Over 2000 Posts Search here

Custom Search

Monday, 22 August 2011

Two men with alleged links to an outlaw motorcycle gang will face court on firearm and drug charges

Two men with alleged links to an outlaw motorcycle gang will face court on firearm and drug charges. Early morning raids on the Rebels outlaw motorcycle gang in Bendigo and Redesdale uncovered a pistol, sawn-off shotgun, longarm rifle, amphetamines, cannabis and hydro equipment. Forty-six police from the central Victoria response unit and Taskforce Echo issued the search warrants yesterday at 7am at a Rebels clubhouse in Rohs Road, a house in Mitchell Street and two houses in Redesdale. A 28-year-old Redesdale man has been charged with possession of an unregistered longarm rifle, possession of an unregistered handgun, possession of a firearm without a certificate, failure to secure a firearm, possession of ammunition, possession of amphetamines and use of amphetamines. A 38-year-old Redesdale man has been charged with trafficking cannabis, cultivating cannabis and use and possession of cannabis. Central Victoria Local Area Commander Acting Inspector Darren Wiseman said one of the men was a fully patched member of the motorcycle gang and the other was an associate. “There is a chapter of the rebels motorcycle gang in Bendigo and they are always under the scrutiny of police because of the activities they involve themselves in,” he said. “Obviously the fully patched member is very active in the club. “The investigation is always ongoing as far as Victoria Police is concerned around the activities of outlaw motorcycle gangs. “To us this is a good result for the community of Bendigo and surrounds that we’ve removed the firearms from the possession of outlaw motorcycle gang members. “Obviously somewhere, somehow they could have been used for some sort of criminal activity and it could have been much worse.” Acting inspector Wiseman said the investigation had been going for a month and both men had been bailed to appear in Bendigo Magistrates Court. “Any information from the public is always a great assistance. “Because of the Echo Taskforce’s expertise in dealing with outlaw motorcycle gangs, we utilised their specialisation in the area. “Overall, it’s been a great success on our behalf. “The message is regardless of what criminal enterprise you’re involved in, whether it is organised crime or links with outlaw motorcycle gangs, we will always be targeting these sorts of people.”

Read more...

Gunfire sends Mexican soccer fans scrambling in battle between police, drug gang

A Mexican first division soccer game ground to a frightening halt Saturday night after gunfire sent players and fans alike running for their lives.

Santos Laguna and Morelia were forty minutes into their match when shots broke out at the Estadio Corona in Torreon, causing both teams to bolt off the field in a panic. Many terrified spectators did the opposite and ran onto the pitch, while others sought protection under seats, in stadium tunnels or wherever they could hide.

Cameras were running as the commotion of cheering gave way to the eerie sound of bullets flying through the air. What nobody realized at the time was that the shootout was taking place outside the stadium, where cops exchanged gunfire with a group of assailants who attacked a police patrol unit, according to Reforma of Mexico.

"Officers spotted three trucks travelling on the [Torreon-San Pedro] highway and ordered them to stop. The trucks ignored the command and shot at the officers, which led to a car chase and a shootout in the vicinity of the stadium", Jesus Torres Charles, chief prosecutor of the Mexican state of Coahuila, said in an interview with Milenio TV channel.

Charles also said a police officer was injured during the chase, but didn't specify what type of injury he suffered or whether it was the result of gunfire. No information was given on the status of the assailants, either.

Once calm was restored at the Estadio Corona, players tried to project a sense of calm.

"Tomorrow we will train, like we always do. Right now we're continuing with our normal activities," Santos Laguna goalkeeper Oswaldo Sanchez said in an interview with ESPN.

"Don't be afraid."

Fear was apparently a motive for Sanchez's former teammate, Christian Benitez, to leave the team last season.

"Mi family didn't feel safe in Torreon", Benitez, who now plays in Mexico City with Club America, told Reforma.  "My wife wasn't happy because she couldn't go out."

Torreon is one of the most violent cities in Mexico, where over 40,000 drug-related killings have been reported since President Felipe Calderon declared war on cartels in 2006.

Although authorities have yet to confirm whether Saturday's incident falls into this category, Mexican soccer has been linked to some of the country's bloodiest drug gangs, including the Sinaloa, Juarez, Tijuana and the Beltran-Leyva cartels.

 

Read more...

Friday, 19 August 2011

The Burger Bar Boys. The Cash or Slash Money Crew. The Bang Bang Gang. These names sound straight out of a novel, but they're real-life gangs in Birmingham

The Burger Bar Boys. The Cash or Slash Money Crew. The Bang Bang Gang. These names sound straight out of a novel, but they're real-life gangs in Birmingham - some of the underground armies that spearheaded England's worst riots in a generation.

As Britain comes to grips with the causes of the descent into anarchy, Prime Minister David Cameron has identified the growth of gangs as a key factor and is recruiting high-profile American anti-gang experts to help bring them to heel.

While senior British police officers openly resent that move, analysts of gang culture say it seems logical to seek American assistance, because today's British gangs consciously ape American gang ambitions and style, from the bling to the lingo.




They talk in a street patois shaped by US rap lyrics, use noms de guerre lifted straight from American gangster films and crime dramas, and choose such icons as Don Corleone, Al Pacino's Scarface or Baltimore ganglord Stringer Bell of The Wire TV series as their avatars on social-networking sites.

"These teenage gangsters are creating their own criminal worlds, and in their minds it's very much an Americanised world. When they talk about the police, it's 'the Feds', or 'The 5-0', as in Hawaii 5-0," said Carl Fellstrom, an expert on England's gangs and author of a recent book on the topic, Hoods.

British law enforcement authorities admit that, until only a few years ago, they sought to minimise the scale and violent potential of their homegrown gangs. They promoted their preferred label of "delinquent youth groups" and billed full-blooded street gangs as an American phenomenon.

In the wake of the riots — when gangs used text-messaging to deploy break-in artists to breach steel-shuttered shops — politicians now use the "G" word pointedly.

"Territorial, hierarchical and incredibly violent, the gangs are mostly composed of young boys, mainly from dysfunctional homes," Cameron told the House of Commons in a debate on the riots. "They earn money through crime, particularly drugs, and are bound together by an imposed loyalty to an authoritarian gang leader. They have blighted life on their estates, with gang-on-gang murders and unprovoked attacks on police."

In Birmingham, a reporter took a drive through the contested turf of its working-class west side, a hodgepodge of cramped red-brick rowhouses and grey-concrete 1960s tower blocks where rival Caribbean and Indo-Pakistani gangs long have been at odds. Their feuds have sparked at least four riots since the 1980s.

The police were there too, raiding the home of a gang member believed to be storing loot from the week's gang raids on convenience stores and hi-fi shops.

At one corner, a teenage boy in hooded jacket and green bandanna - colour of a predominantly Caribbean gang called BMW, short for Birmingham's Most Wanted - was keeping an eye on "the Feds" as they pounded in the front door of that house and charged in by the dozen in search of stolen electronics and fashion-label clothes.

Such raids have become common sights in gang power bases since rioting subsided. The BMW foot soldier texted his gang leader the police's location, using heavily abbreviated code that the "5-0" was raiding the house of an enemy "cru".

The boy, initially hostile to a reporter's questions, warmed up when asked about the cost of a black-market plasma TV.

"It's sale of the century down that end. Everything must go," he said, pointing to a nearby residential cul-de-sac in the opposite direction of the police raid.

The gang's pilfered TVs, he said, were going for one-tenth of their sticker price, and locals were paying in cash in back alleys beyond the reach of Birmingham's network of CCTV cameras. He added with a cheeky smile: "We don't take Visa, but we do home delivery."

English gangs often defend their turf down to the curbstone. Many even attach the postal codes of their district to gang names. They also mark territory with wavy-lettered graffiti of tribal identity that would look at home on a Los Angeles highway underpass.

Virtually every spot on the English map that suffered riots is home turf to one or multiple gangs, according to an interactive online map called London Street Gangs and related gang-mapping efforts by the Metropolitan Police and University of Bedfordshire youth-crime expert John Pitts.

One riot spot, Enfield in north Londo,n where a Sony distribution centre was ransacked, hosts six active gangs including Dem Africans, Red Brick Crew and Gun Man Down. The south London borough of Croydon, scene of the worst arson attacks and the fatal shooting of a 26-year-old man, is the power base for the Don't Say Nothin gang.

While the wide-open shops in London inspired citizens from all walks of life to loot, police say gangs formed the theft-savvy vanguard. CCTV footage of certain riot zones clearly shows groups carting off goods with their faces hidden by gang-branded bandanas, baseball caps and jacket hoods.

The north London borough of Tottenham, where the fatal police shooting of alleged gang member Mark Duggan on August 4 triggered the first riot two days later, has at least a dozen gangs rooted in the vicinity.

Duggan was a reputed member of The Stars gang in Tottenham and a relative of a major crime family in Manchester, northwest England. Police say Duggan, 29, was transporting a loaded Italian handgun hidden in a sock at the time of the police ambush. His last recorded words were a text to his pregnant girlfriend: "The Feds are following me."

Roy Gisby, who helps manage a London-wide charity called In-volve that tries to steer youths away from drugs and gangs, said how the violence spread from Tottenham demonstrated the hallmarks of gang direction. The lead rioters in attacks on shops brought cars for both getaways and carrying heavy loads, and deployed members using preset gang text lists to tie down police, he said.

"It's gang-led, no doubt about that," said Gisby, 59. "Look at what happened in Tottenham. The youngsters were kept in the streets there to riot, while the older ones went north to rob Enfield. It might've looked like chaos, but there was an order to it."

