Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

'Little Violence' As Hells Angels Make Their Return To The Maritimes

The Canadian Press, 28 Dec, 2016 01:44 AM
  • 'Little Violence' As Hells Angels Make Their Return To The Maritimes
HALIFAX — Andy Cook knows the Hells Angels, and what they bring with them.
 
The bespectacled RCMP corporal has crossed paths with Canada's most notorious outlaw biker gang before, during stints in Ontario and British Columbia, and he is not happy they are setting up in Prince Edward Island, where he works now.
 
"It doesn't sit well with me for them to be here because I know what they bring with them," said the 20-year veteran Mountie. "I've seen them in action and they bring violence with them and they bring drug trafficking with them."
 
The Angels were without a beachhead in the Maritimes since police smashed the former Halifax chapter in 2001. The raid led to the imprisonment of four of its seven members and the closing of the chapter after the clubhouse was seized by justice officials.
 
But the gang has begun to re-assert itself, cementing its presence mainly through affiliate or so called "puppet clubs" in Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and P.E.I. A New Brunswick chapter of the Nomads is now "full patch H.A.," said Cook. 
 
An Angels puppet club threw a high profile "welcome home" event in Musquodoboit Harbour, N.S., 45 kilometres east of Halifax, in June, drawing as many as 150 bikers.
 
Earlier this month, members affiliated with the Hells Angels chapter from Woodbridge, Ont., held a party in Charlottetown to celebrate the establishment of a new so-called hangaround club there. There are now eight Island bikers with hangaround status with the Hells Angels.
 
Cook, the RCMP's outlaw motorcycle gang co-ordinator on the Island, said P.E.I. is already home to two chapters of the rival Bacchus Motorcycle Club.
 
Yves Lavigne, a Toronto-based author and journalist who has written three books on the Hells Angels, says the territorial push is the gang's latest attempt to ensure they control the drug market from coast to coast.
 
"What I'm surprised about is that they appear to have bought off the local dealers because there has been very little violence compared to what happens when they take over drug markets in other parts of the country," said Lavigne.
 
He said that's significant because the territory the Angels are moving into is now largely the preserve of the New Brunswick-based Bacchus club.
 
"The way I measure it is that if members of Bacchus aren't being killed then they are working together. There is no push-back from anyone in the Maritimes as far as I can tell right now," Lavigne said.
 
Stephen Schneider, a criminology professor at Saint Mary's University who has also written extensively on organized crime, isn't as convinced of an outright deal between the gangs, but said there does appear to be a kind of "detente" that has developed.
 
"The Bacchus knows they are simply not at the same level as the Hells Angels and they are not going to get into a protracted war with them," said Schneider.
 
He believes the return to the Maritimes is mainly about establishing territory with the main goal being Halifax and control of its port, which can be used to import drugs like cocaine and hashish. Schneider said there is also a growing need to export an expanding list of synthetic drugs such as fentanyl to British and European markets.
 
"They are certainly operating pill presses out in B.C. and perhaps they want to start setting up production facilities in the Maritimes so they actually can start exporting," he said.
 
Lavigne said the public should be concerned by the club's return, because of the secondary effects of what happens when major drug dealers establish networks. They include an increase in the number of addicts and a corresponding increase in street crime such as car and home break-ins he said, as drug users look to feed their habit.
 
"Insurance rates for cars, for houses and for businesses over time ... they'll go up. The costs to society are multi-faceted."
 
Schneider says the Angels' move into P.E.I. is about encircling its rivals in the region.
 
The affiliate members on P.E.I. will have to attain prospect status before becoming "full patch" Angels. It's a process that can take up to two years.
 
"We are expecting that after they have done their prospect stage then they will form a Charlottetown club and they will have a bottom rocker (vest patch) that reads Prince Edward Island on it," he said.
 
"We will do everything legal we can to deal with them."
 
Cook believes that in setting up on the bucolic island, at least, the Angels have made a strategic mistake.
 
"I think they made a bad move into P.E.I.," he said.
 
"It's a smaller place and everybody talks to everybody here."

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. Veterinarian Saves Puppy With Opioid-Reversing Naloxone

B.C. Veterinarian Saves Puppy With Opioid-Reversing Naloxone
SAANICH, B.C. — A Victoria-area veterinarian who used naloxone to revive a puppy that ate some sort of opioid said she fears word of the successful treatment could put her clinic at risk.

B.C. Veterinarian Saves Puppy With Opioid-Reversing Naloxone

Home Ownership Costs Remain Sky High In Vancouver

Home Ownership Costs Remain Sky High In Vancouver
TORONTO — The latest report on housing trends and affordability from RBC Economics Research says owning a home in Canada is less affordable now than at any time in nearly eight years.

Home Ownership Costs Remain Sky High In Vancouver

Making Kids Proud Best Christmas Gift For Single Moms In Surrey

Making Kids Proud Best Christmas Gift For Single Moms In Surrey
Thanks to the Single Parent Employment Initiative (SPEI), a unique government employment program launched just over a year ago, hundreds of single parents throughout the province, and their children, will be having a brighter Christmas

Making Kids Proud Best Christmas Gift For Single Moms In Surrey

Good Samaritan Turns in Found Money In Delta, B.C.

Good Samaritan Turns in Found Money In Delta, B.C.
Delta Police responded to a report of found money on December 15, 2016. Police are now reaching out to anyone who may have been in the area of 6900 blk Nicholson Road on or around December 14, 2016 and is missing cash.

Good Samaritan Turns in Found Money In Delta, B.C.

Vancouver Police Look For Woman Missing Since November

Vancouver Police Look For Woman Missing Since November
Vancouver Police are requesting the public’s help to locate a missing woman who was last seen in early November

Vancouver Police Look For Woman Missing Since November

Four Environmentally Sensitive Parcels Of Lands Around B.C. To Be Protected

Four Environmentally Sensitive Parcels Of Lands Around B.C. To Be Protected
VICTORIA — Four properties have been added to British Columbia's collection of environmentally sensitive lands.

Four Environmentally Sensitive Parcels Of Lands Around B.C. To Be Protected