Monday, July 17, 2023

Outlaws and Loners MC in conflict - update

Shortly before the latest, Loners MC biker Eric St. Louis, 34, of Ottawa, and Jessica Rose, 31 were busted for possession of drugs for the purpose of trafficking and possession of property obtained by crime over $5,000.

Cops landed two Loners cuts, Loners MC jewelry, a vehicle, cocaine and $11k in cash.
On July 8, 2023 the clubs tangled with a shooting and assaults with knives. On July 10th the Outlaws clubhouse in Brockville was burned to the ground. The Loners MC came to Peterborough in 2012 with a clubhouse on Park Street which later burned down. The group was embroiled in a turf war with the Vagos MC. That conflict ended with the patch over of the Vagos Peterborough chapter to the Outlaws in 2014. Experts say the Loners MC remains active without a formal clubhouse.

Brockville cops now say the 2 a.m. fire was arson.

Friday, July 14, 2023

B.C. HAMC make splash in Inuvik and Tuktoyaktuk

A pair of road worn HA don't appear to be setting up a new chapter in Canada's far north. Cops went out of their way to spell things out for concerned residents as the bikers rolled through Inuvik.

“The Inuvik RCMP were aware of the presence of these individuals. The Hells Angels are an international criminal organization that is linked to murder, widespread drug trafficking, human trafficking and other serious criminality in Canada. We, as the police, do not welcome their presence in our communities.”

Kaleb James Moir in the chit again

Kaleb James Moir, of Pocatello, Idaho has been charged with felony aggravated battery after a Pocatello police officer witnessed the assault. The cop saw Moir, who was listed in the police report as being 6 foot, 4 inches tall and weighing 275 pounds, standing over the other man, who is described as being 5 foot, 7 inches tall and weighing 130 pounds. “Moir had a hand on (the victim’s) throat and was slamming the back of his head on the floor and was punching him in the face multiple times,” cops wrote. A video provided audio of the altercation, in which Moir can be heard yelling profanities and threatening the victim for having Hells Angels stickers on his motorcycle. Prosecutors will attempt to prove there is enough evidence against Moir to elevate the case. If convicted of a felony aggravated battery charge, Moir faces up to 15 years in prison and a fine of up to $50,000.
Moir was busted in January for attacking a woman. The victim said Kaleb Moir hit and choked her multiple times over the course of two days after he was kicked out of a motorcycle club. In 2021 Kaleb James Moir challenged a man to fight him outside of Karen’s Bar, severely cutting the man’s face and injuring his nose. Moir was carrying a semi-automatic handgun at the time.

Wednesday, July 12, 2023

President of Rebels MC Dixon busted in Bendigo

Victoria police say a Rebels MC chapter president, sergeant at arms and patched member attacked the victim outside his North Bendigo home. They assaulted the man after he had waved at a speeding motorbike on his street to slow down. The victim was left with serious facial injuries. The bikies face up to 10 years in jail.

Dixon was out on bail.
The acting State president of the Rebels bikie gang is Jason Anthony Dixon, 49. He is facing a long list of gun and drugs charges after a major takedown by the gang crime squad in 2022.

Storm Shadow missile strike kills Russian Lt. Gen. Oleg Tsokov

Senior Russian general Lt. Gen. Oleg Tsokov was killed in the port city of Berdyansk. Both sides confirm a UK-supplied Storm Shadow missile strike, 100 miles from the front. Tsokov, the deputy commander of Russia's Southern Military District, would be the highest-ranking Russian officer to be killed in the conflict.
Russian Major General Sergei Goryachev was killed in a strike on a command post in southern Ukraine in June. Goryachev is the fifth major general be killed in Russia’s invasion and first of 2023. On May 11 the UK confirmed the transfer of Storm Shadow cruise missiles to Ukraine. The Storm Shadow warhead features an initial penetrating charge, then a variable delay fuse to control detonation of the warhead. Intended targets are high value, strategic targets. The missile is fire and forget, programmed before launch.
Storm Shadow missiles are capable of striking targets with great precision at much longer ranges than had previously been possible for Ukraine.
The cruise missiles are launched from specially modified Su-24 strike aircraft and fly under the cover of MiG-29 and Su-27 fighters. They have a range of over 400 km and deliver a 300 kg (660 lb) HE multipurpose warhead. Unit cost is $3.19m.

