Quebec, Canada (February 21, 2019) BTN — A former Hells Angel who took part in one of the most notorious crimes committed in Quebec when he and other bikers slaughtered fellow club members three decades ago is a free man again, despite having recently pleaded guilty to assaulting someone during a road-rage incident in Montreal.
Jacques Pelletier, 63, was a full-patch member of the Hells Angels in 1985 when the club decided to slaughter several members of its now-defunct Laval chapter. The club members who were killed in what became known as the Lennoxville Purge were considered unruly drug dealers whose actions affected relations with other organized crime groups, notably the leaders of Montreal’s West End Gang who supplied the gang with cocaine.
On March 24, 1985, five Laval members were shot to death after they were summoned to a Hells Angels’ clubhouse in Lennoxville, just outside Sherbrooke. Several Hells Angels were present that day and played a role in the slaughter, but only four — including Pelletier — were convicted of first-degree murder and received life sentences.
Pelletier was granted full parole in 2013, but returned behind bars a couple of times for parole violations. For example, in October 2017, he was returned to a penitentiary after police noticed his motorcycle parked outside a strip bar frequented by known criminals.
In November, he was returned to a penitentiary again following his arrest, by Montreal police, for his role in a road-rage incident during which he got into a shoving match with another driver on Oct. 18.
According to court records, the incident was considered minor by the judge who ultimately sentenced Pelletier, on Feb. 6, to pay a $1,000 fine after he pleaded guilty to one count of simple assault. But Pelletier remained behind bars because he also had to explain himself to the Parole Board of Canada for having violated his release by not keeping the peace.
On Wednesday, the parole board decided to lift the suspension of his parole after having heard Pelletier’s version of events. According to a written summary of the decision, Pelletier feels he was the victim in what transpired in October.
He told the board he was driving home from work when he stopped at a light and the driver of another vehicle got out and challenged him to a fight. The other driver apparently felt that Pelletier had cut him off. He said he tried to discuss things with the man, who grew more aggressive and ended up tearing Pelletier’s jacket. The man pulled out his cellphone and took photos of Pelletier as well as the licence plate on his car.
Pelletier called his parole officer immediately to report the incident, and a co-worker who was riding in his car later told the police that Pelletier wasn’t the instigator in the dust-up. The judge who heard Pelletier’s short trial this month at the Montreal courthouse did not believe the other driver, who claimed Pelletier had punched him. The judge found Pelletier guilty of using excessive force while he tried to take the man’s cellphone from him.
According to the parole board, Pelletier quit the Hells Angels in 1995.
SOURCE: Montreal Gazette
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Thursday, February 21, 2019
Friday, February 15, 2019
Gypsy Joker MC national president released
Portland, OR (February 15, 2019) BTN – A federal judge Thursday ordered the release of Kenneth Earl Hause, the 61-year-old national president of the Gypsy Joker Motorcycle Club, who is charged in an alleged racketeering conspiracy.
But U.S. District Judge Robert E. Jones placed Hause on home detention with electric monitoring and said he must resign immediately from his role as leader of the motorcycle club and not associate with any current or former Gypsy Joker members as he awaits trial.
Hause’s defense lawyer, Todd Bofferding, called his client a "man of honor'' and described him as an ailing grandfather who has the widespread support of his local community in Aumsville -- from the chief of police to waitresses in the small Marion County town of about 3,580 people. Hause also can’t get the medical care he needs in jail for his congenital heart failure, Bofferding said.
Related | Gypsy Joker MC members face charges
Though he has a past criminal record, it’s old and he hasn’t been convicted of a crime in 15 years, his lawyer said. “I don’t believe he’s now the man the government believes he is,’’ Bofferding said. Prosecutors vigorously opposed Hause’s release, contending that at his direction as the "Wiz'' or "The Boss’’ of the club, fellow Gypsy Joker kidnapped, tortured and murdered a former club member.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Steven Mygrant called Hause the “chief enforcer of this criminal enterprise,’’ a motorcycle club he said that prides itself on being a “1 percenter’’ group of outlaws, apart from the 99 percent of motorcyclists who abide by the law. Hause has pleaded not guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit racketeering.
Four co-defendants who remain in custody are accused of racketeering but also are charged in the 2015 torture and killing of former club member Robert Huggins, who was kicked out for stealing money and for his intravenous drug use, prosecutors said.
