minister (prime minister Henry Puna), had ultimate responsibility for the decision, but delegated it to the principal immigration officer.

“The immigration officers first discuss (these matters) with me and provide evidence and reasoning for the turnaround, and I make the final decision.

“We take these turnarounds seriously, recognising that people have spent money to come here for whatever reason, and this is not taken lightly.”

CINews asked Samuela on what basis decisions were made to turn back people at the border, in view of the fact that in the past, visitors with tattoos signifying membership of two well-known New Zealand gangs, the Mongrel Mob and Black Power, had been sighted on Rarotonga.

“When we have evidence of their criminal convictions and affiliations to groups that I would consider detrimental to the interests of the Cook Islands public - and these may also involve discussions with the police, there will be turnarounds,” she said.

“However, when information is received after the fact, then it is not a turnaround process, as entry has already been permitted.

“Hence the importance of national and regional co-operation between border security agencies in providing information to us. And in turn, we also provide information that may be of interest to them, this includes New Zealand and Australia law enforcement.”

On average, Immigration refused entry to at least 10 visitors a year, Kairangi said.

“These include people who have committed immigration offences in the Cook Islands – for example have overstayed, worked whilst on visitor permits etc, and or committed offences in the Cook Islands that upon sentencing would have resulted in imprisonment of 12 months or more.”

http://www.cookislandsnews.com/item/69680-outlaw-interception-a-joint-effort

(USA) Conviction upheld for ex-Pagans leader, Hempfield resident

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n a 6-to-2 ruling Thursday, the state Superior Court reversed an appellate court decision and upheld the 2014 conviction of a former head of the Pagans motorcycle club on multiple drug charges.

A three-member appellate court panel in December 2016 ruled that Dennis “Rooster” Katona, 52, of Hempfield should be granted a new trial in Westmoreland County, citing problems with the validity of the search warrant used in the years-long investigation.

The court previously ruled that police cannot use a single search warrant to repeatedly send a wired informant into someone's home. As stipulated in earlier court rulings, “a separate finding of probable cause was required for each in-home intercept,” the court ruled in a 2-1 decison.

However, the state Attorney General's Office appealed that ruling as too narrow, and Thursday afternoon the Superior Court announced its decision.

Katona was convicted by Westmoreland Judge Debra Pezze of two counts of possession with intent to deliver and two counts of possession of a controlled substance in 2014 after police searched his Ember Lane home in 2011 and found more than 84 grams of cocaine and nearly 100 grams of methamphetamine with a combined street value of $20,000.

The search turned up nearly $4,000, a digital scale used to weigh drugs and a document that indicated who owed Katona money, police reported.

Officers previously testified that as many as 30 state troopers stormed Katona's property and searched the home as Katona and his wife sat on a living room sofa. The drugs and money were found in a bedroom.

The full court Thursday said that even if the wiretap recordings were “removed from the equation, the Commonwealth lawfully obtained everything (Katona) relayed to the confidential informant.”

“Evidence is potentially suppressible as fruit of the poisonous tree stemming from unconstitutional police conduct. However, any such evidence may be admitted where the Commonweath sufficiently proves that it was discoverable through an independent source,” the 38-page opinion states.

“The search warrant application provided sufficiently specific information to conclude there was probable cause to believe that (Katona) would call the confidential informant on June 29, 2011, to supply more drugs. The judgment of sentence is affirmed,” the court wrote.

Joe Grace, spokesperson for the Office of Attorney General Josh Shapiro, said the office was happy with Thursday's decision.

“The office of Attorney General Josh Shapiro is pleased with the court's decision, which upholds the sentence and conviction in this case,” he said.

Katona's attorney, Paul Boas of Pittsburgh, did not immediately return telephone calls seeking comment on the decision.

Katona, former national president of the outlaw Pagans motorcycle club, had served 63 months in federal prison for his role in a 2002 attack on Hell's Angels at the “Hellraiser Ball” in Long Island, N.Y. Seventy-two other Pagans were charged in the brawl. One Pagan was killed. Ten men were injured.

Superior Judge Mary Janes Bowes wrote the majority opinion and was joined by Judge Susan Peikes Gantman, Judith Olson, Paula Francisco Ott, Victor P. Stabile, Alice B. Dubow. Dissenting were Judges Anne E. Lazarus and Jacqueline O. Shogan.

http://triblive.com/local/westmoreland/13761540-74/conviction-upheld-for-one-time-leader-of-pagans-hempfield-resident

(CAN) 'Saskatchewan is a bit safer today': Project Forseti concludes to mixed reviews

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'They needed to justify the enormous amount of money that they spent'

Prosecutors and police are hailing one of the largest criminal investigations in Saskatchewan history a success, but not everyone agrees.

