----
Wednesday, March 14, 2018
Tuesday, March 13, 2018
New police task force opening to target the influx of Australian MC's to the region
Tauranga, North Island, NZ, (March 13, 2018) BTN — Police
Minister Stuart Nash is in Tauranga today to launch the first new branch of the
National Organised Crime Group outside of Auckland and Wellington.
A statement released by the New Zealand Police today says
the task force is strategically based in Tauranga to help deal with organised
crime, methamphetamine production and importation and asset recovery.
The NZ Herald reports the organised crime taskforce
expansion into the Bay of Plenty is largely due to the growing numbers of
Australian bikies, particularly the Comancheros and Bandidos, who have been
deported from Australia for their past criminal histories and failure of the
"good character" legal test.
The encroachment of the long-established Australian chapters
of the Comancheros and Bandidos onto Kiwi soil comes after another Australian
bikie gang, the Rebels, as well as the Head Hunters, established chapters in
Tauranga over the last few years.
"Organised criminals with transnational ties are
operating in the region," says Police Commissioner Mike Bush.
The appeal of Tauranga as a base for bikie gangs comes from
the presence of the busiest port in the country - and the potential to smuggle
large drug quantities through it on container ships.
"Tauranga is an area of growth for New Zealand and good
people are setting themselves up in Tauranga," Assistant Commissioner
Richard Chambers said in anticipation of the opening.
"Organised criminals are too. Being on their back
doorstep is the right thing to do."
Making up the new team will be six detectives focusing
exclusively on organised crime in the Tauranga region, and reporting back to
the larger police base in Wellington.
New Zealand police have for years now warned of the threat
deported "Kiwi" gang members, many who have spent the majority of
their lives in Australia, would in time strengthen New Zealand gangs and
increase their criminal efficiency.
SOURCE: TVNZ
Source: Biker Trash Network
Hells Angel fires lawyer in BC Supreme Court
Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, (March 13, 2018) BTN — The trial of an
Edmonton Hells Angel and two associates scheduled for April will be delayed as
the three fired their lawyer in BC Supreme Court in Chilliwack on Monday.
Neil Patrick Cantrill – who goes by “Nitro” in a Nomads
Chapter of the Alberta Hells Angels – is charged with aggravated assault,
kidnapping without the use of a firearm, unlawful confinement or imprisonment,
extortion, attempting to choke to overcome resistance, and possession of
non-firearm knowing unauthorized.
Charged alongside Cantrill in the alleged incident from Hope
in August 2016 is Stephen Cantrill and Robert Lowry. A publication ban prevents any details of the case to be
reported at this time.
The matter was scheduled to go to trial on April 9, but the
Edmonton-based lawyer for the men, Jake Chadi, appeared via telephone in
Chilliwack on March 12 to apply to be removed from the case as the Cantrills
and Lowry want a new lawyer. Biker TrashNetwork
“My clients have lost confidence in my services,” Chadi
said.
The three men said they are looking for a local lawyer, and
should have one by next week but there would not be enough time for he or she
to get up to speed by the April 9 court date.
Crown counsel Grant Lindsey pointed out any further delay in
the case is as a result of defence so the Jordan principle, which addresses
court delays, would not be in effect.
Neil Cantrill, 59, has a long history with the courts, and
was once convicted of illegal possession of live rattlesnakes and fined $1,000.
In 1998, he faced much more serious charges after a man
claimed three men, one in Angels colours, stormed his home and forced him to
hand over property for a debt, according to a Jan. 28, 2001 article in the
Edmonton Sun. Those charges were later stayed.
And according to Vancouver Sun gang reporter Kim Bolan,
Cantrill was accused of a large methamphetamine production operation nine years
ago in Alberta. He was alleged to have supplied the White Boy Posse.
In 2003, he faced further weapons and drug charges that were
later dropped due to an invalid warrant, Bolan wrote in 2016 in her blog on
gangsters.
SOURCE: Hope Standard
Source: Biker Trash Network
Rebels MC: Several members plead guilty to crimes
Christchurch, South Island, NZ (March 12, 2018) BTN — Four
members of the Rebels motorcycle club have admitted being members of an
organised criminal group that was dealing methamphetamine and cannabis in
Christchurch.
Raids on the clubs's headquarters in Vagues Rd, Papanui, in
2016, found firearms, 38 grams of methamphetamine, 300g of cannabis, and
$35,000, Crown prosecutor Claire Boshier told the Christchurch District Court
as the group pleaded guilty on Tuesday.
"The Rebels motorcycle gang had as one of their
objectives to deal in drugs, notably methamphetamine and cannabis, for
profit," she said.
Rebels MC members wait outside their clubhouse while police
perform search
Judge Tom Gilbert set sentencing for June 27 and ordered
home detention assessments for three who are on bail: Baden Kenneth Clunie, 25,
Apirana Ropata Ngata, 23, and a 45-year-old man who has interim name
suppression.
