Sunday, April 16, 2023

2 charged for attempted hit on HA tied Carlos Fernandes

McLee Charles, 38, and Gahens Lee Souverain, 23, are charged with attempted murder of HA associate Carlos Fernandes, 50. Fernandes is a former member of the first iteration of the Ontario Nomads chapter of the Hells Angels. He was a member when it was shuttered.
In 2018, Fernandes pleaded guilty to drug trafficking and gangsterism, and was sentenced to 42 months.
The attempt on Fernandes’s life occurred in Terrebonne on Feb. 16, 2022.
Souverain is charged with the attempted murder of Davide Barberio, a member of the Montreal Mafia. Charles’s record includes conviction for his role in the death of Raymond Ellis, 25. Ellis was killed in Montreal on Oct. 23, 2005 after being attacked by a group, including Charles, who were part of a Blues street gang. Charles pleaded guilty to manslaughter in the case of mistaken identity and was sentenced to over seven years.

Davide Barberio
See ----->Attempted hit on Davide Barberio
See ----->Martin Bernatchez shot in Granby

Gangster turned politician Atiq Ahmad, brother shot dead

Gangster turned politico Atiq Ahmad and his brother Ashraf were shot dead in Prayagraj by unidentified gunmen while they were being escorted by police. The moment was caught on camera. 3 men fired at close range, killing the handcuffed men.
Ahmad and his brother Ashraf were brought for a court hearing in connection with the Umesh Pal murder case. Atiq Ahmed was an Indian criminal, gangster, and politician. He had served as a member of the Indian Parliament and the Uttar Pradesh Legislative Assembly from the Samajwadi Party. He had more than 100 criminal cases registered against him and was in jail from 2019 until his assassination. Ahmad’s son Asad was killed in a police encounter on April 13.

Saturday, April 15, 2023

Anthony Zottola guilty of murdering father = life


Anthony Zottola

Bushawn 'Shelz' Shelton
Anthony Zottola, 45, was found guilty in the plot to murder his father and was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole. Anthony Zottola hired a Bloods gangster to kill his father in 2018. He was charged along with nine others in the murder of his mob connected father in a McDonald's drive-thru. Anthony Zottola hired Bushawn Shelton to carry out the murders.
Sylvester ‘Sally Daz’ Zottola

All face a mandatory punishment of life.
Shelton was paid $200k to rub out Zottola so the son could seize control of his father’s $45m real estate empire. The men were also charged in the near-fatal shooting of Anthony's brother, Salvatore Zottola. They are charged with murder-for-hire, unlawful use of a firearm, and causing death with a firearm.
See ----->Bronx Drive-thru mob hit was "like in the movies"
See ----->Shooting of Mafia associate's son caught on camera

Ekene Anigbo goes away on weapons charges - update

Charges were laid Friday against Red Scorpion gangster Ekene 'Lololanski' Anigbo and his associate Jalen Falk for the murder of Kathleen Richardson. Richardson was killed in her Naramata home on June 9, 2021. A third gangster Shahram Tokhy is also charged.

Anigbo was arrested in October 2021 after he carried two loaded semi-automatic firearms into a Richmond hotel lobby. He is notorious after being named as a top Vancouver gangster.
Ekene Dillichuwu Anigbo, 23, pleaded guilty to possession of a prohibited or restricted and loaded firearm. The 'top 6' Vancouver gangster bought himself four years on Sept. 26 after he carried two semi-automatic firearms into a hotel lobby. He was on probation at the time for possession of a loaded P80 handgun. Anigbo "presented a risk to public safety". The judge noted that Anigbo had pledged he wanted to turn his life around and committed to doing so. That was pure bullshit.

With credit for time served, Anigbo has a remaining 33.5 months.VPD say Anigbo, also known as rapper Lolo Lanski, is a member of the Kang/Red Scorpion group.

Thursday, April 13, 2023

$897,540 forfeited in Saskatchewan

The Saskatchewan Highway Patrol located $897,540 in Canadian cash during a commercial traffic inspection on a semi-truck in 2022. Cops found two large duffle bags that were filled with cash in a clear and vacuum-sealed plastic bag. Two were arrested, and then released.