In Nottingham, the city of Robin Hood fame, gang members wearing the red bandanna of one of the city's biggest gangs, St. Ann's Posse, tossed petrol bombs at a police station before ransacking a sportswear store. The following night, the city's other major gang, the Radford Boys, showed up in their black bandanas to lob Molotov cocktails at their turf's own police station, too.

"Radford didn't like that their big rivals were getting all the media attention, so they had to put on a show of force too," said Fellstrom, whose book focused on Nottingham gangs.

A national study by the Home Office, responsible for law and order in England, estimates that six per cent of all boys and girls aged 10 to 19 — or about 50,000 people — are members of gangs. They're sometimes recruited by older gang members to serve as drug couriers, making deliveries by bike with little risk of being stopped by police, just as in the United States.

The starkest difference between British and American gangs is the firepower. In gun-control Britain, only the bigger gangs make firearms - smuggled in with drugs shipments from Holland, North Africa and the Caribbean - their weapon of choice. For UK teenage apprentices and wannabes, the knife is still king.

Most of the more than 5000 stabbings a year in Britain, according police and social workers, are gangs attacking rivals who strayed into their areas, muscled into their rackets, or simply insulted them.

Already this year in London, eight teenagers have been stabbed to death. One wouldn't hand over his mobile phone. Another was stopping a bicycle-borne gang from chasing his younger brother.

Such bloodshed pales in comparison to the epicentre of gang culture, Los Angeles, where an estimated 90,000 gang members have been blamed for the majority of 297 murders last year. The LA gang model is the world export leader, with chapters throughout the United States and Central America. Dozens of British gangs brand themselves as LA-style Crips and Bloods, too, although no true trans-Atlantic affiliation exists.

But even before England's August riots, gangs cast a bigger statistical shadow in London than in New York, where official crime figures last year recorded just 228 gang-related crimes — in a city that suffered 18,000 robberies and 532 murders. While experts there estimate New York's gangs to have around 17,000 members, they stick to business and discourage inter-gang conflict over turf.

"New York doesn't have clearly demarcated gang territories," said David Brotherton, a youth gang expert and chairman of the sociology department at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice.

Britain's Cameron has just recruited the Los Angeles Police Department's former commander, William Bratton, to be his adviser on anti-gang tactics. Bratton previously commanded the police in Boston and New York, where his tactics were credited with greatly reducing gang-related bloodshed. Cameron and Bratton are expected to promote ideas pioneered 15 years ago in Boston by Harvard academic-turned-crime fighter David Kennedy.

Kennedy's "Boston strategy" seeks public meetings of police, probation workers, welfare providers, community residents, and a target audience of gang members. The discussions have been credited with delivering sharp drops in gang-related killings in Boston, Chicago and Cincinnati.

"It is now absolutely demonstrable that there is a better way to do this. There is a 15-year history in the United States in city after city after city. We don't think that London can fix its gang problem. We know it can fix it," Kennedy said.

While England has been slow to address its growth of gang culture, the gang-infested capital of Scotland - Glasgow - has already imported the Boston method.

Karen McCluskey, a director of Scotland's Violence Reduction Unit, in 2008 held her first Boston-style mass meeting with gang members in a Glasgow courthouse. She said gang members were shocked to learn the wealth of intelligence police held about them, appeared unaware of the range of help on offer, and were shamed by stories of how their behaviour had terrified their neighbourhoods.

McCluskey said her colleagues were sceptical that American anti-gang techniques could be imported meaningfully to Scotland, then watched Glasgow's gang-related violent crimes fall 46 per cent in the past three years because of them.

"It's easy to say that the approach won't work here because of this difference or that difference," Kennedy said. "The one thing we've learned is that the differences don't make a difference."

Read more...

Thursday, 18 August 2011

Expect retaliation and expect the bloodbath to possibly spill into Edmonton.


After a submachine-gun shooting spree in Kelowna that killed a notorious gang member Sunday, a Grant MacEwan University criminologist says retaliation should be expected. 
And if that retaliation turns into a war that involves the notorious Hells Angels, expect that ongoing fighting to reach Edmonton, he said. 
“There is going to be some movement,” said criminologist Bill Pitt. “Is there a risk for somebody getting whacked here or shot here in Edmonton? I would say definitely.” 
Pitt says gangs in B.C. are thriving because “lucrative” drugs are so heavily available in that province. 
And gangs, like the Hells Angels, are the ones distributing drugs like marijuana, or heroin and cocaine, that is shipped in through Vancouver. 
Edmonton, Red Deer and Calgary are home to Hells Angels chapters.
“Gangs want to make a move in Alberta,” said Pitt. “Are we immune to this? Absolutely not.” 
Tony Simioni, the head of the city’s police union, says the shooting in Kelowna doesn’t necessarily mean violence will spill into Alberta’s capital city. 
“This is a local issue and we don’t see any immediate danger of this spilling over,” said Simioni. “Having said that, that kind of gang instability, no matter where it’s at, will not only spark violence in Kelowna, but elsewhere.” 
Members of three of Western Canada’s most notorious gangs were reportedly riding in the same Porsche SUV on Sunday afternoon when a masked gunman opened fire, riddling the vehicle with bullet holes.
Witnesses say the weapon was automatic — likely a submachine-gun, according to one ex-military man — and up to 60 shots were fired as the SUV attempted to leave the parking lot of Kelowna’s Delta Grand Hotel.
Red Scorpion gang member Jonathan Bacon was killed while White Rock, B.C., Hells Angel Larry Amero was wounded, along with four others, including two women and an alleged member of the Independent Soldiers gang.
“Organized crime is a global business,” said Pitt. “It doesn’t just happen in the Lower Mainland. People don’t just get whacked in Kelowna.

Read more...

Revenge expected following Bacon death

The fatal shooting of Abbotsford Red Scorpion Jonathan Bacon in Kelowna on Sunday will likely result in a retaliatory attack, but not an all out return to the spiral of gang violence that plagued Abbotsford and the Lower Mainland in recent years, says a UFV criminologist.

Jonathan, the eldest of the three notorious Abbotsford Bacon brothers, was killed in a brazen, public shooting outside the Delta

Grand Okanagan Resort that also injured Larry Amero, a full-patch Hells Angels member from the White Rock chapter.

Also in the car was Independent Soldiers gang associate James Riach, 29, and two women, both of whom were wounded, according to The Vancouver Sun.

Riach fled the scene on foot and has not been located.

The RCMP has made clear it is determined to hunt down those responsible for the shooting, but has not determined which gang member was the actual target in the attack.

University of the Fraser Valley criminologist Darryl Plecas said reprisals will follow, most likely from the Hells Angels in response to the wounding of a full patch member.

"There will be retaliation [by the Hells Angels] all right, but it won't be reckless and quick," Plecas said.

The attack - which involved a hail of bullets aimed at a Porsche Cayenne parked outside a busy Kelowna hotel - was reckless in nature and could have killed people nearby.

Foolhardy and brazen, the shooting had all the earmarks of being the act of a loosely organized mid-level street gang, Plecas said.

The Hells Angels, a hierarchical, disciplined criminal organization generally doesn't operate in a manner that would attract such public attention.

Despite the risk of a revenge attack, the resurgence of a gang war is likely not in the cards, as police have made significant arrests and inroads, particularly against the Red Scorpions and UN gang, in the last couple of years, he said.

"Police have a much greater capability to keep on top of gang violence," he said.

"The public hears of [attacks] but they don't hear about all the things police are heading off at the pass and doing to prevent a hit."

Kelowna RCMP is working with police agencies across the province to catch suspects and head off retaliatory attacks, said Supt. Bill McKinnon.

Abbotsford Police Sgt. Casey Vinet said that although there is heightened awareness on the part of the APD, there is nothing to indicate a pending outbreak of violence here.

"We are working with our partner agencies to ensure we have the latest information around gang violence," said Vinet.

"It would be wrong to think violence couldn't occur here but we don't have any specific information to suggest something similar could happen in Abbotsford."

 

Read more...

Larry Amero was pals with Randy Naicker from the Independent Soldiers. We know that the Bacon brothers met Randy Naickers with several other gang members in the Castle Fun Park meeting in Kevlar

Machine gun fire in Kelowna killed Jonathon Bacon dead and injured five others including Larry Amero full patch Hells Angel from Whiteropck Chapter. What on earth was Jonathon Bacon doing in Kelowna with Larry Amero? That pretty much confirms the suspected association.

We knew that Larry Amero was pals with Randy Naicker from the Independent Soldiers. We know that the Bacon brothers met Randy Naickers with several other gang members in the Castle Fun Park meeting in Kevlar. Jamie Bacon is being charged in the Surrey Six Murder. That previously showed an indirect connection between Larry Amero of the Hells Angels and the Bacon brothers who did the Surrey Six Murder. We knew Larry's friends were Bacon brother's friends and we heard rumors of Larry being friends with Jonathan Bacon but getting shot with him in Kelowna pretty much confirms the association.

The Surrey Six murder was committed because the Bacon brothers were trying to take over the leadership of the Red scorpions who were formally associated with the UN and had beef with the Haney Hells Angels. After the Surrey Six murder and subsequent shootings the leadership changed and the Red Scorpions became puppets of the Hells Angels who clearly are the driving force behind BC's gang war.

It said four others were injured. I wonder if Matt the rat was one of them. With this proven association all his UN ass kissing must look awfully suspicious right about now. Matt the rat was pals with that dirty former cop Rob Sidhu who fraudulently obtained the info about where the Bacon brothers were living after the were shot up in Surrey. Larry Amero's former girlfriend was in the car with the UN guys that shot at the Bacon brothers outside Tbars.

It sure would appear Larry Amero and Matt the rat have been lying to the UN all along and have been playing both sides by supporting the Bacon brothers while still trying to do business with the UN. Kinda makes Matt the rat being with Elliot in Mexico before he was killed there very suspicious. With friends like those, who needs enemies.