Defense lawyer Nicolas Stooshinoff said several low-level criminals were pursued excessively because "they needed to justify the enormous amount of money that they spent on this project."

On Jan. 14, 2014, RCMP and Saskatoon police raided 19 locations in seven cities in an operation known as Project Forseti. They seized $8 million worth of methamphetamine, cocaine and fentanyl linked to three Saskatoon overdose deaths, as well as hundreds of guns.

Relying largely on intelligence gathering and testimony from Noel Harder, a gang member turned police agent, 20 people were eventually convicted. The final trials wrapped up last month.

Estimates place the total cost of Forseti anywhere between $30 and $50 million.

"Personally, I believe it was worth it," said Supt. Dave Haye, head of criminal investigations for the Saskatoon Police Service.

Haye and others said the cost of the investigation can't simply be measured by the value of contraband seized. It's also about taking dangerous people off the streets, preventing them from preying on those struggling with drug addiction and sending a message to other criminals.

Haye said it was also important to dismantle the Fallen Saints Motorcycle Club, described as a "puppet" club serving the Hells Angels. Two "full-patch" Hells Angels were convicted while five Fallen Saints were found guilty of acting on behalf of a criminal organization.

"I believe any time we can interrupt an organization that's involved in criminal activity, that's a good thing for society," Haye said.

Federal Crown prosecutors Lynn Hintz and Doug Curliss agreed.

"We're all a bit tired from it. It's been a long process and we're glad it's coming to an end," Hintz said.

All that remains of the legal proceedings is the sentencing hearing for three men, including Fallen Saints President Mark Nowakowski.

'The biggest drug dealer involved was Noel Harder'
Saskatoon lawyer Nicholas Stooshinoff, who defended Nowakowski and another Fallen Saint, said officials were "desperate" to secure criminal organization convictions in their attempt to justify Forseti's massive costs.

He said some Fallen Saints committed low-level crimes, but claims it was an elaborate criminal organization is "patently false."

Stooshinoff said it was wrong to enlist Harder as a police agent and witness.

"The biggest drug dealer involved was Noel Harder, and they let him go…he should have been the guy charged," he said.

Curliss, Hintz and Haye said agents are essential to infiltrate these secretive criminal organizations.

"We recognize they come with this baggage," Curliss said. "It doesn't mean they're incapable of telling the truth."

Project Forseti, named after the Norse god of justice, was a joint investigation by RCMP and Saskatoon police. Harder was arrested transporting firearms in early 2014 and agreed to become a police agent.

Harder has said that for months, the shop of his Saskatoon construction company served as the club house for the Fallen Saints, with frequent visits from Hells Angels members.

Harder said he allowed police to install surveillance equipment. He also met with police regularly in hotel rooms to report on the group's activities.

Just before the January, 2015 raids, Harder and his family were spirited to another province by RCMP.

Harder returned to Saskatoon under heavy armed guard several times to testify as the Crown's star witness.

In one Forseti case, the judge questioned Harder's credibility and acquitted. In others, the judges believed Harder and said there would have been no conviction without his eyewitness accounts.

"His testimony held up. A lot of people went to jail," Canadian biker gang and organized crime expert Yves Lavigne said. "Saskatchewan is a bit safer today for that."

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/saskatoon/saskatchewan-is-a-bit-safer-today-project-forseti-concludes-to-mixed-reviews-1.4704848

(USA) Former ATF undercover biker Jay Dobyns, who infiltrated Hells Angels, speaks in El Paso

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The danger. The death threats. The time away from family.

Retired federal agent Jay Dobyns spoke about infiltrating the Hells Angels and the personal challenges of undercover work at a police seminar in El Paso this week.

Outlaw biker gang members don’t necessarily have education degrees, "but they have Ph.D.s in violence and intimidation," Dobyns said in an interview.

"It’s part of that world," he said. "They’re very dangerous men who live a very dangerous lifestyle that’s built on violence."

Dobyn's presentation focused on the mindset, health and well-being of law enforcement officers amid the toil of police work.

The retired agent's visit was part of a three-day seminar funded by an anti-gang grant to the El Paso Independent School District Police Department.

Dobyns' exploits and struggles while undercover for the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives are well-documented in books and gang documentary TV programs.