Mohammed Majidpour misunderstood = guilty

Mohammed Majidpour has pleaded guilty to arson, assault and shoplifting charges with sentencing likely in May.
Prolific Vancouver repeat offender Mohammed Majidpour, 35, remains caged, and is now facing an arson charge on top of a slew of robbery and assault charges. He is now accused of torching a car. Cops recognized him instantly and he was busted again. He was previously wanted Canada-wide for an attack on a woman.
That attack involved hitting a 19-year-old student over the back of the head with a pole.

Wednesday, April 12, 2023

$7.5m in fentanyl, cocaine seized in Vancouver drug bust

Project Toluene launched in January, focusing on a group manufacturing and trafficking drugs throughout the Lower Mainland and Vancouver Island. The investigation led cops to a fentanyl lab operating out of a house in a residential Richmond neighbourhood. On March 21 the team executed a search warrant to raid the home and dismantle the lab, seizing more than 7kg of suspected fentanyl, 800 grams of methamphetamines, and $39,000 cash from inside. A man in possession of an additional 15 kg of suspected fentanyl, 2kg of cocaine, and nearly $48k cash inside his vehicle was arrested nearby.
A search warrant at a condo in Coal Harbour returned 4.7 kg of fentanyl and $272k cash.

Man accused of butchering villagers still a Canadian


Orantes in 2011
A man accused of slaughtering villagers in Guatemala using a grenade, gun and sledgehammer is still fighting Canada's attempt to revoke his citizenship. Jorge Vinicio Sosa Orantes denies he concealed participation in a 1982 massacre by the Guatemalan military when he obtained Canadian citizenship a decade later.

He paints himself as an instructor at a military training school, working with local communities in Guatemala to build good relations. Sosa Orantes, 64, was served a 10-year sentence for immigration fraud in the United States, where he also held citizenship until it was revoked in 2014.
In the early 1980s, the Guatemalan military junta began a ruthless campaign against guerrilla groups that wiped out 440 villages, killing over 75,000 people. Sosa Orantes was a senior member of a military special forces group that led a mission to Las Dos Erres in December 1982. Military members killed at least 162 civilians, including 67 children. Women were raped and children were thrown into an 18-metre dry well.

"The members of the special forces group killed their victims by hitting them on the head with a sledgehammer, by hitting their heads on a tree, by shooting them, or by slitting their throats," the federal submission says.
Sosa Orantes represented himself in the Federal Court case from a Phoenix prison cell. "I was not in Las Dos Erres," he writes. Sosa Orantes says that in late 1982 and early 1983 he was busy travelling to several towns as part of a goodwill effort, handing out notebooks, pens, chalk, educational games and sports equipment for children. Sosa Orantes married an American woman and attained U.S. citizenship in September 2008. In 2010, the U.S. discovered he had committed immigration fraud by concealing his past. He was arrested the following year in Canada. In ordering his extradition to the U.S. to face trial, the Alberta Court said the evidence establishes Sosa Orantes was one of the commanding officers who decided to murder the villagers and that he "actively participated in the killings with a sledgehammer, with a firearm and a grenade."

Tuesday, April 11, 2023

Former Cape Town cop breaks bad

Former Cape Town cop Sandile Edward Mroqoza, 40, was sentenced to 20 years behind bars for robbing a cash-in-transit vehicle of R2.3m ($125k) using a police vehicle. He was convicted of robbery with aggravating circumstances. The cash was found hidden in his fridge.

173 guns seized

Toronto cops say 173 guns were seized in Canada and the U.S. as part of a cross-border firearms trafficking investigation. Project Moneypenny began in March 2022 by Toronto police’s guns and gangs unit. It resulted in a large number of firearms seized, 42 people arrested, and 422 criminal charges laid. Fentanyl, carfentanil and cocaine and $184k cash was also seized. Cops seized about 1.5 kilos of fentanyl/carfentanil with a street value of $300k, and 1.8 kilos of cocaine.

87 handguns were wrapped in bubble wrap and then in holiday paper in an attempt to avoid detection by border security.
Seized firearms originated in Arizona, Florida, North Carolina, Georgia, Ohio, and Texas.