Charles DeBono free 1 year after $56m steal

A year after being sentenced for orchestrating one of Canada’s largest Ponzi schemes, Charles DeBono is free on day parole. When arrested in his bolthole in the Dominican Republic in 2020, the fugitive was so distraught that he said “they would have to kill” him before he’d go back to Canada. He even tried to wrap one of his shoelaces around his neck to convince folks he was serious. DeBono, 64, was the architect of Debit Direct, an 'investment opportunity' that supposedly provided debit terminals to small businesses. 515 people were duped out of $56 million by a shameless conman in a classic Ponzi scheme. After a four year investigation and prosecution, DeBono was sentenced to seven years, which was cut to just over four years after credit for pre-sentence custody. DeBono was also ordered to pay nearly $29 million in restitution to victims. Cops found $1.5m.

Tuesday, July 11, 2023

Iran's ‘Bitumen Mafia’

Iran is among the world’s top producers of bitumen, a black viscous mixture of hydrocarbons usually obtained as a residue from petroleum distillation. It is typically used in applications such as road surfacing, roofing and certain types of paint. Most Irainian national production is distributed free of charge to state-owned entities and affiliates of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard. 65% of this, or 2.5 million tons, ends up being exported illicitly. With a bitumen price of $410 per ton, this is equivalent to over $1 billion per year.

None of this returns to ordinary Iranian citizens.

Lawrence Bishnoi rushed to hospital

Notorious gangster and accused in the hit of Punjabi singer Sidhu Moosewala, Lawrence Bishnoi, 30, was rushed to hospital from jail amidst tight security. Bishnoi's lawyers said he suffered from high fever and a stomach infection. He began showing symptoms of jaundice, further exacerbating his deteriorating health.
See ----->Gangster Goldy Brar needs to go, and others
See ----->Punjabi rapper Sidhu Moose Wala whacked

Monday, July 10, 2023

UK dog Connor Chapman guilty = 48 years


Connor Chapman blasted Elle Edwards twice in the back of the head and injured five others, including his intended targets. He posted on Facebook four days after murdering her, saying her killing 'could of been enyones tragedy'
UK nutbar Connor Chapman, 23, killed Elle Edwards, 26, after opening fire with a sub-machine gun outside a pub on Christmas Eve. Chapman was convicted of killing Edwards, who died after he fired 12 rounds at a group of people standing outside a pub in Wallasey Village, Merseyside. Chapman fired a volley of shots from a Skorpion sub-machine gun as he sought revenge on two rival gangsters.

Sunday, July 9, 2023

Cops seize 3D-printed guns, printers in rural Alberta

Cops showed off some of the guns they recently seized in rural Alberta, including 11 that were 3D printed. Cops found the guns while searching seven homes in Grande Prairie, Penhold, Innisfail, Brooks, Lloydminster and Lac St Anne County. 8 3D printers, 45 gun parts, 72 long-barrelled guns, eight handguns, suppressors, bump stocks and over-capacity magazines were also found. The search warrants were executed as part of Project Reproduction, led by Montreal’s Équipe intégrée de lutte au trafic d'armes (EILTA), which aims to crack down on the manufacturing and trafficking of firearms. 2 weeks ago, RCMP confirmed 440 firearms were seized (both traditional and 3D-printed) and 45 people were arrested as part of Project Reproduction searches across Alberta, including Calgary and Edmonton.
See ----->Canadian cops raise alarm over ghost guns

Montreal mafia lawyer Loris Cavaliere linked to HA, street gangs - flashback 2016

It is July 2016.