He authored the 2009 best-seller "No Angel: My Harrowing Undercover Journey to the Inner Circle of the Hells Angels."

Undercover biker
The key to undercover work is "comfort and confidence" in selling a persona, said Dobyns, who grew up in Tucson and was a wide receiver for the University of Arizona football team.

"To be honest with you, I don’t know which one comes first," Dobyns said. "Are you a confident individual and that allows them to be comfortable with your role? Or if you are comfortable with your cover story and that allows your confidence to come out.”

During a two-year case in Arizona, Dobyns posed as a gunrunning biker interested in joining the Hells Angels in an operation that included faking the murder of a member of the rival Mongols Motorcycle Club.

Biker gangs have an allure with their fearsome reputations, offer members a sense of belonging and have a criminal side they try to hide from the public, Dobyns said.

"In society, you can be in essence an unimportant, unknown person," Dobyns said. “When you join one of those gangs and they put that patch on your back, all of a sudden people are paying attention to you. People are buying you drinks. People are giving you drugs. Women want to put their arm around your shoulder.

“You’re intimidating. You scare people, and to some people that’s intoxicating," he said.

Working undercover in the biker gang world can be extremely dangerous, said Dobyns, who was shot and wounded in the late 1980s while serving an arrest warrant at the start of his 27-year-career with the ATF.

"The first and foremost thing is staying alive," Dobyns said. "Because the people that you’re infiltrating, you’re gaining their trust and you’re gaining their loyalty and at times you're gaining their love and it’s all built on a lie.

"And those people don’t take well to being betrayed if they find out who you are," Dobyns said.

By the conclusion of the investigation dubbed Operation Black Biscuit, Dobyns had been "patched" into a Hells Angels chapter, a feat some at the start had described as impossible, he said.

The leaders of the infamous biker organization have claimed that Dobyns' entry wasn't official.

“I was there. I lived it. I breathed it," Dobyns said. "They (the Hells Angels) have members that participated in the indoctrination. It doesn’t matter what they say in public."

Family fallout
In the aftermath of his undercover case, Dobyns had a falling out with ATF leadership and his family was "melting down" amid his absences.

During his years undercover, Dobyns was hardly home, visits were short and when he was home he couldn't wait to get back to the "gangster" undercover work, he said.

“I would get home, mow the lawn, pat the kids on the head and have coffee with the old lady" and then leave, Dobyns told an audience of law enforcement officers at the Bowie High School theater.

He was absent so often that his young son once made a hand-drawn Father’s Day card addressed to Dobyn’s alias and mailed it to his undercover home.

As he spoke to the room full of law enforcement officers, Dobyns showed a photo of his children on a beach during a vacation, explaining he wasn't in the photo because he was working, feeling he was "important" and needing to save the world.

“My situational awareness at home was nonexistent," he said.

Death threats
When the case ended and Dobyn's identity was revealed, he and his family were the targets of death threats, including injecting Dobyns with HIV so he would die slowly.

The Aryan Brotherhood, the Mara Salvatrucha (MS-13) and other gangs allegedly had received contracts on his life, he said.

Dobyns said he felt betrayed by the ATF when his superiors told him no one had forced him to work undercover and neglected to investigate the threats.

The ATF removed protective measures that had kept secret Dobyn's home, vehicle and other information, he said.

Dobyns won a lawsuit against the ATF for neglecting to protect him and his family and accusing him of burning down his own home in 2008. He retired in 2014.

He said he wrote "No Angel" because the book's publicity helped protect him by making gangs think twice about retaliation.

Dobyns isn't in hiding. He is active on social media, gives speaking engagements and even had a role in the Hollywood action movie "Den of Thieves" last year.

His biggest regret is the impact his commitment to work had on his family, Dobyns told the audience.

"I traded this, for this," Dobyns said, first showing the audience a photo of his family, then taking a Hells Angels vest out from behind the podium.

But the former federal agent said he would do it again.

"I'd do it better," he said.

https://www.elpasotimes.com/story/news/crime/2018/06/15/jay-dobyns-ex-atf-agent-infiltrated-hells-angels-biker-gang-visit-el-paso/699150002/

(AUS) Former Finks boss Peter Yealland pleads guilty to 14 charges in Wagga's Local Court

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The man named as the head of Wagga’s Finks Outlaw Motorcycle Gang has pleaded guilty to 14 criminal charges before a Wagga magistrate.

