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Wednesday, 7 September 2011

Gang violence A rivalry between two gangs — Fresh Off the Boat (FOB) and the FOB Killers (FK)

 

Two suspected gang members went on trial Tuesday accused of shooting three people to death, including an innocent bystander, on New Year's Day in 2009. Three masked gunmen entered the Bolsa Vietnamese Restaurant in a southeast Calgary strip mall and opened fire, killing Sanjeev Mann, 22, described by police as a known gang member, and Aaron Bendle, 21, who also had gang ties. The third victim, construction worker Keni Su'a, 43, was eating in the restaurant and tried to escape, but was gunned down in the parking lot. Nathan Zuccherato, 24, Michael Roberto, 27, and Real Honorio, 27, are each charged with three counts of first-degree murder. Honorio's trial did not begin on Tuesday because his lawyer was unavailable. A publication ban was put in effect for the pre-trial arguments, which are expected to last two weeks. Gang violence A rivalry between two gangs — Fresh Off the Boat (FOB) and the FOB Killers (FK) — is believed to be connected to more than 20 homicides in Calgary dating back to 2002. In the days following the 2009 murders, police vowed to step up their work against gangs in Calgary. Officials have since credited that renewed focus with reducing the murder rate by almost 50 per cent the following year. The trial in Court of Queen’s Bench is scheduled to last for more than a month.

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The Westies and psychopathic criminal PJ Judge, the neighbouring suburbs of Finglas/ Blanchardstown and Ballymun have had to deal with more than their fair share of gangland violence

 Eamon Dunne was murdered in a northside pub in April of 2010, the fear was that his cold-blooded execution would create a deadly power vacuum, one which would lead to bloody gang warfare on the streets.

After all, The Don's gang were responsible for 15 murders since he took over the Finglas gang that had been led by crimelord Martin 'Marlo' Hyland .

Marlo himself was murdered in December 2006.

Ever since the days of The Westies and psychopathic criminal PJ Judge, the neighbouring suburbs of Finglas/ Blanchardstown and Ballymun have had to deal with more than their fair share of gangland violence.

But the reign of terror imposed by crazed Eamon Dunne was unprecedented in the capital's gang scene.

Softly spoken and relatively well educated, Dunne was a massive hit with the ladies and sources say that his almost crazed sex drive was driven by the use of Viagra.

Until the gun murder of Traveller Tom McDonagh in Ballymun last weekend, the area had seen a dramatic decline in gang related violence since Dunne's murder.

It is understood that McDonagh was murdered over a drugs debt to Finglas gang.

"The lull in murders and complete drop in shooting incidents in the past 16 months has to be linked to the fact that Eamon Dunne is no longer with us," explained a senior source.

The situation had been so bad previously that a small area in Finglas west was dubbed the 'murder mile' or 'murder triangle' after up to 20 people were murdered in the space of a decade.

Most of these killings are unsolved gangland shootings in a small area which encompasses Cappagh Cross, Ratoath Road and Cardiffsbridge.

With the murders of Eamon Dunne and other gang bosses who came before him, the situation has eased in Finglas, Blanchardstown and Ballymun over the past year.

But the sprawling estates of north Dublin are still home to some of the most dangerous gangs in the country.

The Don's gang are still active and dealing in millions of euro worth of drugs.

But gardai have had some major successes against them.

Many of the core members of Dunne's crew cannot be named here because they are before the courts on charges including armed robbery, murder and dug dealing.

One of The Don's former associates who we can name is feared hardman Brian O'Reilly -- a Ballymun native who now lives in Co Meath.

"O'Reilly is a big tough man but he is very paranoid. He deeply dislikes the media and the gardai who he accuses of colluding against him.

"He is a man of few words but when he talks everyone listens. He has great respect," a source explained.

O'Reilly, who remains a major target for specialised garda units, was lucky to escape with his life when targeted by a gunman in a pub in Bettystown, Co Meath.

He was shot in the chin and back as he drank in his local pub in August, 2010.

But he survived the murder bid organised by the Real IRA.

A month later O'Reilly's close pal Eamon Kelly (62) cheated death when the Real IRA tried to murder him at his home in Killester.

A source said of Kelly: "On the outside, he seems like the quintessential retired Dubliner -- he enjoys his pints and going to the bookies but in reality he is a criminal campaigner with links to most of the crime gangs in the State."

This year has seen the strength of the gang who murdered Dunne grow considerably and sources say that they operate drugs rackets in the Finglas/Cabra area.

Dunne's murder in the Fassaugh House pub was "sanctioned" by some of his own gang members and the gang's drug supplier, international crimelord Christy Kinahan.