Kim Bolan reports that the niece of a Haney Hells Angel was present and wounded in the shooting. Fortunately she was just shot in the leg. We hear too many stories of pretty young girls getting shocked when they're out with their gang member boyfriend and a car pulls up shooting at their boyfriend. Obviously the girlfriends are innocent yet it's impossible to be in that association and not know where all that money comes from.

Haney Hells Angels were the ones that had the beef with the old Red Scorpion leadership that were affiliated with the UN. Weren't they the ones that ran the grow op on Pickton's farm and attended parties at Piggies' Palace? Not much to be proud of there.

Read more...

Thirty-year-old Red Scorpions gang boss Jonathan Bacon was gunned down on Sunday afternoon while in the company of a full-patch Hells Angels member and an alleged member of the Independent Soldiers

The fatal shooting of Red Scorpions gang boss Jonathan Bacon and the wounding of a known member of the Hells Angels has raised questions about what they were doing together.
    R-C-M-P Superintendent Pat Fogarty, with the anti-gangs task force, says their affiliation was likely based on making drug profits.
    He says there's no loyalty among gang members, who often work for different players.

    Thirty-year-old Red Scorpions gang boss Jonathan Bacon was gunned down on Sunday afternoon while in the company of a full-patch Hells Angels member and an alleged member of the Independent Soldiers Employing a combination of smarts and muscle, the three siblings from Abbotsford became one of the most successful – and most feared – gangs in British Columbia’s criminal underworld. Sunday’s slaying of Jonathan Bacon brought a swift and bloody end to their violent career

When Jonathan Bacon and his younger brothers Jarrod and Jamie burst onto the Abbotsford crime scene soon after getting out of high school just over 10 years ago, they were hungry, reckless and bold enough to take a shortcut to success.

Until he was slain in a drive-by gang shooting outside a Kelowna casino on Sunday, Jonathan led his brothers and their Red Scorpions gang on a decade-long crime rampage that terrified neighbours and even intimidated their gang rivals.

“The Bacons brought something different to the table. They made it very, very clear that they were not afraid of anybody,” said Inspector Andy Richards of the Port Moody police, who has been investigating gangs in British Columbia’s Lower Mainland for 30 years. “That really aggressive style ultimately paid some dividends for them.”

Police say the Bacon brothers kicked off their crime career by breaking into and stealing from the many marijuana grow-ops flourishing in the area. “Instead of doing all the hard work and logistics, they would just go and rip them off,” said Detective Andrew Wooding of the Abbotsford Police Department’s gang suppression unit. “They cut their teeth that way.”

The youthful gangsters quickly moved on to the huge profits to be made in so-called dial-a-dope operations, where criminals hand out 24/7 phone numbers, often on a business card, that clients can call for speedy delivery.

“That’s where the real money can be made, controlling those phones,” said Det. Wooding, estimating a single line could bring in up to $5,000 a day. “They had all kinds of drugs, every commodity covered.”

 

Read more...

Tuesday, 16 August 2011

The Mission District unit of the gang known as MS-13 "waged war against rival gang members" and "ended up spilling a lot of blood on the streets of San Francisco,"

San Francisco's biggest gang trial in years is heading to a federal court jury today after attorneys offered a final round of competing narratives of organized mayhem on the city's streets and unreliable accusations by government-paid informants.

The Mission District unit of the gang known as MS-13 "waged war against rival gang members" and "ended up spilling a lot of blood on the streets of San Francisco," Assistant U.S. Attorney Wilson Leung told the jury last week during seven days of closing arguments, due to end today.

In more than four months of testimony in U.S. District Court, the prosecution sought to portray the seven defendants as principals of a heavily armed organization that controlled its territory through fear and intimidation.

All seven face up to life in prison if convicted of a racketeering conspiracy that includes four 2008 murders.

MS-13, or Mara Salvatrucha, originated in El Salvador. Members are initiated by "jumping in," a beating that lasts 13 seconds. Then, according to prosecutors, they rise in the ranks by committing acts of violence.

Eighteen others indicted in 2008 have pleaded guilty, including two men who were sentenced to 20 years each for the fatal stabbing of 14-year-old Ivan Miranda in the Excelsior district in July 2008, and two others who await trial for a slaying outside the Daly City BART Station in February 2009.

Additional guilty pleas have come from six men who are awaiting sentencing after testifying for the prosecution. Their credibility is a critical issue in the case.

The witnesses provided inside accounts, supported by secretly recorded conversations, of attacks and plots in which they - and, allegedly, the defendants - took part.

Defense lawyers focused on inconsistencies in the witnesses' statements to federal agents and the jury. They said the six men, who were paid and promised reduced sentences in exchange for their cooperation, could not be trusted.

One witness, Jaime Martinez, "described how he was cooperating and would sell out his own brother to save his skin," said Lupe Martinez, lawyer for Angel Guevara, whom prosecutors described as a leader of MS-13's "clique" at 20th and Mission streets.

Mark Rosenbush, lawyer for defendant Moris Flores, said allegations that Flores had taken part in or ordered three separate shootings were based entirely on Jaime Martinez's uncorroborated testimony.

Martinez "is a liar, he is manipulative and deceptive," Rosenbush told the jury.

Prosecutors said the informants' testimony was corroborated by other evidence, including cell phone records tracking the defendants' movements after fatal shootings as well as their own clandestinely taped statements.

"No one is asking you to like the government's witnesses, but fairly and rationally evaluate their evidence," Leung, the prosecutor, told the jury.

The central charge in the case is racketeering, a conspiracy in a criminal enterprise that includes drug dealing, assaults and murders. The murder victims include Ernad Joldic and Philip Ng, described by prosecutors as ordinary people who happened to be wearing a rival gang's color, red, in the wrong neighborhood one day in March 2008.

Another man, Juan Rodriguez, was killed in a revenge slaying in May 2008, and Armando Estrada, a seller of fake documents, was shot in broad daylight in July 2008 for refusing to pay "taxes" to MS-13 in its territory, prosecutors said. They said a witness saw defendant Guillermo Herrera take off his bandanna and laugh after shooting Estrada.

Besides Guevara, Flores and Herrera, the defendants are Marvin Carcamo, Erick Lopez, Jonathan Cruz Ramirez and Walter Cruz-Zavala.

Read more...

Hells Angel injured in the same shootout that left notorious gangster Jonathan Bacon dead Sunday has ties to members and associates of a number of Lower Mainland gangs.



Larry Ronald Amero, born in 1977, is a full-patch member of the White Rock chapter of the Hells Angels.

Amero leases three vehicles: a 2006 BMW M5, a 2007 Cadillac Escalade and a 2008 Chevrolet Silverado. The Escalade is a shared lease with his former live-in girlfriend, Sarah Trebble.

Trebble, a West Vancouver realtor, was acquitted this year of a charge of occupying a vehicle in which there was a firearm. The charge was laid after Trebble was found in a car involved in a shooting outside of the T-Barz strip club in Surrey in 2009. Police have alleged that Trebble is a known associate of high-ranking United Nations Gang member Barzan Tilli-Cholli.

Amero has also been photographed with one of the founders of the Independent Soldiers gang, Randy Naicker. Naicker was convicted of a drug-related kidnapping and extortion and was also the intended target of a shooting at a Vancouver halfway house. Another gangster — Raj Soomel — was killed instead.

Naicker and another Independent Soldier met with members of the Red Scorpions in 2006, reports state.

In December 2002, Amero was given a one-year conditional sentence followed by a year of probation after being found guilty of possession for the purpose of trafficking and production of a controlled substance.

The address associated with two of Amero’s vehicle leases is a $1.13 million Surrey property owned by a Ronald Amero.

Amero was in critical condition on Sunday. An update on his condition was not available Monday.

Read more...

Hells Angels now outsourcing their drug business



Increased police scrutiny of the Hells Angels has pushed the infamous gang into outsourcing its drug trade business to smaller outfits – a likely reason why a full-patch Angel was in the same SUV as Red Scorpions gangster Jonathan Bacon when the vehicle was riddled by gunfire.

“If you are a full-patch biker, you no longer drive around on a Harley with your full leather, showing your tattoos. It doesn’t pay to advertise and it doesn’t pay to do the risky work at the street level,” said organized-crime expert Michael Chettleburgh. “It pays to develop relationships with these young, eager gangsters who don’t look at risk the same way as the older folks do.”

 

Read more...

Georgia teen held in great-grandmother's sword death

Authorities in west Georgia say a 14-year-old is in custody after his 77-year-old great-grandmother was stabbed to death with a sword and his grandmother was wounded.

Douglas County Sheriff Phil Miller says officers arrived at the home Monday afternoon and found the grandmother, who is in her 50s, barricaded inside a room and the great-grandmother on the ground outside.

They say the teen was standing in the doorway with what they described as a full-sized sword and a pellet rifle, and that he shot out the windows of a patrol car.

Authorities say police used a stun gun to take the teen into custody after a standoff. The grandmother was taken to a hospital for treatment of what officials described as non-life threatening injuries.

 

Read more...

RCMP in Surrey, B.C., say several men with gang connections have been involved in a late night shooting.


The apparently targeted attack occurred just before 11 p.m. Monday night outside a nightclub near Surrey's Guildford neighbourhood.

Police say a man ran up to an SUV and fired several shots at two or three men inside, leaving one with a minor injury, possibly from flying glass or a graze wound from a bullet.

The suspect then fled on foot and no arrests have been made.

Mounties say all the men in the SUV have gang connections.

But investigators say it is too early to know if the gunfire is linked to the slaying of Red Scorpions leader Jonathan Bacon and the injuring of at least four others, including two gang members, in a daylight shooting in Kelowna on Sunday.

Read more...