Peter Yealland, also know as Peter Hooper, appeared in Wagga’s Local Court on Wednesday morning via video link from the Long Bay Correctional Complex.

During his brief court appearance, Yealland pleaded guilty to a total of eight separate counts of supplying a prohibited drug.

Two of Yealland’s supply convictions concerned a “commercial quantity” of prohibited drugs, which is considered the second most serious bracket of offending in terms of supply.

Yealland also pleaded guilty to five counts relating to firearms offences; two counts of possessing an unauthorised pistol, one count of possessing ammunition without a licence, one count of acquiring a pistol against a firearms order, and one count of not keeping a firearm stored safely.

He also pleaded guilty to one count of knowingly dealing with proceeds of crime.

Four alternative charges against Yealland were then withdrawn by the prosecution after he entered his pleas of guilty.

This was the second time Yealland fronted a Wagga courtroom in just over one week, also appearing before the court on drug supply charges last Monday.

Those charges related to Yealland supplying a large commercial quantity of prohibited drugs – namely, ice – between July 9, 2016, and November 3 of the same year.

The bikie boss, who, as the president of the gang’s Wagga chapter, was one of the most senior Finks in NSW, was originally arrested in December, 2016 in a large-scale police raid that brought down a number of alleged bikies and their associates.

In an operation dubbed Strike Force Tandine, police reported that they seized all manner of prohibited items including machetes, steroids, cannabis, cash, and several stolen vehicles during the series of raids targeting the Finks.

At the time, officers from the Riverina Police District described the operation as “a victory in the city’s drug supply crisis”.

Since then, Yealland has been prosecuted for numerous offences while being held in custody at Long Bay.

The severity of Yealland’s crimes means his case will now need to be advanced to Wagga’s District Court for sentencing.

Yealland will appear before the District Court on July 13, when a final sentencing date will be handed down.

https://www.northqueenslandregister.com.au/story/5466166/finks-boss-pleads-guilty-to-long-list-of-charges/

(NL) Dutch ban homegrown bikers' gang

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Dutch judges on Monday banned a national motorcycle club and seized all its assets, ruling gang members had spread a culture of violence and criminal activities in the Netherlands.

"The court in The Hague has decided today that the motorcycle club Satudarah is banned with immediate effect," the judges said in their ruling.

The ban includes not just Satudarah, but also its fan club, and affiliate Supportcrew 999.

The judges found "the combination of numerous offences along with its culture of violence means Satudarah's activities are contrary to public order".

Its members "have been involved for many years in criminal activities including violence against other motorcycle clubs, manufacturing and trafficking in narcotics, the illegal possession of weapons and extortion".

The judges also ordered that the club should lose all its assets including access to its clubhouse.

The case had been brought by the Dutch prosecution service, as part of an ongoing clampdown on gang violence.

Last year prosecutors successfully shut down the violent biker gang the Bandidos, when a court in Utrecht ordered all the club's chapters to close, saying it posed a public threat.

Dutch justices have also tried in vain several times to outlaw the Hells Angels as a criminal organisation. But a new case against the Hells Angels is due to be heard next month, the Dutch broadcaster NOS said.

https://www.expatica.com/nl/news/country-news/Netherlands-bikers-court-crime_1927983.html

(AUS) REVEALED: Armed robbery suspects named

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A MAN police wish to speak to in relation to an armed robbery at a CBD gaming lounge is a former member of the Finks outlaw motorcycle gang and should not be approached.

Police believe Terence Knowles, aka Terry Chook or Terry Fowler, can assist with their investigation into the armed robbery of the AM Bar last Wednesday, which was carried out by two men. 

Police also wish to speak to a man they have identified as Aydon Seaton.

Detective Inspector Brendan Smith said members of the public should exercise caution if they see either Knowles or Seaton.

"As you remember from the incident, it was a dangerous incident using a firearm, so therefore (there is) a risk to community,” he said.

A bar attendant was left shaken after being held up with a "sawn off long arm” in a sophisticated and premeditated armed robbery in the gaming lounge of the Rydges Mackay Suites on June 12.

One of the two men handed a note to the attendant demanding cash. He then showed her a weapon concealed in his pink backpack.

The attendant of Mackay's newest gaming lounge on Wood St handed the thieves a significant amount of money before they fled in a dark coloured sedan, headed towards Alfred St.

Det Insp Smith said police had an idea of a motive but could not elaborate beyond saying they believe it was done for a particular reason and to clear some debts.

He warned the public not to approach Knowles or Seaton.

