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Showing posts with label Abbotsford. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Abbotsford. Show all posts

Abbotsford police will continue its close surveillance on two notorious gangster brothers despite the fact one has now filed a formal complaint against their treatment by law enforcement.Const. Casey Vinet, the department’s media officer, confirmed that a complaint has been filed by Jamie Bacon, who with brothers Jarrod and Jonathan has been the subject of public warnings by police because they have been targeted for death by rivals.After Jamie, 23, was shot at in a busy Abbotsford intersection at rush hour Jan. 20, police have stepped up surveillance on him and Jarrod, 26, sitting outside the family home and following them during the day.
The two are facing more than two dozen gun and drug charges laid May 31, 2008 and are out on $175,000 bail, and conditions that they maintain a curfew and reside at their parent’s Strathcona Court home.The complaint says police have violated their rights on a number of occasions since the extraordinary surveillance began.Police have set up video cameras at two locations near their home so that cars coming and going can be observed.Vinet said the department is aware of the complaint, which is being reviewed by the Vancouver police department.In the meantime, “We have no intentions at this time to change anything we are doing. “There is a continued threat and we are taking the steps we feel are necessary to keep our community safe.”Lawyer Don Morrison, hired by Jamie Bacon to lay the complaint, said he was concerned details of Bacon’s complaint have been leaked to media by police, another breach of professional standards regulations.

Bacon brothers of Abbotsford protect themselves with bulletproof vests and armoured vehicles and are trailed by police even as they dodge bullets wherever they go.
Alleged to be in a gang known as the Red Scorpions, the brothers might not be directly responsible for the dozen or so shootings in Metro Vancouver in the last month that have left seven people dead, but their presence has cast a shadow of fear and intimidation in their hometown of Abbotsford
.The once rural town, 45 minutes east of Vancouver and a short distance from the U.S. border, has become an epicentre of criminal activity in the region. Police have taken the unusual step of warning the general public and even friends and family of Jonathan, Jarrod and James Bacon not to get too close to them in case they are caught in the crossfire. At least three innocent people have killed by being in the wrong place in the past 16 months.
Jonathan Barber was installing a car stereo in the Porsche Cayenne that belonged to one of the brothers when he was shot dead last May. Abbotsford man Ed Schellenberg, a gas fireplace technician, was killed inside an apartment when four gang associates were murdered in October 2007. Another innocent bystander, Chris Mohan, who lived next door, also died. Schellenberg's brother-in-law, Steve Brown, said Abbotsford residents have learned they are not immune to the gang violence taking place in the bigger cities of Vancouver and Surrey.

"Abbotsford was galvanized by the death of Ed," said Brown. "We have morphed into the big city because of the number of criminals on our streets."