Gangster culture An element of rap music has shifted from the ghetto to mainstream

What was the cause of the riots in the United Kingdom?

This wasn’t a political riot. There wasn’t anything political about it. It wasn’t even race-on-race rioting. It was races rioting together — rioting against the state, and for themselves.

Last week, renowned British historian David Starkey made this point to the BBC: The rioting was just shopping with violence. People sensed a moment of lawlessness and impunity.

But Starkey’s point was an observation, not an explanation. How did thousands of people in the land of the Magna Carta, the land of liberty and law, simply decide to become petty little gangsters?

Starkey referred to a speech made in 1968 by a politician named Enoch Powell, who had warned about unlimited immigration to the U.K., using the phrase “rivers of blood.” Starkey said the violence predicted by Powell had come true — but it wasn’t race versus race.

It was various races together. “The whites have become black,” he said. “A particular sort of violent, destructive, nihilistic gangster culture has become the fashion.” Uh-oh.

Hundreds of people immediately filed censorship complaints against Starkey and the BBC, and he was widely condemned as a racist.

Perhaps Starkey could have been more careful; he said white had become black — and then immediately became more precise, meaning they had accepted a particular segment of black culture, namely gangsta rap. But his meaning was perfectly clear — to anyone who has listened to rap music, with its glorification of violence and material excess, and who has seen the glamourization of that lifestyle move from ghettos into the cultural mainstream.

What grown men wear hoodies in public? Or their underwear up high and their pants down low? Those aren’t crimes, of course — maybe fashion crimes. But far more serious is the set of values that has been swallowed along with the cultural touchstones of fashion and diction.

Gangsta culture calls women “hos” and “bitches,” a crude misogyny with an undercurrent of a threat of violence. It glamourizes fighting, shooting and even dying in gangland warfare. It holds that the point of wealth is to squander it on bling and champagne.

For some folks, it’s a joke. Take Sacha Baron Cohen, the British comic who created a character called Ali G — a twenty-something white kid trying so hard to be a gangsta.

It was a laugh riot, so over the top it was hilarious. Except that thousands of British kids decided that’s who they wanted to be when they grew up.

As U.K. Prime Minister David Cameron said on Monday, this isn’t just about mimicking some questionable role models. It has become a substitute moral code. Starkey accurately pointed out where it came from, and where it has gone.

When thousands of British thugs decide it’s not a fantasy anymore, but rather a code for living, that’s the time to blow the whistle.

Cameron’s right. This is a slow-motion moral collapse. And the solution is surely not banning rough music or comedy. But being free to talk about it openly, like David Starkey did, is part of the solution, not part of the problem.

 

Read more...

Santosh Shetty was planning to bump off Rajan

After three days of intense interrogations, arrested gangster Santosh Shetty revealed that he was plotting to eliminate his one-time mentor Chhota Rajan with help from gangster Chhota Shakeel, who is in hiding in Pakistan.

Shetty was deported to India from Bangkok on August 12.
He reportedly also told the police that though in Bangkok, he was in contact with almost all the fugitive gangsters from Mumbai, including Ravi Pujari, Hemant Pujari and Bunty Pandey.

“These gangsters would approach Shetty whenever they needed any help,” said a police officer on condition of anonymity.

Shetty has reportedly told the police that he was in touch with fugitive don Dawood Ibrahim’s right-hand man Shakeel and was planning to eliminate Rajan.

Once a close aide of Rajan, Shetty had split ways with him after a spat over money in 2005.

According to sources, Shetty and Rajan had planned to make counterfeit US currency.

“They got in touch with a counterfeiter, who demanded Rs6 crore for the job. Rajan agreed to pay Rs3 crore, but Shetty said that he did not have that kind of money,” a police officer said on condition of anonymity.

Rajan asked Shetty to hand over a restaurant in Indonesia which was partly owned by him. “This suggestion soured relations between him and Shetty,” the officer added.

Shetty then started his own gang and soon joined hands with Bharat Nepali and Vijay (Viju) Shetty.

According to sources, Shetty used to often travel to the Middle East, Europe and the UK, where he reportedly met members of the Shakeel gang to plans ways to bump off Rajan.

In fact, Shetty had played a major role in helping Rajan escape a near-fatal attack in Bangkok in 2002.

“When Shakeel’s men attacked Rajan, Shetty and Nepali rescued him. They took Rajan to Cambodia and ensured he got proper medical attention,” said a retired Mumbai crime branch officer.

According to the police, in the last five years, Shetty has created a niche for himself in the underworld.

“He enjoys a unique distinction of being well-educated, polished and fluent in English. This gives him an edge over other gangsters, who are not so well-educated,” the officer added.

 

Read more...

Model sisters jailed for looting Argos



THE difficulty of dealing with those arrested in the aftermath of the riots is the vast number of different individuals involved.

At the moment there is little or no fear of law enforcement because for many youngsters it just doesn't exist, either in the courts or with the police.

It is common sense that sentences for rioting and looting need to be far tougher - with a minimum of five years to make it a proper deterrent.

Zero tolerance in America involves both the velvet glove and iron fist - and it works.

Feckless, useless criminals are taken out of their communities by proper sentencing.

Three strikes and you're out means just that - after two jail terms you go down for life.

We now have a proper opportunity to reform our justice system.Let's hope our politicians seize it.

 

TWO model sisters wept yesterday as they were caged for six months for ransacking an Argos store.
Shonola Smith and her sister Alicia joined 100 rioters who stormed the Croydon shop on Monday, tearing apart display cases and looting the stock.

The mob included their pal Donness Bissessar, 21 - who joined them again in court, and also got six months.

Bright student Shonola, 22, was about to restart a university course next month.

The girls' stunned families clutched each others' hands as District Judge Robert Hunter imposed the sentences, and the girls were led to the cells at Croydon Magistrates Court.

He told the defendants: "The tragedy is that you are all of previous good character, each of you well-educated. You have jobs. You have plans for future education. You have shown remorse and pleaded guilty. However, I can't ignore the context in which these offences were committed."

He added he hoped the harsh sentence would "serve as a deterrent to others".

Magistrates worked round the clock yesterday to deliver swift justice to hordes of captured hooligans.

Ministry of Justice officials said last night 2,033 arrests had been made and 1,043 people had already been charged.

A boy of 13 who went into riot-hit Manchester with a HAMMER strapped to his leg was hauled before the city's magistrates court.

He was given a nine-month referral order after admitting possessing an offensive weapon without lawful excuse.


Friend ... Donness Bissessar
District Judge Khalid Qureshi said: "If you had been 15, you would be going straight to the cells."

Three university students were jailed for a YEAR each for "scavenging" £4,500-worth of electrical gear and clothes during the London chaos.

Law student Akintunde Amosu, 19, business and marketing student Xavier Techie-Afful, also 19, and his younger brother Javier, 18, were told at Camberwell Green Magistrates Court they had "blighted their lives by a moment of madness".

A girl of 14 was bailed after her mum admitted she had not seen her for TWO WEEKS.

The teen is accused of stealing clothes, CDs and perfume in Tottenham, North London. Neither of her parents were in London's City of Westminster Magistrates Court to take her home and frantic calls were made to track them down.

Dozens were hauled before the courts accused of trying to rally the mobs online. Jamie Counsell, 24, allegedly used Facebook to organise an event in Cardiff called: "Rioting, looting, robbing and burgling." He was remanded in custody for a week by magistrates.


Insurance salesman Aidan Curwen, 18, was accused at Northampton Magistrates' Court of using a BlackBerry to urge 140 people to arm themselves with "bats and weapons".

A girl of 11 got a police warning for involvement with a Facebook page inviting 400 to gather at a Poundland store in Plymouth, Devon.

Jobless Amed Pelle, 18, faces jail after he admitted using Facebook to encourage the "killing of a million police officers" in Nottingham.

TWO men aged 24 and 26 were arrested yesterday over the murder of Trevor Ellis, 26 - shot in the head in his car in Croydon, South London, during Monday's trouble.

Read more...

Monday, 15 August 2011

ONE of Sydney's most notorious and violent street gangs - the Muslim Brotherhood Movement - has been "ripped apart"

ONE of Sydney's most notorious and violent street gangs - the Muslim Brotherhood Movement - has been "ripped apart" after a series of undercover police raids.

Head of the Middle Eastern Organised Crime Squad, Detective Superintendent Deb Wallace said the once "powerful" MBM has been "dismantled and disrupted".

"When you take out people who see themselves as significant players and those who can direct activity, it's like cutting the head of a snake," Supt Wallace said.

"We put a lot of work into what they were up to."

MBM members have been linked to serious and organised crimes including drug dealing, extortion, kidnappings and even attempted murder.

Such was their disregard for authority that during one search warrant on their Union Rd, Auburn premises last year, a police officer was stabbed in the head with a key.




The operation saw dozens of officers swarm MBM turf around Union Rd in Sydney's west, once considered a "no-go" zone for police because of serious, repeated attacks on officers.

Those at the top of the MBM hierarchy were finally locked up during the operation.

A huge blow to the gang also came with the arrest of two MBM leaders in separate operations. One is currently before court over a double stabbing at a McDonald's while the other is facing firearm and kidnapping charges.

Supt Wallace said there was a period 18 months ago when police saw the MBM escalating in notoriety, and feared they were on the verge of becoming a more serious criminal entity.

At its height, the gang's core membership consisted of 40 people and up to several hundred "associates".

The gang's notoriety rose last year when it emerged that a young Socceroos star - Kerem Bulut - was allegedly a member of the gang.

Read more...

Armed police have arrested a man on suspicion of shooting a father-of-four to death during rioting in Croydon.



Officers investigating the killing of Trevor Ellis, 26, carried out an "armed operation" in Camberwell, south-east London, where they arrested a 24-year-old.