"They could be armed, they could be dangerous, you don't know how these people will react or what state they are in,” he said.

It is understood Knowles is in Brisbane while Seaton remains in the local area.

https://www.dailymercury.com.au/news/revealed-armed-robbery-suspects-named/3445141/

(CAN) Unprotected

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Meet Noel Harder. Testifying against the Hells Angels led to a $2M bounty on his head. Then he got kicked out of the Witness Protection Program.

Noel Harder risked his life as a secret police agent, then spent three years testifying as the star witness against drug dealers, gun runners, mobsters and the Hells Angels.

Today he’s a marked man with an apparent $2-million bounty on his head.

And he’s on his own.

The RCMP kicked Harder out of the federal Witness Protection Program last month and, by his account, reneged on one promise after another.

These aren't just the words of a man labelled a "rat" and "snitch" after his double life was exposed; Harder served as the inside man on Project Forseti, the largest organized crime investigation in Saskatchewan history.

His allegations appear to be supported in a series of texts he received from a high-ranking Saskatoon police officer and a top federal Justice Department official.

"I'd never ever try to talk someone into going the agent route. It's a joke," the officer told Harder in a recent text obtained by CBC News.

Harder is not going quietly. He agreed to an interview with CBC News at a secret location. Those who want him dead already know what he looks like, he said, and they may even know where he is.

"There's a good chance that I'm gonna be killed. I'm just trying to get things sorted out for my family before that happens," Harder said.

"Somebody needs to listen to this, to look into this so police don’t do this to other people."

Both the RCMP and Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale declined interview requests, saying they don't comment on witness protection cases.

Goodale did, however, send a letter to Harder through his lawyer in Regina on May 7, warning that disclosure of "certain witness protection information" in open court could lead to five years in prison.

https://newsinteractives.cbc.ca/longform/unprotected

(AUS) Evidence stolen from police car: Coroner urges probe into bikie murder

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A NSW Coroner has recommended a probe be launched into the possibility that police caused evidence to be lost in the murder investigation of a Rebels bikie.

Edin Smajovic, 23, was shot once in the chest soon after arriving at a Campbelltown car yard with associate David Meatuai at about 2.30pm on January 9, 2009.

A recent statement by one of the original investigating officers, Detective Senior Constable Max Kral, has pointed the finger at Anthony Tan, one of two owners of the Macarthur Auto Centre, who was initially charged over the murder, along with his colleague Nathan Reddy.

"From evidence and information available to me at this time I believe that sufficient evidence exists which identifies that Tan is responsible for the murder of the deceased Edin Smajovic," Senior Detective Kral said in the May 2017 document.

A large brief of evidence was tendered before Deputy State Coroner Teresa O'Sullivan in the Glebe Coroner's Court during a short hearing on Monday.

After receiving the brief, Ms O'Sullivan delivered her findings, recommending that the police investigation into the death "be thoroughly investigated by the Law Enforcement Conduct Commission (LECC), so as to identify whether the actions of certain officers caused evidence to be lost".

Police dropped their case against Mr Tan and Mr Reddy in February 2013 - understood at the time to be partly due to a confession by a prosecution witness.

In her opening address, counsel assisting the coroner, barrister Peggy Dwyer, said Mr Reddy had given police conflicting versions of events during multiple interviews.

Tan has consistently refused to be interviewed.

Senior Detective Kral said he found a version put forth by Mr Meatuai in August 2009 to be the most believable.

In that recorded interview, Mr Meatuai said Mr Smajovic had picked him up earlier that afternoon, saying they had to "go and speak to this guy" before heading to the car yard.

He claimed that while they were speaking to Mr Reddy outside the workshop doors, Mr Tan walked into the workshop and retrieved a gun from a white car, cocking it.

Mr Smajovic then allegedly produced his own gun and held it to Mr Tan's head, telling him repeatedly to put the gun down.

"Mr Tan shook his head, turned his body to the left and shot Mr Smajovic, who shot back straight away," Ms Dwyer told the court.

"Mr Smajovic fell face down on the floor and Mr Tan walked up to him, push kicked him with the bottom of his foot, called him a 'f---ing dog' and then kicked him in the head. Mr Meatuai ran."

Senior Detective Kral said he believed Mr Smajovic and Mr Meatuai had attended the workshop over a drug debt, and that Mr Tan and Mr Reddy had armed themselves following a previous confrontation.

He said he believed there was evidence that, after taking Mr Tan to hospital, Mr Reddy went to an unidentified location and disposed of the gun used to shoot Smajovic.