Brown said there is palpable anger among residents who believe too many criminals are getting charges stayed or are released on bail.Hugh Stansfield, chief judge of the provincial court in B.C., said he understands why people say the justice system is too lenient. "There has been an alarming outbreak of violence in the last month, disturbing violence," he said. "People are strongly motivated to try and make sure their community ... is safe." Stansfield points out, however, there have been few gang cases that make it to trial and police haven't made any arrests that have brought suspects before the courts in the recent string of shootings.The two younger Bacon brothers, Jamie, 23, and Jarrod, 25, are on bail for weapons charges and the eldest, Jonathan, had weapons and drug charges thrown out in 2005 because of improper search procedures. The Red Scorpions and the United Nations are two of the most high-profile gangs to have emerged in the Metro Vancouver area. Both gangs have roots in Abbotsford.Although police have made no arrests in the 2007 "Surrey Six" slayings, in which Mohan and Schellenberg were killed, many believe the two gangs were involved.Federal Public Safety Minister Peter Van Loan, who met with officials in Abbotsford, Surrey and Langley this past week to discuss strategies for combating crime, said the proximity to the U.S. border had led to the emergence of gangs.
"Frankly over the years there has been a bit of a tolerance of a certain level of drug activity there," Van Loan said. "It's now gotten to the point where Vancouver and that area have the largest number of organized criminal outfits in the country."
A decade ago, there were 10 gangs operating in the region, said criminologist Darryl Plecas at the University of Fraser Valley in Abbotsford. Two years ago, there were 50 and police officials say there are now more than 139 active criminal organizations operating in B.C. The number of customers for drugs hasn't changed significantly, but violence is up because there is more jostling among the suppliers. Border security is tighter than ever but penetrable, and the potential gains are worth the risks. Plecas calculates that an average grow op can net $500,000 a year. With that much earnings from marijuana, even new players have easy access to guns and cash.
"These are rinky-dink criminals who are not sophisticated, not organized," said Plecas. "They're vying for power and position whether it's within their own group or rivals and because they're small it's not like the established organizations where you need permission from above to bump someone off."The Abbotsford connections are time-honoured mafia culture, he said."It's like the Sicilian mafia. It started in Sicily but they moved from there," said Plecas. "That's like these guys. They grew up here, they have long-term friends, people they grew up with who are now part of the organizations."Abbotsford Deputy Police Chief Rick Lucy said by alerting the public of the criminal associations in their community, residents know there is a local connection to the shootings that are going on throughout the region. Police are urging businesses in the community to stop conducting transactions with gang associates and are asking neighbours and family and friends of gang members to turn them in."People are now seeing that Abbotsford is no longer a small quiet location," said Lucy.
The UN gang is a multi-ethnic crime group that has its roots in the Fraser Valley, but has grown throughout Metro Vancouver over the last few years. Members have also been showing up more frequently in the Okanagan and Interior.
40-year-old gunned down in a targeted hit late Thursday on a quiet Abbotsford street was a member of the United Nations or UN gang, The Vancouver Sun has learned.
The man, whose identity is being withheld by investigators, was gunned down on the front steps of the house he had shared with his wife and daughters for several months.But police have confirmed that he was heavily involved in organized crime.
The man is known to police and he is suspected of having links to organized crime," said Abbotsford Police Const. Casey Vinet. "All indications are that the victim was targeted."Several Lower Mainland murders and shootings have been linked to rivalries between the UN and other crime groups such as the Independent Soldiers.
Neighbours of the home at 1432 Kipling St. say the man and his family have been residing there for only a few months and kept to themselves in the close-knit community-oriented area.The man was apparently arriving home at 10:40 p.m. May 8, when he was shot on his front steps.Vinet said some witnesses described seeing a grey or silver SUV in the area at the time of the shooting, but investigators do not know if it was connected to the murder.The case is being handled by the joint police Integrated Homicide Investigation Team, Vinet said, with the involvement of Abbotsford police.The house has been owned since 2005 by Oscar Cojulun, who is now listed as living in Edmonton, suggesting the victim was a tenant.
Cojulun did not return phone calls Friday.Supt. John Robin, head of the Integrated Gang Task Force, confirmed the latest victim has considerable criminal links.
But he said it does not appear the Abbotsford shooting is connected to another gangster slaying, which occurred exactly 24 hours earlier after a fight at the Cecil strip club in downtown Vancouver."The two incidents do not appear to be related," said Robin.The identity of the 30-year-old Vancouver victim will not be released until next week, Vancouver police Const. Tim Fanning said Friday.Fanning said the Richmond man is also well-known to police though not linked to a specific gang, but with many criminal associates.He said VPD homicide investigators are poring over video surveillance from the vicinity of the shooting to attempt to identify suspects.
The Vancouver shooting took place in the hotel parking lot, at 1336 Granville St., minutes after a fight broke out inside the strip club. A second man was shot in the leg, but survived.The Cecil's liquor licence was temporarily suspended after the shooting.
The total number of homicides across the Lower Mainland in 2008 is close to 40, with 27 in IHIT's jurisdiction, 10 in Vancouver and one in Delta. Many of the slayings have been gang-related or linked to organized crime, making witnesses reluctant to come forward.
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