Close X
Tuesday, January 7, 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

First-degree murder convict escapes in B.C.

First-degree murder convict escapes in B.C.
The Correctional Service of Canada says Roderick Muchikekwanape was confirmed missing at 10 p.m., Thursday. He was serving a life sentence in the minimum security unit of the Mission Institution, east of Vancouver.

First-degree murder convict escapes in B.C.

More pandemic funding for Indigenous communities

More pandemic funding for Indigenous communities
The new money is on top of more than $2.2 billion the federal government has already allocated to help Indigenous and northern communities get through the health crisis.

More pandemic funding for Indigenous communities

Missing B.C. mushroom pickers found dead

Missing B.C. mushroom pickers found dead
The father and son had set out for a day of mushroom picking last Thursday in the mountains overlooking the community of Pemberton, 150 kilometres north of Vancouver.

Missing B.C. mushroom pickers found dead

Advocates, opposition parties push feds on LTC

Advocates, opposition parties push feds on LTC
More than 100 residences are reporting outbreaks currently, including 79 in Ontario, 14 in Alberta, 21 in British Columbia and 19 in Manitoba.

Advocates, opposition parties push feds on LTC

Assisted-dying bill wins approval in principle

Assisted-dying bill wins approval in principle
Conservatives, including Leader Erin O'Toole, were the only MPs to vote against the bill, which passed by a vote of 246-78.

Assisted-dying bill wins approval in principle

Feds outline rules for methane emission funds

Feds outline rules for methane emission funds
Natural Resources Minister Seamus O'Regan unveiled rules for the $750-million emissions-reduction fund first announced by the federal government at the end of April.

Feds outline rules for methane emission funds