Mr Tan was under police guard while being treated in Liverpool Hospital for a gunshot wound to his shoulder.

According to events in Senior Detective Kral's statement, the two officers guarding Mr Tan were instructed to temporarily leave the scene by a superior, giving Mr Tan an opportunity to wash his hands.

Police later swabbed his hands for gunshot residue but found no evidence of it.

Mr Tan discharged himself from hospital against medical advice and flew to Vietnam days later.

Senior Detective Kral said a PACE alert, which would notify police if Mr Tan attempted to leave the country, had been requested but not been put in place before Mr Tan left for Vietnam.

Senior Detective Kral said he believed there was information to suggest Mr Tan signed himself out of hospital "to prevent covert investigation techniques being used by police against him".

"I believe he fled Australia days later to prevent him from being targeted similarly in the ensuing investigation. I believe this displays evidence of flight and knowledge of guilt," he said.

Senior Detective Kral said that on January 6, 2010, a NSW Police laptop, a USB thumb drive and a police notebook issued to investigating officer Detective Senior Sergeant Keith Bristow, all with information relevant to the murder, were stolen from an unmarked police car while it was parked in Moore Park.

"This stolen property included records made by Detective Sergeant Bristow of a conversation he had with an informant," Senior Detective Kral said.

He said he and Detective Sergeant Bristow interviewed a man in relation to the murder in July 2010, and that that man said he'd been told that Mr Reddy had possession of the stolen laptop, and it had "all the stuff with the case on it".

"The comment about the stolen property was made without any prompting," Senior Detective Kral said.

Ms Dwyer told the court there were a number of factors about the police investigation that were of serious concern, "and may indeed have impacted on your Honour’s ability to determine the manner of death".

"Those matters have now been outlined to the Law Enforcement Conduct Commission, which has been invited to use its powers to conduct a full investigation," she said.

Ms Dwyer said she didn't suggest Ms O'Sullivan suspend the inquest and refer it to the Department of Public Prosecutions, nor that she make a finding about who shot Smajovic.

https://www.smh.com.au/national/nsw/evidence-stolen-from-police-car-coroner-urges-probe-into-bikie-murder-20180618-p4zm8l.html

(AUS) Cross-border operation targets OMCGs in state’s north, NSW

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Four alleged Outlaw Motorcycle Gang (OMCG) members have been arrested after a cross-border operation in the state’s north today, NSW Police say.

More than 50 officers from Tweed/Byron Police District, Queensland Police’s Taskforce Maxima, Australian Federal Police (AFP), Queensland Probation and Parole and Corrective Services NSW – Community Corrections, were involved in today’s operation (Tuesday 19 June 2018), which is proactively targeting OMCG activity in the region.

As part of an ongoing strategy, police officers conducted searches for firearms, firearms parts, and ammunition at properties of OMCG members subject to Firearm Prohibition Order’s (FPOs).

At a property at Cudgen, south of Tweed Heads, officers located ammunition, illicit drugs, steroids, explosives and cash. A 25-year-old member of the Mongols OMCG Tweed Heads chapter was arrested at the scene. He was later released pending further inquiries.

A 47-year-old member of the Lone Wolf OMCG Gold Coast chapter was arrested on warrant at a property in Carrara, Queensland. He was conveyed to Southport watch house where NSW Police applied for his extradition. That application was granted and he was extradited and placed before Tweed Heads Local Court today.

Queensland Police with the assistance of police from NSW executed a search warrant at a Tugun property allegedly associated with a member of the Lone Wolf OMCG. Police located steroids and prescription medication, which were seized for forensic analysis. Queensland police issued notices to appear at court to a 32-year-old man and a 24-year old woman.

Community compliance officers from Corrective Services NSW and their QLD counterparts visited a number of properties to conduct compliance checks. Queensland Probation and Parole officers conducted drug tests on several OMCG members, who tested positive to cannabis and methamphetamines. They will be dealt with by Queensland Probation and Parole.

Tweed/Byron Police District Crime Manager, Detective Chief Inspector Brendon Cullen, said police and government agencies across the region will continue to work closely to reduce the impact of OMCG activities.

“High-impact operations like this are conducted to target and disrupt the activities of outlaw motorcycle gangs and their associates.

“The safety of the community is our priority, and we will not tolerate activities that put the public at risk,” Det Ch Insp Cullen said.

https://www.miragenews.com/cross-border-operation-targets-omcgs-in-state-s-north-nsw/
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