A fourth man, Mark Allan Powhiro, 32, is already being held
in custody and no home detention report was called for. All have admitted participating in an organised criminal
group. Clunie also admitted offering to supply methamphetamine and cannabis.
The man with name suppression also admitted offering to supply methamphetamine.
Boshier said the Rebels formed in Brisbane in 1969 and
became Australia's largest motorcycle club. Since 2011 they have rapidly
expanded throughout the world and established a presence in New Zealand in
January 2011. From August 2014 to June 2016, the Rebels Motorcycle Club
South City headquarters was in a warehouse in Vagues Rd. It contained a headquarters
room, accommodation, and a bar.
The bar area, main room, and accommodation had Rebels
paraphernalia such as flags, logos, drawings and insignia on display. There
were patched Rebels jackets and vests, Harley Davidson motorcycles and five
surveillance cameras with television monitor screens set up in two areas. Boshier said between March and April 2016, the four men were
either patched members or prospects of the Rebels Motorcycles South City club.
They were seen wearing Rebels regalia and associating with
known members, in Christchurch and other parts of the country. She said Clunie was the "money man" who held the
club books and chased members for money owed for club fees.
Firearms were found at the pad when the police searched the
premises.
"Gangs such as the Rebels acquire firearms for the
purpose of intimidation and protection of the gang. They are readily used by
drug dealers for their protection and standover tactics in the sale and supply
of methamphetamine and cannabis," Boshier said.
The Crown detailed the firearms – a sawn-off shotgun and
ammunition, a cutdown .308 firearm, and air rifles – found at the premises. They also found drugs, a balaclava, and text messages, which
they say include "drug talk and drug dealing", although they are
sometimes unable to say what type of drug is being supplied.
A fifth person arrested has pleaded not guilty and the case
is headed for trial.
SOURCE: Stuff.co
Monday, March 12, 2018
Video: Outlaws MC members caught on surveillance camera in bar beating
Bay City, MI (March 12, 2018) BTN — A bar's surveillance
camera captured the moment an argument between patrons escalated into violence,
when two men associated with the Outlaws Motorcycle Club beat and stomped
another man.
Miller puts a cigarette in his mouth, dons his coat, and walks out of the frame. A few moments later, as Peterson continues speaking with the woman who intervened in his dispute with Miller, Kerkau takes a few steps back, then quickly steps forward and twice punches Peterson in the head. The two begin scuffling as others move in to break them up.
The video was recorded in the Whyte Goose Inn, 108 State
St., around 1 a.m. on Dec. 27. The Bay City Times-MLive obtained the footage
from the Bay City Department of Public Safety after prosecutors played it in
court during the March 6 preliminary examination of defendants Eric J. Kerkau,
46, and Arthur R. Miller, 33.
At the beginning of the silent video, 49-year-old Scott M.
Peterson stands near the bar in the upper left corner of the frame. He is
arguing with a man police have identified as Miller, who stands opposite him. A
woman is between them, apparently trying to quell their dispute. Standing
closer to Peterson and slightly behind him is a man police have said is Kerkau.
Miller puts a cigarette in his mouth, dons his coat, and walks out of the frame. A few moments later, as Peterson continues speaking with the woman who intervened in his dispute with Miller, Kerkau takes a few steps back, then quickly steps forward and twice punches Peterson in the head. The two begin scuffling as others move in to break them up.
As they grapple, Miller walks back into frame and yanks
Peterson from behind. He knocks him to the ground and repeatedly knees him in
the face. He and Kerkau then kick Peterson several times, with Miller stomping
him at least twice. Peterson stays on the ground for the rest of the clip.
Police responded to the scene and Kerkau and Miller were
both charged with a 10-year felony count of assault with intent to cause great
bodily harm. Peterson testified in the March 6 hearing that the incident left
him with injuries to his shoulder, knee and ribs. He suffered a slightly
detached retina in his right eye, which has required two laser surgeries. He
also required six staples to mend a wound in the back of his scalp, he said.
In that same hearing, bartender Ashley Schwartz said the
three men had argued over a belief that Peterson had taken a photo of the two
bikers on his cellphone.
During the dispute with Peterson, Miller had made comments
about being "black and white" and that "nobody needs to have any
black and white on their phones," Schwartz said.
"One gentlemen stood up, took his coat off, and tried
to initiate a fight," Schwartz said, identifying this man as Miller.
"I tried to stop it. The gentlemen that tried to initiate a fight tried to
get Scott to come outside and fight him, but he would not go. The other
gentleman (Kerkau) who was still in the bar ... took a few steps back and just
sucker-punched (Peterson). It just proceeded from there."
Peterson denied having taken a photo of Kerkau or Miller.
Bay City Public Safety Officer Todd Armstrong testified he
responded to the scene and recovered a necklace bearing a Black Pistons
medallion. The Black Pistons is a support club of the Outlaws. Armstrong added
that Kerkau's Facebook page featured references to his "black and white
brothers."
Both defendants are free on bond and their trial dates are
pending.
SOURCE: MLive
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)