Mr Ellis, of Brixton Hill, south London, was found with bullet wounds in a car in Croydon last Monday.

Police think he and some friends had a row with a group of about nine people.

Three other men have been arrested over the murder, which is thought to have happened following a car chase beginning in Scarbrook Road, Croydon, and passing along the A232 flyover into Duppas Hill Road.

Police appealed for information about the pursuit involving a dark coloured estate car and silver hatchback - believed to have been driven by the group of nine - and a dark coloured hatchback in which Mr Ellis was a passenger.

'Violence and disorder'
Mr Ellis was found shot at about 21:20 BST on the corner Duppas Hill Road and Warrington Road.

A post-mortem examination showed he died from a gunshot wound to the head.

On Sunday, Det Ch Insp Neil Hutchison, who is leading the investigation, said: "Trevor Ellis was murdered on a night where Croydon, and in fact London, saw unprecedented levels of violence and disorder.

"I believe his killers were actively involved in looting and responsible for robbing at least two people that night.

"They thought nothing of arming themselves with a gun and ultimately taking a young man's life, leaving four young children without a father."

On Saturday afternoon a 27-year-old man became the third person to be arrested on suspicion of Mr Ellis's murder.

He was being questioned at a police station in south London, officers said.

A 26-year-old man arrested in Mitcham, south London, on Friday, and a 24-year-old man arrested in Brighton, East Sussex, on Thursday have both been bailed until mid-September.

Read more...

Friday, 12 August 2011

Dump Squad member gets six life terms in Newport News street gang case

federal judge on Thursday threw the book at a leader of a Newport News street gang, saying he wrought terror on the community with murders, shootings, robberies and a host of other crimes.

Perry E. Cousins, 26 — a leader of the Dump Squad street gang in Southeast Newport News — was sentenced to six life terms, plus another 60 years, by U.S. District Judge Rebecca Beach Smith.

"You terrorized the city of Newport News," Smith told Cousins. "Your actions put the community in fear."

Text NEWS to 71593 to receive breaking news. Click here for other text alert options.

Throughout her career as a judge, Smith said, "a case doesn't come to mind that can rival Mr. Cousins'" in terms of the sheer number of violent acts committed in so short a span.

"There hasn't been one iota of remorse shown by this defendant — none," Smith added. "Not even an iota of feeling shown to the family of the victims.… He showed no remorse at trial, and he shows no remorse now."

Cousins' crimes included two killings, an armed home invasion, other robberies and shootings and a pistol whipping. Trial testimony painted a picture of a man who could whip out a gun and shoot at the slightest provocation.

Thursday's sentence brings to a close a large, multi-year effort by local police and federal agents to bring down the Dump Squad gang. The gang ravaged Dickerson Courts, Harbor Homes and Ridley Circle, three local housing projects in the Southeast section of Newport News, between 2003 and 2009.

Of 17 defendants originally charged in the case, Cousins was the only one who did not plead guilty. Several gang members turned on Cousins at trial, testifying against him in the hope of winning sentencing reductions in their own cases.

With her sentence, Smith exceeded even the sentencing recommendations of the U.S. Attorney's Office, which had requested four life terms. "This is one of the few cases that I've been involved with that … the individual enjoyed killing people," said Assistant U.S. Attorney Bob Bradenham. "He went out of his way to kill people.... He shot people that were unarmed and unaware."

Cousins' lawyer, Lawrence H. Woodward Jr., didn't ask for a specific sentence, but asked Smith to keep in mind Cousins' young age — between 18 and 22 — at the time of the crimes.

According to trial testimony, Rashed Caudle, 20, was sitting in a parked car on 19th Street in August 2003 when Cousins walked up from behind and fired nine bullets into Caudle through the shattered glass.

Caudle, who tried unsuccessfully to escape the bullets, was found partially hanging out the driver's-side door in a pool of blood. No motive was ever discovered, except that Caudle had earlier given Cousins a look he didn't like.

In September 2005, Lorenzo Antwan Thomas, 24, was sitting in his mother's apartment in the Harbor Homes housing project, getting ready to watch a football game, when two armed and masked gunmen barged in.

Thomas was a drug dealer, but didn't keep any drugs or money in the home, witnesses said. That led the two robbers, one of whom was Cousins, to grow frustrated at the fruitless search. At one point, Thomas thought he saw an opening and lunged at Cousins. Cousins shot him twice.

Before Smith pronounced the sentence, Cousins said: "Only Allah can judge me. I'm ready for whatever."

"This won't heal the wound in my heart, but justice has been served," said Teresa Cooper, Lorenzo Thomas' mother. "Justice has been served. Hallelujah."

Angela Caudle, Rashed Caudle's mother, said, "I thank God for Judge Smith. She saw through his hard exterior and she gave him exactly what he deserved."

Aside from the slayings of Thomas and Caudle, Cousins was convicted in several other criminal incidents:

* The February 2003 attempted murder of a man who was shot eight times, but survived.

* The June 2005 shooting of a drug dealer who resisted a robbery and was shot in the hand and arm.

* The July 2005 robbery of a drug dealer for $3,900 in cocaine.

* The severe pistol whipping in November 2007 of a man who had earlier pulled a gun on a gang member in trying to defend a friend.

The 17 criminal counts Cousins was convicted of include: murder in aid of racketeering; two counts of using a firearm resulting in death; racketeering conspiracy; drug conspiracy; conspiracy to interfere with commerce by robbery; three counts of interfering with commerce by robbery; three counts of using a gun in a violent crime; assault resulting in serious bodily injury during racketeering; three counts of cocaine possession with the intent to distribute; and two gun charges.

Members of the Dump Squad and two affiliated gangs — the Slump Mobb and the Bang Squad — were found to have committed a host of crimes. Some of the most notorious of those crimes include the November 2006 killing of Terrell Williams on 18th Street during a drug robbery; the January 2007 slaying of 22-year-old Tiarra Campbell, who was strangled, with her apartment set on fire, after she was considering cooperating with police; the December 2007 slaying of Tony Vaughan after a fight at a Hampton nightclub; and the setting fire to a police substation in May 2008.

 

Read more...

head of the violent drug gang “Mano con Ojos” or “Hand with Eyes,” an offshoot of the notorious Beltran Levya drug cartel arrested

Mexican authorities say they have arrested a suspected gang leader who they say has admitted to murdering — and ordering the murders — of 600 people.
Prosecutor Alfredo Castillo told reporters police had arrested Oscar Garcia Montoya Thursday in the capital, Mexico City. He identified the suspect as the head of the violent drug gang “Mano con Ojos” or “Hand with Eyes,” an offshoot of the notorious Beltran Levya drug cartel.
The prosecutor said Montoya told police he had executed 300 people and ordered the executions of 300 more.
Castillo said Montoya is a former corporal in the Navy, had received special military training in Guatemala, and served as a police officer in northern Mexico before joining the Beltran Levya gang.
The arrest comes just two weeks after Mexico announced the arrest of another suspected hitman leader, Jose Antonio Acosta Hernandez, who has admitted to ordering 1,500 killings. Acosta is the suspected chieftain of La Linea gang, in northern Mexico, whose members act as enforcers for the Juarez drug cartel.
In 2006, President Felipe Calderon launched an army-led crackdown on Mexico's drug cartels. Since then, more than 41,000 people have died in violence linked to the drug gangs

Read more...

Thursday, 11 August 2011

Authorities in Colombia have arrested a woman they say set up businesses to launder money for Mexico's most-wanted man, Joaquin “Shorty” Guzman.


Officials Wednesday announced the arrest of Dolly Cifuentes Villa, alias “La Meno.” She was taken into custody earlier this week in the city of Medellin.
Investigators say Villa was responsible for several illegal businesses in Colombia and outside the country that were put to use by Guzman. They also say she is the sister of Francisco Cifuentes Villa, who officials say once worked as Guzman's pilot.
Guzman is head of Mexico's Sinaloa drug cartel and is that country's most-wanted man. He has been on the run since escaping from a Mexican prison 10 years ago. The United States has offered a $5 million reward for information leading to his capture.
Guzman is one of the world's most powerful drug traffickers and richest men. The U.S. financial magazine, Forbes, estimates he has a fortune of $1 billion.

Read more...

Vigilantes clash with Police in Eltham

Riot police were hit with missiles including bottles as more than 1,000 officers battled with dozens of middle-aged men on the streets Eltham, south-east London.
Witnesses reported that many of the 200 men were chanting in support of the English Defence League, the controversial Right-wing group.
The group had promised to defy police orders and mobilise their own forces to protect their families and businesses from mobs of looters.
Last night hundreds of police from eight separate forces tried to restore calm from the mainly white men.

 

Read more...

Hundreds of people gathered for a candlelit vigil in Birmingham last night close to the scene of where the three men were killed by a car while trying to protect their community from rioters.



Tariq Jahan, whose 21-year-old son Haroon Jahan was killed alongside Shazad Ali (30), and Abdul Musavir (31), called on people to “respect the memories of our sons” by bringing a stop to the violence that has spread across the UK.

The trio died after being struck by a car in Dudley Road, Winson Green, as they attempted to protect a petrol station and nearby stores on Tuesday night.

Eyewitnesses estimated the car was travelling at around 80km/h when the men were hit.

A 32-year-old man arrested on suspicion of murdering the men remains in custody, while police are examining a car recovered near the scene of the crime.

Speaking yesterday following the murder of his son, Mr Jahan said: “Today we stand here to plead with all the youth to remain calm, for our communities to stand united.

“This is not a race issue. The family has received messages of sympathy and support from all parts of society.”

Mr Jahan added: “I lost my son. Blacks, Asians, whites - we all live in the same community. Why do we have to kill one another? Why are we doing this? Step forward if you want to lose your sons. Otherwise, calm down and go home - please.”

