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Biker gang stakes claim in Nova Scotia

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Last Updated: Tuesday, January 12, 2010 | 3:28 PM AT Comments185Recommend121.
CBC News
Police say an outlaw biker gang with close ties to the Hells Angels has established itself in Nova Scotia.

The Bacchus motorcycle gang has links to the Hells Angels. (CBC)Eight members of the East Coast Riders were "patched over" by the Bacchus motorcycle club Saturday night at the Bacchus main clubhouse in Albert County, N.B.

The new "1%" crest hasn't been seen in Nova Scotia since the Hells Angels chapter folded in 2003 after a series of police raids that put most of its members in prison.

Insp. Greg Laturnus, with the RCMP Intelligence Unit, said the 1% designation is an open claim of outlaw status among bike gangs.

"We have a national strategy to combat outlaw motorcycle gangs, and certainly the Bacchus motorcycle club is considered an outlaw motorcycle gang," Laturnus told CBC News.

But Paul Fowler, a new Bacchus Nova Scotia club member, disputes that, saying members have families and jobs.

"We are far from organized. And we're not a crime group neither," said Fowler.

"In our mind, the true meaning of the 1% is that we are the one per cent that doesn't fit in with the other 99 per cent of society, for whatever reason. You know, we like to do things our own way. We like to hang out together, ride motorcycles and party."

Longtime links
Bacchus is one of Canada's oldest biker clubs, with longtime links to the Hells Angels. Its members have been arrested in raids involving the Angels, and the club is respected in the outlaw biker world.

RCMP say the 1% patch indicates an outlaw biker gang. (CBC)Members of the East Coast Riders never wore a 1% crest. The clubhouse in Waverley, near Halifax, is for sale as Bacchus looks for something new.

Cpl. Steve MacQueen, head of the RCMP's outlaw motorcycle gang unit, said the takeover came after two Hells Angels rival clubs, the Outlaws and the Rock Machine, showed interest in establishing chapters in Nova Scotia.

Fowler agrees that being in a club like Bacchus will deter other groups. However, he said that's not why he and other members made the move.

"I don't think we have the ability to prevent other clubs from opening and doing their thing. We're just saying that we are here, this club's been around for 38 years or so and we're gonna continue hanging around together and being brothers," said Fowler.

The new Bacchus patch may go unnoticed by most Nova Scotians, but police said people in the criminal underworld have already noted its presence in the province.

Read more: http://www.cbc.ca/canada/nova-scotia/st … z0iqnxSJKB

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Biker gangs in Canada
Last Updated: Tuesday, April 21, 2009 | 5:24 PM ET Comments68Recommend111.
CBC News
In the 1960s, the American Motorcyclist Association said only one per cent of motorcycles riders were hard-partying, non-mainstream people. (Jim Tiller/Daytona Beach News-Journal/Associated Press)
Ninety-nine per cent of people riding motorcycles and the clubs they belong to are law-abiding, according to an oft-cited quote by the American Motorcyclist Association. It's only one per cent that are hard-partying, non-mainstream people, the organization said in the 1960s.

The description gave birth to the moniker "one percenter," with some bikers donning patches proclaiming their "1%" status.

But according to the Outlaws Motorcycle Club, law-enforcement officials changed the meaning of "one percenter" in the 1980s so that the term referred to members of criminal gangs. It no longer referred only to those who refused to live by the rules of society.

The Outlaws, however, still proudly wear their one percenter patches and say they are a law-abiding organization whose members share a commitment to biking and brotherhood. The U.S., however, has classified them as a criminal group.

Hells Angels
As of April 2009, it was estimated that the Hells Angels had 34 chapters across Canada and about 460 full-fledged members.

Here's a breakdown of the Hells Angels chapters by province:

Ontario 15
British Columbia 8
Quebec 5
Alberta 3
Saskatchewan 2
Manitoba 1

(Source: Criminal Intelligence Service Canada )
Characteristics of a biker gang
Despite the large law-abiding portion of the biker community, outlaw gangs do exist across the country.

According to police, biker gangs share several characteristics:

•They show off their colours in public.
•Biker gangs use force and violence to survive and grow. Intimidation, arms and explosives are their weapons of choice.
•The organizations have a hierarchical structure. Committing crimes is left to new recruits while those higher up reap the rewards.
•The hierarchical structure allows the leaders to operate with impunity while flaunting their image of power to attract recruits and draw them into crime.
•It is difficult for law-enforcement agencies to infiltrate these organizations because becoming a member involves committing crimes. North American clubs also tend to require their members to own American-made bikes, often Harley-Davidsons.
The largest outlaw motorcycle gang in Canada is the infamous Hells Angels, though the organization denies it's anything more than a motorcycle club.