Leonardo Rizzuto with Loris Cavaliere
The allegations are contained in an affidavit prepared to obtain search warrants last year in Projects Magot and Mastiff, two Sûreté du Québec-led investigations that produced the arrests of nearly 50 people on Nov. 19, including alleged Mafia leaders Leonardo Rizzuto, 47, and Stefano Sollecito, 48. HA Salvatore Cazzetta, 61, was charged in the investigation and the SQ arrested André (Frisé) Sauvageau, 60. He died in 2021.
André (Frisé) Sauvageau

Nicolo Rizzuto Sr. with his defence lawyer Loris Cavalière
When Louis Cavaliere was arrested in November, the SQ alleged his law offices on St. Laurent Blvd in Little Italy were used for multiple meetings between organized crime figures. But according to information contained in the affidavit, Cavaliere was also involved in drug-trafficking along with his clients.

Cavailiere was linked to Hasan Eroglu, a close friend of Lorenzo Giordano, who was known to police as the leader of the K-Crew, a group that specialized in selling heroin in Montreal. The K-Crew were involved in a conflict with the Hells Angels about a decade ago. Eroglu was fatally shot, on July 5, 2007. The homicide remains unsolved.
An informant who was being handled by two Montreal police detectives described a meeting between Cavaliere and Arsene 'Big Mouth' Mompoint, 42, a member of the Bo-Gars. Cavaliere, 62, was part of the roundup in November, but unlike many of the accused, he was granted a conditional release on Dec. 4. One of the conditions he agreed to prevents him from practising as a lawyer while his case is pending.

Montreal police say mafia, Hells Angels, and street gangs formed an alliance to control drug trade, and it all could not have happened without Loris Cavaliere. “All the crucial decisions were made in his office,” Sûreté du Québec Chief Inspector Patrick Bélanger said.
Loris Cavaliere was sentenced to 34 months after he pleaded guilty to gangsterism. He became the first lawyer in Quebec to plead guilty to the criminal charge of gangsterism. He was granted full parole after serving one third of his sentence in minimum security. Cavaliere's mobster clients were all acquitted after tapes made in the lawyer's office were tossed.
Now 68, former mafia lawyer Loris Cavaliere has not hit the news since.

Saturday, July 8, 2023

NZ Black power gangster and enforcer scuttles parole

Whanganui Black Power sergeant at arms Gordon Anthony Runga appeared set for release after being sentenced to seven years for being part of a Black Power gang that gunned down Kevin Ratana, a father of two, in 2018. Runga told the board he had spoken to the chapter’s president about “his need to step down from the gang to focus on his whānau. (Whānau is the Māori word for extended family) and was told he could leave without fear of anyone coming after him." That was revealed as bullshit as after he was moved into minimum security he tried to bolt by scaling a fence. In June four months were tacked on to Runga’ sentence after he pleaded guilty. He's back in maximum security and a 'role model' according to his fans.

Gangster emus spotted in Prince George


In 2021 residents of Prince George were on the hunt for a rouge emu named Dora the Explorer. Corralled at the airport the bird was returned to its owner. It escaped again instantly. Posts on Facebook regularly detail encounters with Prince George’s gangster bird since. We can now say birds, and they are tough enough to survive without help from dumb humans.
An escaped emu in Tennessee led cops on a 20-mile chase this spring after it got spooked and jumped its 7-foot fence. In that case the athletic perp led cops on a 20 mile high speed chase at speeds approaching 35 mph.