He also urged witnesses to the incident to come forward and give information to police.

Prime minister David Cameron, who visited Birmingham yesterday, described the deaths as “truly dreadful”.

West Midlands Police chief constable Chris Sims urged everyone to act calmly following the three deaths.

“Like everyone else in Birmingham, my concern now will be that that single incident doesn’t lead to a much wider and more general level of distrust, and even worse, violence, between different communities,” he said.

“If we are calm, I’m absolutely confident that the people of the West Midlands can get through this ... and that we can rebuild trust between communities.”

West Midlands Police has made more than 300 arrests since the disturbances which blighted the region on Monday and Tuesday night. They said the night passed peacefully with no further outbreaks of disorder.

The force had 1,000 officers on duty overnight - compared with 400 for each of Monday and Tuesday - with the situation across the region remaining calm.

Police also released more than 30 CCTV images of people they want to speak to in connection with the disorder and have begun the process of recovering “thousands of pounds worth” of items stolen by looters, executing a series of search warrants.

Solihull Magistrates’ Court sat all night to help fast track those charged in connection with the disorder in the region.

Read more...

Britain's cities were largely quiet Thursday after days of rioting and looting that drew thousands of extra police officers onto the streets

Britain's cities were largely quiet Thursday after days of rioting and looting that drew thousands of extra police officers onto the streets and a stern warning from Prime Minister David Cameron that order would be restored by whatever means necessary.
Tensions remained high even in the absence of any major incidents, and Cameron has recalled Parliament from its summer recess for an emergency debate on the riots later in the day. He will face questions about what caused the riots, and pressure to reconsider planned police budget cuts, which critics claim will strain an already overstretched force.
Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg said the "sociological debate" about the origins of the violence was for the future.
"Right now it's important that people are reassured that their streets are made safe, their homes are made safe and society is allowed to move on," Clegg told BBC radio.
Calm prevailed in London overnight, with a highly visible police presence watching over the capital. The Metropolitan Police said it would keep up the huge operation — involving 16,000 officers — for at least one more night.
There was a brief outbreak of trouble in Eltham, southeast London, where a group of largely white and middle-aged men who claimed to be defending their neighborhood pelted police with rocks and bottles. Police said the incident had been "dealt with" and a group was dispersed.
There were chaotic scenes at courthouses, several of which sat through the night to process scores of alleged looters and vandals, including an 11-year-old boy. Police said they had arrested almost 900 people in London since trouble began on Saturday, and 371 have been charged.
Other cities where looters had rampaged earlier this week also came through the night largely unscathed, though for the first time minor disturbances were reported in Wales.
Even as Cameron promised Wednesday not to let a "culture of fear" take hold, tensions flared in Birmingham, where a murder probe was opened after three men were killed in a hit-and-run incident as they took to the streets to defend shops from looting. Chris Sims, chief constable of West Midlands Police, said a man had been arrested on suspicion of murder.
"We needed a fightback and a fightback is under way," Cameron said in a somber televised statement outside his Downing Street office after a meeting of the government's crisis committee. He said "nothing is off the table" — including water cannons, commonly used in Northern Ireland but never deployed in mainland Britain.
Senior police officers, however, indicated they had no plans to use water cannons.
The violence has revived debate about the Conservative-led government's austerity measures, which will slash 80 billion pounds ($130 billion) from public spending by 2015 to reduce the country's swollen budget deficit.
Cameron's government has slashed police budgets as part of the cuts. A report last month said the cuts will mean 16,000 fewer police officers by 2015.
London Mayor Boris Johnson — like Cameron, a Conservative — broke with the government to say such cuts are wrong.
"That case was always pretty frail and it has been substantially weakened," he told BBC radio. "This is not a time to think about making substantial cuts in police numbers."
Scenes of ransacked stores, torched cars and blackened buildings have frightened and outraged Britons just a year before their country is to host next summer's Olympic Games, bringing demands for a tougher response from law enforcement. Police across the country have made more than 1,200 arrests — including 888 in London — since the violence broke out in the capital on Saturday.
Britain's soccer authorities were talking with police Wednesday to see whether this weekend's season-opening matches of the Premier League could still go ahead in London. A Wednesday match between England and the Netherlands at London's Wembley stadium was canceled.
Britain's riots began Saturday when an initially peaceful protest over a police shooting in London's Tottenham neighborhood turned violent. That clash has morphed into general lawlessness in London and several other cities that police have struggled to halt.
While the rioters have run off with goods every teen wants — new sneakers, bikes, electronics and leather goods — they also have torched stores apparently just to see something burn. They were left virtually unchallenged in several neighborhoods, and when police did arrive they often were able to flee quickly and regroup.

Read more...

Wednesday, 10 August 2011

Bristol riots: 19 more arrests and four due in court

Nineteen people were arrested in Bristol overnight as police clamped down on troublemakers to prevent more damage.

Four people are due to appear before Bristol magistrates this morning, Avon and Somerset Police said, charged with offences including criminal damage, violent disorder, theft and assaulting a police officer.

Since the disorder began on Monday night 24 people have been arrested in the city.



Chief Superintendent Jon Stratford said: "It is clear that a minority of mindless individuals are intent on causing disruption and criminal damage in our communities. This will not be tolerated.

"By taking swift action with our partners we have managed to contain the number of incidents. This sends a clear message to those individuals that behaviour of this kind will be stamped out and offenders brought to justice for their actions.

"The wider community should rest assured that we will continue to scrutinise CCTV and other evidence and we anticipate more arrests in the coming days."

 

Read more...

Triple murder inquiry: Three men are dead after being hit by a car during the riots overnight in Birmingham



The trio - two brothers aged 25 and 21 and a friend - had just emerged from a mosque and were on the streets protecting their car wash business after the previous night's violence, according to a family member.

Kabir Khan Isakhel, a relative of one of the dead men, told Sky News this morning that two cars approached at high speed and struck the trio.

He said: 'They were not in the way or blocking the road. The car swerved towards them. They were flying up in the air.'



Three men died after they were hit by a car in a hit-and -run incident in Birmingham in the early hours of this morning. 
They were hit while on Dudley Road, near the Jet Filling Station, close to the border with Cape Hill in Smethwick.

A spokesman for West Midlands Police said the men died 'following a road traffic collision in the Winson Green area of Birmingham which detectives are treating as murder.

'The incident occurred just after 1am in Dudley Road.

'West Midlands Police have launched a murder inquiry, arrested one man in connection with the incident and recovered a vehicle from near the scene which will be examined by forensics experts.'

 


The three were taken to Birmingham City Hospital, where a large crowd gathered this morning at around 5.45am and police in riot gear stood guard at the main entrance.

West Midlands Ambulance Service confirmed that all three men had been in collision with a car and that crews of paramedics found around 80 people at the scene of the incident when then arrived.


A relative of two of the dead men said they were on the streets protecting their business because of violence the previous night

An ambulance service spokesman said: 'The incident took place close to the Jet filling station on Dudley Road in Winson Green at approximately 1.15am.

The A457 Dudley Road was closed both ways between Moillett Street and Cavendish Road.

'Three ambulances, two rapid response vehicles and an incident support officer was sent to the scene.

'When crews arrived they found around 80 people at the scene with resuscitation ongoing on three men.

'Crews used their advanced life support skills while police officers provided support.'

The ambulance service said two of the men were pronounced dead soon after arriving at hospital, while a third died later in hospital shortly before 7am this morning. 

A spokesman said the man had received treatment at City Hospital for several hours before dying from his 'significant' injuries.

Read more...

Clapham Junction 'like a war zone amid anarchy

1,000 youths besieged Clapham Junction, south London, as they ransacked high street stores with no sign of police who appeared powerless to stop destruction.
For more than two hours, the youths, some as young as 14 and many female, destroyed buildings as they rioted throughout one of the capital's bustling shopping districts.
Witnesses reported police were "completely outnumbered" as they tried to barricade the rioters inside St Johns Rd.
Astonishing footage emerged of hundreds of masked looters running through the streets unchecked, breaking into shops such as Debenhams and stealing thousands of pounds worth of goods.
Not one business was spared, as row after row of shop fronts were destroyed along Lavander Hill, St John's Road and St John's Hill.

 

Read more...

Tuesday, 9 August 2011

police station in Nottingham was firebombed late on Tuesday by a group of up to 40 men

police station in Nottingham was firebombed late on Tuesday by a group of up to 40 men, police said, while there was looting in Manchester and there were tense scenes in Salford.

Canning Circus police station in Nottingham was attacked by the group but no injuries were reported, Nottinghamshire police said just after 10pm.

The force said a number of men were detained nearby.

There was also trouble in Birmingham and other parts of the West Midlands, but relative calm in London as Scotland Yard attempted to put the capital in lockdown with 16,000 police on the streets, in contrast to 6,000 on Monday.

Scotland Yard ordered its officers to use every available force including the possible deployment of plastic bullets to tackle widespread rioting and looting as the capital was flooded with the biggest police presence in British history.

Sporadic looting was taking place across Manchester city centre; there were also disturbances in Salford and tense scenes there around Shopping City, where a large group of youths had gathered.

In the centre of Manchester, rioters set fire to a Miss Selfridge shop on Market Street. Then around 100 youths looted Foot Asylum in the Arndale Centre after two raiders smashed open the glass entrance with a large stone slab. Once the glass was shattered, youths rushed in and carried out clothing and shoes.

A recently–opened fashion boutique in King Street owned by former Oasis singer Liam Gallagher was been hit by looters.

A Diesel clothing shop and a Bang & Olufsen store were also broken into, with a chorus of cheers going up among the crowd as the front window of the latter was smashed.

Several of the looters shouted out directions for the others to follow, suggesting a degree of co-ordination.

The mob scattered in different directions as police sirens sounded.