Founded in 1948 in California, the Hells Angels has grown over the decades to more than 2,000 members across the U.S. and 26 other countries, the U.S. National Gang Intelligence Center says.

In Canada, the Angels are believed to have 460 full-fledged members and 34 chapters, according to 2009 estimates by the Criminal Intelligence Service Canada.

Turf war
The largest and most-feared chapter of the Hells Angels was formed in Montreal. It opened in Quebec in 1977 when a biker gang called the Popeyes joined the Angels.

After the Rock Machine emerged in 1986 and quickly became the biggest rival of the Hells Angels, a turf war between the two erupted in the late 1990s. Over the years it claimed more than 150 lives, including two prison guards and 11-year-old Daniel Desrochers, who died when a car bomb exploded outside a biker hangout.

His death and the outrage that followed prompted Bill C-95, legislation passed in 1997 that stiffened penalties for convicted offenders who are shown to be members of established criminal organizations.

In early 2009, Gérald Gallant, who confessed to contract killing during the bloody biker wars, helped police arrest 11 people who allegedly ordered or carried out killings during the course of the turf battle. He also pleaded guilty to slaying 27 people over three decades, making him one of Canada's most prolific killers.

Here's a brief look at the major biker organizations that have operated in Canada.

Hells Angels
Criminal Intelligence Service Canada describes the Hells Angels as the largest "outlaw motorcycle gang" in the country, with active chapters concentrated mostly in Quebec, Ontario and British Columbia.

In its 2004 report, CISC said the Angels derives "significant financial income" from criminal activities such as prostitution, fraud and extortion but primarily relied on drug trafficking for income.

The gang moved into Ontario in 2000. Before that, its only presence in the province was with a chapter of the Nomads, the club's elite branch. The Nomads doesn't tie itself to geographical locations and doesn't have formal clubhouses, like other chapters.

Within a year, the Angels had absorbed members of the Para Dice Riders, Satan's Choice and Last Chance, giving them at least 100 members in the Toronto area — the highest concentration of Hells Angels in the world.

In mid-April 2009, police targeted more than 150 people linked with the Hells Angels in early-morning raids mostly in Quebec, but also in New Brunswick, France and the Dominican Republic. They also seized four suspected Hells Angels bunkers.

Bandidos
It's considered world's second-most powerful criminal biker gang, with more than 2,000 members in 14 countries, according to NGIC's 2009 report, which describes the Bandidos as a "growing criminal threat."

The Bandidos was founded in the 1960s in Texas. The club's old guard was said to be against its absorption of the Rock Machine's Ontario branches for fear of igniting the same kind of war with the Hells Angels that gripped Quebec for much of the 1990s and left at least 150 people dead.

In April 2006, eight people — all Bandidos members or associates — were found dead in a farmer's field near the small town of Shedden, Ont., about 30 kilometres southwest of London. Police said the killings virtually wiped out the Toronto chapter of the Bandidos.

Outlaws
First established in the United States in 1935, the gang came to Canada in 1978 when several chapters of Satan's Choice in Montreal changed allegiance and set up shop as the Outlaws Motorcycle Club of Canada. The group is known to detest members of the Hells Angels.

Rock Machine
Second only to Hells Angels in Quebec. A long-running turf war with the Angels left more than 150 people dead as the two fought over the lucrative trade in illegal drugs. The war also led to the passage of anti-gang legislation by the federal government.

As the Hells Angels expanded into Ontario, so did the Rock Machine. The organization established three chapters. In 2001, it aligned itself with the Bandidos.

Satan's Choice
Once one of Ontario's strongest motorcycle gangs, Satan's Choice became part of the Hells Angels' 2000-2001 expansion into Ontario. Satan's Choice had branches in Keswick, Kitchener, Oshawa, Sudbury, Simcoe County, Thunder Bay and Toronto — but nothing outside the province.

Para Dice Riders
Another group that was once among Ontario's strongest biker gangs. Its membership was limited to the Toronto area. The group was absorbed by the Hells Angels in 2001, when the Angels moved into Ontario.

Last Chance
Another small Ontario-based biker gang that agreed to switch over to the Hells Angels when the world's most power biker gang moved into the province.

Lobos
Originally concentrated in the Windsor, Ont., area, the Lobos motorcycle gang decided to take up the Hells Angels on its offer of merger in 2001.