The killing was in retaliation for Huggins’ burglary and robbery at the Woodburn home of Portland’s Gypsy Joker president Mark Leroy Dencklau. Dencklau’s then-girlfriend was tied up during the robbery.
SOURCE: FOX 12 Oregon
Kenneth Earl Hause
Hause’s defense lawyer, Todd Bofferding, called his client a "man of honor'' and described him as an ailing grandfather who has the widespread support of his local community in Aumsville -- from the chief of police to waitresses in the small Marion County town of about 3,580 people. Hause also can’t get the medical care he needs in jail for his congenital heart failure, Bofferding said.
Related | Gypsy Joker MC members face charges
Though he has a past criminal record, it’s old and he hasn’t been convicted of a crime in 15 years, his lawyer said. “I don’t believe he’s now the man the government believes he is,’’ Bofferding said. Prosecutors vigorously opposed Hause’s release, contending that at his direction as the "Wiz'' or "The Boss’’ of the club, fellow Gypsy Joker kidnapped, tortured and murdered a former club member.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Steven Mygrant called Hause the “chief enforcer of this criminal enterprise,’’ a motorcycle club he said that prides itself on being a “1 percenter’’ group of outlaws, apart from the 99 percent of motorcyclists who abide by the law. Hause has pleaded not guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit racketeering.
Four co-defendants who remain in custody are accused of racketeering but also are charged in the 2015 torture and killing of former club member Robert Huggins, who was kicked out for stealing money and for his intravenous drug use, prosecutors said.
The killing was in retaliation for Huggins’ burglary and robbery at the Woodburn home of Portland’s Gypsy Joker president Mark Leroy Dencklau. Dencklau’s then-girlfriend was tied up during the robbery.
SOURCE: FOX 12 Oregon
Thursday, February 14, 2019
Hells Angels MC targeted in early morning raids
Quebec, Canada (February 14, 2019) BTN — A total of 32 people were arrested in a series
of early morning raids on Thursday targeting drug-trafficking networks in
eastern Quebec and New Brunswick with alleged ties to the Hells Angels Motorcycle Club.
The raids, conducted by the Sûreté du Québec, were carried
out in 20 different communities across the two provinces, including in the
Lower St. Lawrence region, the Gaspé and the Magdalen Islands.
Among the objects police seized were jackets bearing Hells Angels insignia. (Sûreté du Québec)
The SQ says that, in a period of just four months, the
trafficking network brought in $2.4 million, of which $250,000 was given
directly to the Hells Angels as a distribution tax.
"The Hells Angels control the territory and allowed networks
to sell drugs. Those networks then paid a tax based on the quantity of drugs
sold," SQ spokesperson Capt. Guy Lapointe said at a news conference in
Quebec City.
"The Hells Angels have a monopoly, which they maintain
with a regime of fear, violence and with their colours."
Among those arrested were prominent members of the New
Brunswick Hells Angels chapter, police say.
They are still searching for four other alleged participants
in the network
The people who were arrested today will appear in the
courthouses of the Magdalen Islands, Percé, Rimouski and Quebec City.
Among the objects police seized were:
Six kilograms of cocaine.
More than 232,000 methamphetamine tablets.
More than $640,000.
23 firearms.
Three vehicles.
Eight vests with Hells Angels insignia.
Officers from the SQ's organized crime squad and its North
Shore branch were involved in the raids, she said.
The operation, launched in August 2018, is called the Oursin
project. More than 150 police officers participated in the investigations.
SOURCE: CBC
Tuesday, February 12, 2019
False report leads to Hells Angels raid
Ghent, Belgium (February 12, 2019) BTN — The police action in the Ghent borough
Gentbrugge at the club room of motorcycle club Hells Angels came after a
44-year-old man claimed that he had heard gunshots in a quarrel in the room.
Meanwhile, the man confessed that his report was false, reports the Ghent
department of the parquet East Flanders.
The 44-year-old man from Ghent phoned the local police
around 21.20, stating that he had heard several gunshots in the Hells Angels
club room. 'According to the report, there would be a quarrel and some people
would have fled the room', says press magistrate An Schoonjans of the Ghent
department of the public prosecutor of East Flanders.
There were deployed heavily armed agents, a helicopter and special units (POSA). Certainly two men were taken into a police combination. The police immediately went on the spot. The club room is
located on the Brusselsesteenweg in Gentbrugge, near the entrance and exit of
the E17.