Friday, July 7, 2023

Oz lawyer Sevag Chalabian sentenced to 12 years

Australian justice finally caught up with one of the country's most crooked lawyers. Sevag Chalabian laundered millions for organized crime groups and now joins some of his ex-clients, including former MP Eddie Obeid, behind bars. Chalabian, 52, bought 12 years, with seven-and-a-half years non-parole, for a single count of money laundering. He used his solicitor’s trust account to launder $24m that he knew was the proceeds of crime. Chalabian was a key cog in the nation’s biggest tax fraud, the Plutus Payroll saga. The Plutus Payroll fraud cheated the state out of more than $100m. For a handsome cut, the lawyer was happy to wash the dirty money.
The day before his firm was raided, Chalabian transferred $880k in loot to Hong Kong. The cash went to KSE Property, with the sole director and shareholder being his 85 year-old mother Sosi. Chalabian’s mother, who speaks limited English, knew nothing about any payment. “How do I know? You ask my son,” she said. “I no see him much.” Among others implicated, Huang Xiangmo is a Chinese property developer who used Chalabian to channel $11m to a secret beneficiary. Reclusive mining promoter Mick "Many Names" Shemesian had business links to Chalabian. Chalabian was involved in dozens of Shemesian's companies.
Lawyer Dev Menon, 39, was recorded telling his co-horts theirs was 'the biggest tax fraud in Australia's history'. He was jailed for at least nine years. 'It would be the biggest tax fraud in Australia's history, definitely, there is no question,' Menon was covertly recorded telling conspiracy ringleader Adam Cranston. The Plutus Payroll fraud collected money from legitimate clients and funnelled it through a web of second-tier companies instead of paying it to the tax office, siphoning off at least $105m between 2014 and 2017.

Earth shatters heat records

Tuesday was the hottest day on Earth since at least 1979, with the global average temperature reaching 62.92 degrees F. (17.18 C) July 4 may have been one of the hottest days on Earth in about 125,000 years. The last time the record was broken was on Monday, when the temperature was 62.62 degrees Fahrenheit. “It’s warming 0.25 degrees Celsius a decade,” one expert said. “That’s why we see records broken continuously, rather than just as one-offs.” Scientists are expecting more days of record-breaking heat due to the return of El Niño. The sharp jump in temperatures has unsettled even the professional scientists who have been tracking climate change. The UN secretary general said that “climate change is out of control”.

Thursday, July 6, 2023

Car theft in GTA out of control - gone in 90 seconds


A crew is formed. The primary can make $3k to $5k per car, the break-in man makes from $500-1,000, key fob expert $1,200 and the getaway driver about $500. Following the theft, vehicles are usually taken to a "cooling off area" where the group looks for GPS trackers. Criminals send pictures of the vehicle and its VIN number to the customer who ordered the vehicle and money is wired back. 3 cars are put into shipping containers which are shipped overseas. CBSA checks far less than 1% of outbound containers which number between 5k to 15k per day.
The province says that in Ontario a car is stolen every 48 minutes. At least 32 cars have been stolen in Toronto each day in 2023. From Nov 2022 to April 11, 2023, cops charged 119 and recovered 556 vehicles stolen in the GTA. The vehicles have a combined value over $27m. The resale value overseas is high and it's a lucrative business. Penalties for getting busted are laughably light. The amount of money being made, according to cops, would make the GTA’s top pimps, drug dealers and gun smugglers blush.
In Toronto alone, there were 9,606 vehicle thefts in 2022. That's triple the amount of thefts in 2015. Following another 14% increase in 2023 Ontario is spending $51 million over three years to try to fight auto theft. Money is set to go toward creating an organized crime and auto theft team led by the OPP. The government is creating a major auto theft prosecution team to provide dedicated legal and prosecution support.

See ----->$10m in stolen cars recovered in latest GTA bust

Wednesday, July 5, 2023

Cops warn public to stay away from Surrey chitbags

Karnvir Garcha, Harkirat JhuttyKarnvir Singh Garcha, 25, was found fatally shot on Sunday. Cops warned the public in December.

Surrey RCMP and the Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit issued the unusual warning due to “a significant threat to the public posed by these individuals through their connection to criminal activity and high levels of violence. Police believe that anyone connected to or in proximity to them may be putting themselves at risk.”
Stay the hell away from Karnvir Garcha, 24, and Harkirat Jhutty, 22. Cops are warning any family, friends, associates and the public to avoid any interaction with the two thugs.