Rioters threw stones and other missiles at shop windows, whooping and shouting as they ran from police.

In Piccadilly Gardens an amusement arcade had been plundered. Machines were overturned in Piccadilly Museums with coins strewn across the carpet.

A cafe on Deansgate also had its windows smashed.

Large crowds gathered along the street, while looters helped themselves to bottles of alcohol from a Sainsbury's Local at the corner of Bridge Street.

The thieving continued for several minutes in front of onlookers.

All the looters had grabbed what they wanted and disappeared into side streets before three police vans arrived.

A jewellers was also reportedly attacked before plain-clothed police nearby ran in to arrest two looters from the shop.

Riot police in vans chased large groups of youths wearing ski masks and hoods as they rampaged through the city streets.

Other gangs prowled the streets on mountain bikes, their faces also masked.

On occasions they could be seen talking to drivers of cars on mobile phones, exchanging information, while they drove around the streets in what appeared to be co-ordinated manoeuvres.

Assistant Chief Constable Terry Sweeney of Greater Manchester Police said: "[The force] has been engaged with dealing with outbreaks of minor disorder in Salford and Manchester city centre this afternoon, involving a small number of youths. A handful of shops have been attacked by groups of youths who have congregated and seem intent on committing disorder. As we have said, we will not allow such mindless criminal damage and wanton violence to go unpunished and we will arrest and prosecute anyone found to be involved in looting or acts of criminal damage."

Earlier two cars were set on fire in West Bromwich where shops closed early in the afternoon after rumours of trouble circulated online.

Police in the West Midlands made a total of 36 arrests Tuesday night as fresh disturbances saw looting and vehicles set alight Birmingham, West Bromwich and Wolverhampton.

But West Midlands Police said the disorder was not as severe as Monday's looting in Birmingham city centre, which led to 142 arrests and saw 13 people taken to hospital.

Shops, including a branch of Marks & Spencer and a hi-fi store, were again targeted in Birmingham tonight, although two groups of youths were largely kept away from the city centre by riot police.

In central Birmingham a fluid mob of up to 300 youths gathered, dispersed and regrouped, attacking shops.

Chased by police, groups tried to get into the Mailbox shopping, office and restaurant centre near the city's rejuvenated canal basin, and the Pallisades shopping complex above New Street station before staff brought shutters down.

Marks and Spencer's had windows damaged and a car was set on fire in Albert Street by a large gang retreating from the Dale End part of the centre. House of Fraser was attacked along with a nearby jewellery shop before a line of riot police with batons drove the crowd away.

West Midlands police appealed to families with teenagers out and about to get in touch with them and persuade them to go back home. Three men had been arrested by 8pm.

Riot police pinned 60 youths in part of Wolverhampton after five hours of sporadic violence which left the town centre empty of residents and visitors, with shops shuttered and pubs shutting early. As in Birmingham, a core of several hundred troublemakers continually gathered, dispersed and then picked new targets.

The atmosphere also remained very tense in Handsworth with groups of Afro-Caribbean youths gathering, while Asian shop-owners and security staff stood outside their heavily-shuttered stores.

Read more...

Fresh trouble flares across Manchester and the Midlands as police warn 16,000 officers on London's streets could use plastic bullets

Fresh violence has flared around the UK tonight as police in London admitted they were prepared to use plastic bullets against rioters if a fourth night of lawlessness continues.

Pockets of unrest have been reported in the West Midlands and Manchester as an 'unprecedented' 16,000 police officers were sent to patrol the streets of London following questions over the failure of police to bring last night's riots under control.

Sporadic disorder and looting has been reported in Birmingham, Wolverhampton, West Bromwich, Greater Manchester and Salford, where the Central Housing office is on fire.


Fresh violence flares tonight in Birmingham, Wolverhampton, West Bromwich, Greater Manchester and Salford
Prime Minister David Cameron recalls Parliament on Thursday as Government tries to quell uprising
Plastic bullets could be used for the first time in Britain if there are riots tonight
'Unprecedented' 16,000 police on duty in London - compared with just 6,000 last night
Man, 26, shot in Croydon last night dies in hospital
Man, aged in his 60s, critically ill after clashing with rioters in Ealing
England game against Netherlands at Wembley tomorrow called OFF
400% surge in 999 calls on night of violence with 20,800 dialling the emergency services in London
Cost of clean-up expected to run into 'tens of millions'
Metropolitan Police use armoured vehicles to push back 150 rioters in Lavender Hill, Clapham
'There are no plans for the Army to get involved,' says police chief
Three arrested on suspicion of attempted murder of police officer
525 people arrested in total and more than 100 people have been charged
16-year-old arrested on suspicion of trying to incite riots via Facebook
All police cells in London are now FULL
Copycat riots in Birmingham, Bristol, Nottingham, Liverpool and Leeds

Read more...

The Great Riot of London

After three nights of escalating violence, arson and looting which have left parts of London looking like a war zone, Prime Minister David Cameron has one pressing question to answer from citizens looking to him for reassurance and action: "Who controls Britain's streets?"

Throughout Monday night and the early hours of Tuesday morning the answer to that question appeared to be "the mob." It certainly was not the police, politicians or local community leaders, all of whom were overwhelmed by the unprecedented scale of the violence and the speed with which it escalated and spread, first, from one London borough to another and then, perhaps inevitably, to other cities including Liverpool, Birmingham and Bristol.

If Cameron cannot offer a different answer to the question, one that reassures people that government ministers and the police have control, then the consequences for his leadership could be far reaching and, ultimately, even lethal. Margaret Thatcher's long reign as Prime Minister came to an end partly as a result of less devastating riots against her attempt at radical reform of local taxation in March 1990. As Diane Abbott, member of parliament for Hackney, one of the worst hit boroughs, in north London, told TIME: "One of the basic functions of a nation state is to maintain public order. If Cameron cannot regain control over the next 24 hours then he will be in serious political trouble."

Unlike Thatcher, there is no massive policy issue driving the riots but, as Abbott also points out, the deep government cuts to public spending and local community services to deal with the economic downturn have yet to really bite in many communities. "When they do, it isn't going to make things any better," she says. But, like the majority of politicians from all sides, she draws a distinction between violence sparked by social tensions and criminality. "This violence may have started with the police killing of a man in Tottenham on Saturday, as they classically do start, but last night was just recreational looting and the big problem was that the gangs were allowed to loot shopping centers for hours without the police intervening, so the message went out you could go and loot without being arrested by the police."

With the capital preparing to host the 2012 Olympics in exactly one year's time, the image of burning buildings, looted shops and bloody clashes between riot police and gangs of hooded and masked youths is about the worst possible advertisement for a city already facing concerns over levels of security for such a massive event, with activities taking places around the capital.

For his part, the prime minister, who had cut short his holiday to return to Downing Street, attempted to show he had a grip of the crisis. He convened a meeting of the civil emergencies committee Cobra (named after its venue "Cabinet Office Briefing Room A") with senior police officers and ministers and announced a huge increase of police numbers on the capital's streets from 6,000 on Monday night to 16,000. He also said parliament would be recalled from its summer break on Thursday to hear an update on the situation from him. If he has failed to end the riots by then, he will face serious challenges over his competence.

The prime minister knows a lot rides on his reaction to this latest crisis which, for the second time in a matter of weeks has seen him appearing well behind the curve of events and forced to recall parliament. First it was over the phone hacking scandal which saw the opposition leader making all the early running and Cameron belatedly running to catch up with announcements on public inquiries on July 20. And only last week the Prime Minister faced criticism from opposition politicians for remaining on holiday as the Eurozone veered towards crisis, with headlines such as "Is anybody in charge?"

This time, Cameron, opposition Labour leader Ed Miliband and London mayor Boris Johnson all broke their summer holidays to fly back to Britain as the crisis deepened and the clamor grew for the nation's leaders to "do something," ranging from using water canon, putting troops on the streets or imposing a curfew in targeted areas. The Prime Minister rejected those options and the focus of activity at the moment is towards boosting police resources and intelligence. "We will make the streets safe," he promised.


Downing Street initially on Monday said Cameron would not be returning from Tuscany to take control of the reaction to the riots but was monitoring the situation on an hourly basis. Much the same was said for London mayor Johnson. Undoubtedly there were also fears that the sight of politicians rushing back to the U.K. would only add to the sense this was a genuine crisis.

In the end, it did not need politicians to encourage that impression. The rioters managed it without any help, with scenes of destruction and violence which some observers claimed had not been witnessed in London since the German Luftwaffe blitzed the city between 1940 and 1941 during World War II. What appalled many residents and shopkeepers was the lack of a police presence as their streets were torched and looted.

Cameron has until Thursday to show he can put the lid on this unprecedented eruption of violence. But, even if he succeeds, there will remain one other question to be answered, the same question that was asked during similar riots across the U.K. in the 1980s, another time of mass unemployment and recession. What is it that leads vast numbers of the country's youth to feel so disengaged and alienated from society and their own communities that they resort to violence, even allegedly recreational violence, on such a devastating scale?

 

Read more...

Riots continue for a fourth successive night in Britain, with the worst scenes of violence, looting and clashes with police taking place in Manchester and the Midlands

.

Following three back-to-back nights of rioting all over London, it is in the northwest and the Midlands where the largest numbers of rioters have taken to the streets.

Greater Manchester Police said they were engaged in outbreaks of disorder in both Manchester city centre and Salford.

Assistant Chief Constable Terry Sweeney said: "We will not allow such mindless criminal damage and wanton violence to go unpunished."

Around 100 youths have looted Foot Asylum in the Arndale Centre in Manchester after two raiders smashed open the glass entrance with a large stone slab.

Once the glass was shattered, youngsters rushed in and carried out clothing and shoes.