The traffic coming from the exit was diverted by the special assistance team of the Ghent local police. 'All persons present had to leave the room and the police conducted a search,' says Schoonjans. "Nothing suspicious was found.
The traffic coming from the exit was diverted by the special assistance team of the Ghent local police. 'All persons present had to leave the room and the police conducted a search,' says Schoonjans. "Nothing suspicious was found.
The eleven persons present were taken by the police for questioning,
but they were allowed to go home after the call was false. ' The police started
the action on Monday at 10 pm, which lasted until 0.30 am.
The caller could be identified and arrested by the police.
'During his interrogation last night he confessed that the appeal was false and
that he made up the facts', says the press magistrate.
Criminal prosecution
The forty is no stranger to police and justice. He will be
prosecuted, says the prosecutor. Should the case come to court, the Hells
Angels might claim damages. But it will probably not come that far.
In 2016 there was a shooting at the club room, but the
shooter was not found.
SOURCE: VTM NIEUWS
Monday, February 11, 2019
Bandidos MC publicly deny drug bust involvement
Melbourne, Australia (February 11, 2019) BTN — Two men faced court over a major $1.3 billion
drug bust linked to a Mexican cartel as the Bandidos bikie club made an
extraordinary statement condemning meth trafficking.
Bandidos MC Statement
Federal police revealed on Friday that they had intercepted
1.7 tonnes of methamphetamine bound for Australia – the largest meth seizure
ever recorded on US soil and the biggest intercepted drug haul bound for
Australia. Police said the record haul demonstrated a clear link
between local outlaw bikie clubs and extremely sophisticated Mexican drug
cartels.
Bandidos MC Clubhouse in Melbourne
But the Bandidos motorcycle club released an unusual
statement on Monday, hotly denying having any link to the major haul. The drugs were "artfully concealed" inside a
shipment of loudspeakers on a ship in Los Angeles, US authorities said.
Van Dung Le, 31, and Chi Cuong Vu, 25, faced Melbourne
Magistrates Court after being extradited from Sydney last week.
Mr Vu, who appeared in court wearing a grey T-shirt with the
word "obey" on the front, is charged with attempting to import a
commercial quantity of methamphetamine, cocaine and heroin between October 28
last year and January 23. Mr Le, from the Sydney suburb of Hinchinbrook, is accused of
importing methamphetamine to the Victorian town of Donnybrook as recently as
last week.
He is charged with importing drugs since October last year.
Mr Vu, from Sydney's Bonnyrigg Heights, and Mr Le were
remanded in custody.
The court heard Mr Le was withdrawing from cocaine.
Their appearances came after American nationals Nasser Abo
Abdo, 52, and Leonor Fajardo, 46, who were both living in the Victorian town of
Woodstock, faced court last Friday alongside 31-year-old Tuan Ngoc Tran, of
Keilor Downs.
The Age and The Sydney Morning Herald revealed Mr Abo Abdo,
52, had been a prominent figure in the audio equipment industry in California
and ran a series of companies selling stereos, speakers, subwoofers and digital
amplifiers.
Photos distributed by police showed the intercepted drugs
were hidden inside boxes carrying the names Audiobahn and Alphasonik, two of
the speaker companies operated by Mr Abo Abdo.
US court records show that Mr Abo Abdo filed for bankruptcy
in California in 2008, claiming liabilities of US$4.6 million. His debts were
discharged in 2010.
All five men have been remanded in custody and are due to
return to court on June 17.
The Bandidos motorcycle club has rebuffed any suggestion it
is linked to the drug haul, saying the distribution and possession of ice goes
against the club's spirit and culture.
Bandidos MC Statement
"We, like most Australians, shared a sigh of relief
that these drugs never reached our shores," the Bandidos said in a
statement on Monday.
"The Bandido Motorcycle Club vehemently distance
ourselves from this insidious scourge on humanity, in every way, shape and
form.
"We categorically refute any suggestion of involvement
whatsoever, in this or any other matter concerning ice."
-Bandidos Motorcycle Club
-Bandidos Motorcycle Club
AFP assistant commissioner Bruce Hill said on Friday a
Mexican cartel, which he declined to name, was allegedly behind the drugs.
"The cartel is among one of the most powerful and
violent drug trafficking syndicates in the world," he said.
SOURCE: Bay 93.9
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