Loners
The Loners Motorcycle Club was founded in Ontario in 1979 with a handful of chapters, including a now-defunct one in southwestern Ontario that was headed by Wayne Kellestine. As part of its Ontario expansion drive, the Hells Angels tried to persuade the St. Thomas Loners chapter to join the Angels. Kellestine — who was injured in an assassination attempt in 1999 — resisted.

The club has expanded to the United States and Europe, but in Ontario, its highest profile in recent years was a legal fight by a Toronto chapter to keep its mascot on its property north of the city, in 2001. The neutered, declawed lion named Woody was moved to an animal sanctuary.

Vagabonds
Another Ontario-based motorcycle gang that was more or less absorbed by the Hells Angels when it expanded into Ontario in 2000-2001.

The Red Devils
Said to be the oldest motorcycle gang in Canada, the group is made up of a couple of dozen members concentrated in the Hamilton, Ont., area.
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Read more: http://www.cbc.ca/canada/story/2009/04/ … z0iqoZrrYM

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Canada's anti-gang law

CBC News Online | Updated April 10, 2006

The shooting of Journal de Montreal reporter Michel Auger, seen here on Dec. 6, 2000, put pressure on Ottawa to change Canada's anti-gang law. (Tom Hanson/Canadian Press)Quebec's bloody war between the Rock Machine and the Hells Angels in the 1990s – and the attempted murder of a Montreal journalist who reported on the biker wars – put the federal government under intense pressure to toughen up laws governing gang violence.

Bill C-95, passed in 1997, amended the Criminal Code (and other legislation) to acknowledge crimes committed "for the benefit of, at the direction of, or in association with" a criminal organization. Convictions carry a mandatory minimum sentence of five years in prison and a maximum sentence of 14 years.

But then there's Section 11, which reads: "Every one who …participates in or substantially contributes to the activities of a criminal organization knowing that any or all of the members of the organization engage in or have, within the preceding five years, engaged in the commission of a series of indictable offences …of which the maximum punishment is imprisonment for five years or more …is guilty of an indictable offence and liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 14 years."

In other words, the legislation makes it illegal to be a member of a motorcycle gang or other criminal organization.

But it wasn't until February 2001 that the first convictions under Canada's anti-gang law were won.

Four men, Philippe Côté, Mario Filion, Eric Leclerc and Simon Lambert, were all found guilty of operating a drug ring for the Rock Machine motorcycle gang (which has since merged with the Bandidos). Four others were acquitted of gangsterism charges but were found guilty of lesser crimes, including drug-related offences.

Before this, the only person who had been tried for charges under Bill C-95 was Peter Paradis, an admitted gang member. Paradis eventually became a police informant and was used as the Crown's main witness in the Rock Machine trial.

In September 2004 in Barrie, Ont., two members of the Hells Angels went on trial for extorting money from a businessman. They were also charged under C-95 for allegedly committing the offence "for the benefit or at the direction of a criminal organization." Some lawyers consider the Ontario trial to be the first significant test of the law.

It took almost 10 months, but Judge Michele Fuerst of Ontario Superior Court eventually ruled that the Hells Angels are a criminal organization. She concluded the men had used the gang's reputation for violence and intimidation as a tool because they'd arrived at the businessman's home wearing Hells Angels insignia.

The men "presented themselves not as individuals, but as members of a group with a reputation for violence and intimidation," Fuerst wrote in her ruling.

Critics of Bill C-95 say it goes too far, arguing it infringes on the freedom of association guaranteed by Section 2(d) of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms. In fact, the trial for the eight Rock Machine gang members was postponed to allow the defence more time to consider whether to challenge some of the charges on constitutional grounds.

And they're not the only ones who have the Charter on their side.

Bikers in Alberta won a major court victory in 2005 when a judge ruled that police violated their constitutional rights during a roadside check in 1997. And the Charter will no doubt be used against Ontario's proposed Bill 155, which would give police the power to seize the assets of criminal organizations even without a criminal investigation.

Other critics say Bill C-95 is flawed because it means people could be guilty of an offence simply because of their status in a group rather than because of something they themselves did.

Then there are those who say the legislation won't work, that it's only a political move aimed at making gangs less visible to the media and the public. They argue that the members would stop wearing gang colours to avoid being arrested under Bill C-95, but the gangs would go on.

But in its 2004 annual report, Criminal Intelligence Service Canada reported that since 2002, the Bandidos and Outlaws have kept a fairly low profile. The agency says some of the credit for the relative peace should go to the anti-gang legislation.

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Стас в своем репертуаре... и че с этим делать? http://www.kolobok.us/smiles/standart/not_i.gif

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это для наших многочисленных иностранных гостей )  .. либо можно не полениться перевести автопереводчиком )