They dispersed towards Deansgate when a police van arrived at the scene and a lone officer in riot gear stepped out.

Officers with dogs then began to patrol the area. A line of officers then blocked the bottom of Market Street at the junction with Cross Street.

Large groups of people began to gather along Deansgate. Looters helped themselves to bottles of alcohol from Sainsbury's Local at the corner of Bridge Street.

The thieving continued for several minutes in front of onlookers. All had grabbed what they wanted and disappeared into the side streets before three police vans arrived.

In Salford Shopping City, a Bargain Booze off-licence has been targeted and windows of a branch of the Money Shop smashed.

Greater Manchester police advises people to stay away from the city centre.


West Midlands Police said they were dealing with sporadic disorder in Wolverhampton and the arson of two vehicles in nearby West Bromwich. They have arrested at least 43 people.

A force spokesman said: "Police in Birmingham are managing a large group of people causing disorder in several areas within the city centre.

"A large team of officers are working in the city centre to restore calm and bring the city back to normality.

"Officers remain concerned that young people are being drawn into unlawful activity and encourage families and communities to contact their children and ensure their young people are safely at home during this period."

In London, there have been instances of rioting in Canning Town and Enfield.

LIVE BLOG: London riots latest as trouble flares around UK
Earlier, shops and businesses closed early across the capital in anticipation of another night of violent rioting.

In some of the worst affected areas of the city, including Hackney in the east, Ealing in the west, Camden in the north and Clapham in the south, many shops did not even open at all, and a number of those that did have boarded up their windows in a bid to stop looters.

In the capital, police have made 563 arrests to date and have charged 105, and on riots have spread to Birmingham, Liverpool, Bristol and Nottingham.

Arrests in London have meant that the cities jail cells are now at capacity, and the Metropolitan police said that should further arrests be made tonight, those in custody will be put in buses and driven to jails outside of the city.

Prime Minister David Cameron has announced that 16,000 police officers would be on the streets on Tuesday night, almost three times the 6,000 officers out on Monday night.

Nine forces outside of London have also been deployed to support the Met.

Deputy Assistant Commissioner Stephen Kavanagh said the larger presence will also consider using baton rounds as calls mounted for them to use stronger measures in riots that have been sweeping the capital for the last three nights.

The Met has said that at least 111 officers have been injured since Saturday, when the first riots broke out in Tottenham, when a peaceful protest over the police shooting of Mark Duggan two days earlier led to violence.

Read more...

Three people have been arrested on suspicion of the attempted murder of a police officer after riots spread across England.

 

The Prime Minister was forced to return early from holiday to deal with the escalating crisis.

Scenes of widespread looting, violence and arson were seen not only in London, where riots began on Saturday night, but in other major cities including Liverpool and Birmingham. The worst rioting in decades led to the arrest of hundreds of people, as streets were turned into war zones.

Scotland Yard said the three people were apprehended following an incident in Brent, north west London, that led to a police officer being injured by a car while trying to stop looters.

David Cameron flew back to Britain to chair the Government's emergency committee Cobra and meet police chiefs, having been on a family holiday to Tuscany. Downing Street said Mr Cameron will meet Home Secretary Theresa May and Acting Scotland Yard Commissioner Tim Godwin before chairing the Cobra meeting at 9am.

Scotland Yard said 334 people had been arrested, 69 people charged and two cautioned in connection with the rioting and looting across London. West Midlands Police arrested about 100 people in Birmingham after youths went on the rampage in the city centre's retail area, near the Bullring shopping mall.

Scotland Yard Deputy Assistant Commissioner Stephen Kavanagh said all police leave and training has been cancelled and "all able-bodied officers in the Met will be out" tonight, making it an "unprecedented" number in London.

Speaking on BBC Breakfast, Mrs May appeared to rule out bringing in the Army and using water cannon, saying: "The way we police is by consent." She also urged parents to take more responsibility for their children - some as young as 10 have been seen among the looters, according to reports.

She told ITV's Daybreak programme: "There is no excuse for these levels of criminality and it needs to be dealt with. These people need to see that there are consequences for their actions. We need robust policing but we also need to ensure that justice is done through the courts and this will begin today."

Met Police officer Pc Paul Deller, who was based in the control room co-ordinating the force's response to the violence, said: " "We simply ran out of units to send. That's not something we would normally expose those officers to a risk of, but last night decisions were made that we had to and that's what we did. We threw everything we had at it."

Read more...

Large fire destroys Sony warehouse in Enfield

LARGE clouds of smoke are still billowing from the Sony warehouse in Enfield, after reports of teenagers with petrol cans attacking it last night.

The fire at the huge building, in Innova Park, Solar Way, was started at around midnight.

People are saying a group of teenagers with petrol cans set fire to the building after stealing computer games, DVDs and CDs.

The majority of the building has bee destroyed. Metal walls have melted and folded in on themselves.

Firefighters continue to battle with the smouldering building this morning.

Workers at JJ Food Services opposite have congregated on the grass.

Speaking to the Enfield Independent, one employee called Aga said: “It’s really bad, because people have lost their jobs.

“I feel really sorry for the people. The company has insurance, but they will have lost their jobs.”

Aga said she heard the manager of the nearby Premier Inn hotel had tried to stop the group of 20 "young boys" last night, but was punched after confronting one.

Fellow JJ Food Services employee Daniel Tlusciak, 30, added: “I had friends working on the night shift and they were evacuated about 12am.

“When I arrived at 8am there was a lot of smoke, but no flames. It’s terrible, it’s gone too far.”

 

Read more...

Thursday, 4 August 2011

Marshall "Big Bo" Fry was the last remaining fugitive from the Wheels of Soul motorcycle gang wanted in an attempted murder in Denver and conspiracy to kill rival gang members in Illinois.

U.S. marshals, who had spent days scheming ways to capture a wanted biker-gang member in Denver, only to barely miss him in a predawn raid Saturday, saw the wanted man walking along East Colfax Avenue in Aurora on Tuesday night. They arrested him without incident.

Marshall "Big Bo" Fry was the last remaining fugitive from the Wheels of Soul motorcycle gang wanted in an attempted murder in Denver and conspiracy to kill rival gang members in Illinois.

A tip had led the marshals to Aurora, where they happened to spot Fry walking near a Family Dollar store at Colfax Avenue and Peoria Street.

They ordered him down on the ground. Fry complied.

"He knew we were looking for him," said Charlie Ahmad of the U.S. Marshals Service.

Eighteen members of the Wheels of Soul were indicted in a Missouri federal court in June, and Fry was the last man left walking the streets.

The Wheels of Soul is a gang that earned power through crack-cocaine sales, murder, attempted murder and intimidation of rival gangs and clubs across the country, authorities say.

The gang has a "mother chapter" in Philadelphia, but the group's tentacles reach into Indianapolis, Chicago and Denver.

Members wear vests with patches designating rank or status, and they are required to swear an oath to the organization and a constitution.

At a 2010 national meeting in Philadelphia, members were told: "Wheels of Soul members are to be outlaws at all times, and Wheels of Soul is not weekend warrior s---, it is a lifestyle."

Some members have achieved "diamond status" and are deemed "1 percenters," terms to describe those who are particularly criminal and violent, the indictment says.

The gang coded phone calls — referring to firearms as "bottles of wine," for example — to evade the wiretaps of law enforcement.

On Aug. 2, 2010, Fry rode in a sport utility vehicle past the rival Hell's Lovers clubhouse in Denver and opened fire from a shotgun, the indictment says. Three members of Hell's Lovers inside the clubhouse came out and returned fire.

In January, Wheels of Soul's Colorado chapter president Jerry "Shakka" Elkins directed Fry and fellow member Rasheed Jamal "Diamond" Brandon to travel to East St. Louis, Ill. with the intent to shoot and kill members of the Outkast motorcycle gang, the indictment says.

The three met up with two other national members, also there to carry out the hit, but the mission was thwarted because police were near the Outkast gathering that day.

But the Wheels of Soul's propensity for violence is why local deputy U.S. marshals put so much effort into preparation.

On Saturday morning, they pored over maps one last time and rehearsed the game plan before pouncing on an auto-repair shop where they believed Fry was hiding. They suspect he had been there but left before the marshals arrived. So they were back to mining intelligence and hoping he hadn't fled the state — when they spotted him Tuesday night.

Fry is charged with racketeering, attempt to commit murder in aid of racketeering and conspiracy to commit murder in aid of racketeering. He remained in custody Wednesday, awaiting a detention hearing before a judge.

 

Read more...
Related Posts with Thumbnails

Background

Privacy Policy (site specific)

Privacy Policy (site specific)
Privacy Policy :This blog may from time to time collect names and/or details of website visitors. This may include the mailing list, blog comments sections and in various sections of the Connected Internet site.These details will not be passed onto any other third party or other organisation unless we are required to by government or other law enforcement authority.If you contribute content, such as discussion comments, to the site, your contribution may be publicly displayed including personally identifiable information.Subscribers to the mailing list can unsubscribe at any time by writing to info (at) copsandbloggers@googlemail.com. This site links to independently run web sites outside of this domain. We take no responsibility for the privacy practices or content of such web sites.This site uses cookies to save login details and to collect statistical information about the numbers of visitors to the site.We use third-party advertising companies to serve ads when you visit our website. These companies may use information (not including your name, address, email address or telephone number) about your visits to this and other websites in order to provide advertisements about goods and services of interest to you. If you would like more information about this practice and would like to know your options in relation to·not having this information used by these companies, click hereThis site is suitable for all ages, but not knowingly collect personal information from children under 13 years old.This policy will be updated from time to time. If we make significant changes to this policy after that time a notice will be posted on the main pages of the website.

  © Blogger template Newspaper III by Ourblogtemplates.com 2008

Back to TOP