Close X
Saturday, January 11, 2025
ADVT 
National

Charges laid in alleged illegal gambling bust

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Nov, 2020 08:23 PM
  • Charges laid in alleged illegal gambling bust

Four men are facing charges after police say they broke up a gambling ring in Metro Vancouver.

The illegal gambling team linked to B.C.'s specialized anti-gang unit says it investigated a suspected gaming house earlier this year and served a search warrant in July at Big Shots Cafe in Burnaby.

A statement from the Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit says several people were taking part in what appeared to be illegal gaming.

Items such as poker tables, slot machines, cash, poker chips and playing cards were seized during the raid on July 4.

Two Burnaby residents, a Delta man and one from New Westminster, all aged between 36 and 58, are now charged with being in a common gaming or betting house.

Court records show all four are scheduled to return to provincial court in Vancouver on Friday and again on Jan. 6, 2021.

Sgt. Brenda Winpenny says in the statement that it is a criminal offence to take part in unauthorized gambling in B.C.

“Illegal gaming, and the locations that allow them, have been the root of other criminal offences that impact the safety of the public," Winpenny says.

MORE National ARTICLES

O'Toole letter lifts from rival MacKay's website

O'Toole letter lifts from rival MacKay's website
Conservative party spokesman Cory Hann says human error is to blame: a contractor hired to write the note drafted one version in the event MacKay won the contest, and one for an O'Toole victory.

O'Toole letter lifts from rival MacKay's website

Libs seek to make Sept. 30 day for reconciliation

Libs seek to make Sept. 30 day for reconciliation
Heritage Minister Steven Guilbeault introduced legislation in the House of Commons today to establish Sept. 30 as a National Day for Truth and Reconciliation for federally regulated workers.

Libs seek to make Sept. 30 day for reconciliation

Fredericton councillors divided on abortion poem

Fredericton councillors divided on abortion poem
  Poet laureate Jenna Lyn Albert triggered the controversy when she read, "Those Who Need to Hear This Won’t Listen," a poem about a personal experience with abortion written by Ottawa-based writer Conyer Clayton.

Fredericton councillors divided on abortion poem

Horgan promises schools in Liberal-held riding

Horgan promises schools in Liberal-held riding
Former New Democrat MP Fin Donnelly is running for the B.C. NDP in the Coquitlam-Burke Mountain riding held by Liberal Joan Isaacs.

Horgan promises schools in Liberal-held riding

New trial ordered for man accused of killing wife

New trial ordered for man accused of killing wife
Beckett, a former city councillor from New Zealand, was charged with first-degree murder a year later.

New trial ordered for man accused of killing wife

Arguments in Meng extradition belong at trial: AG

Arguments in Meng extradition belong at trial: AG
Frater said evidence that establishes a defence or an alternative inference of what happened does not meet the test of relevance for an extradition hearing so Holmes should dismiss the defence team's motion.

Arguments in Meng extradition belong at trial: AG