The Herald has previously revealed that the chief suspect for the murder is a young man in his early 20s from the Cabra area who was very close to slain crime boss Hyland.

A former detective described Marlo's way of doing business as "unprecedented".

"He formed alliances with everyone he could -- he knew that murder was bad for business so he tried to keep away from it.

 

fearsome

"But in the last few months of his life the paranoia got to him. He couldn't eat or sleep properly -- he knew his days were numbered."

The young thug is considered "the leader" of a dangerous crew of young criminals from the Finglas, Cabra and north inner city areas who have built up a fearsome reputation for gangland violence since they were aged in their mid teens.

Gardai have placed the dangerous gangster "on top of the list" for pumping eight bullets into 'The Don' -- one of the most notorious criminals in the history of Irish gangs.

He was also involved in the murder of innocent Latvian woman Baiba Saulite in November 2006.

While these young thugs increase their powerbase, the area's veteran criminals continue to operate.

Some of these older criminals had strong links to Paul 'Farmer' Martin -- the Finglas crimelord who was murdered in August 2008.

Others are connected to a 44-year-old local man -- who was a childhood friend of Marlo Hyland.

As Marlo rose to become one of Ireland's biggest drug dealers, this man was constantly at his side.

The 44-year-old -- who now lives in the Finglas area -- was arrested in April by the Garda National Drugs Unit.

Undercover detectives seized more than €400,000 worth of cannabis resin.

Before the massive drugs seizure, detectives watched the gang transfer 70 kilos of the drug near the border before making arrests. However, the Finglas resident was later released without charge.

The Real IRA also have an active presence in this area.

In late March, mobsters from the Continuity IRA claimed responsibility for shooting three men in broad daylight in Corduff Park, Blanchardstown.

The victims were targeted because the dissidents claimed they were guilty of anti-social behaviour.

David Morgan (20) and cousins Gary (25) and Christopher Gleeson (26) all survived the shooting.

The duplicity of the CIRA is breathtaking.

Led by the former head of the Real IRA in Dublin -- now on remand in prison on other charges -- the Continuity mob were responsible for a pipe bomb attack in May at the home of an innocent family in Whitestown.

Also this year, armed gardai swooped on three Blanchardstown men who formerly had links with the infamous Westies gang, whose leaders Shane Coates and Stephen Sugg were murdered in Spain in 2004.

The gangsters were believed to be on their way to carry out a Tiger kidnapping when arrested by armed detectives.

Sources said that the three men had all been key members of the infamous Westies organisation which caused so much trouble a decade ago.

It was also this summer that the Herald profiled a gang from this area who were involved in a new criminal craze called 'fishing'.

A gang of thugs from Finglas and Blanchardstown used fishing rods and magnets to steal more than 100 high powered cars.

Gardai branded the new criminal craze 'fishing' because it involves the gang attaching a magnet to the end of a fishing rod or long wooden pole, pushing it through letterboxes and using it to remove car keys left behind locked doors.

The gang have been selling the high-quality cars for just €1,200 to UK criminals.

The gang has close links to Finglas criminal David Fahy (29) from Cappagh Avenue who was recently released from jail after serving two years for possession of a sawn-off shotgun and cocaine.

However, sources say that Fahy -- who has 152 previous convictions -- is not involved in the scam himself.

The mob also has links to a Traveller gang who operate in the Dunsink area of Finglas.

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UVF supergrass trial

 

Fourteen alleged members of the UVF, including one of its former leaders Mark Haddock, are due to appear at Belfast Crown Court on Tuesday for the start of the first so-called "supergrass" trial to be held in Northern Ireland for 26 years. The charges include the murder of leading UDA member Tommy English during a loyalist feud. Critics say the process being used is unsafe and unjust, while the police and prosecutors insist it is legally sound. Our Home Affairs Correspondent Vincent Kearney looks at the background to the case. The police bristle at the very mention of the word "supergrass" because of its association with a series of high profile trials in the 1980s. Hundreds of republicans and loyalists were convicted on the word of informers and suspects who agreed to give evidence against them in return for reduced sentences and new identities and lives outside Northern Ireland. There were claims that many also received financial rewards. The deals were arranged at a political level, approved by the Secretary of State, and the details were secret. No-one, not the defence teams, the relatives of victims, nor the accused, knew anything, and in many cases there were question marks over whether convicted informers actually served any time in prison at all. Credibility The trials were the largest in British criminal history. In one in 1983, 22 IRA members were given jail terms totalling more than 4,000 years. But 18 of them had their convictions quashed three years later, and the vast majority of the others convicted in a series of similar trials were also released on appeal. The system collapsed in 1985 because of concerns about the credibility of the evidence provided by the so-called supergrasses, with members of the judiciary complaining that they were being used as political tools to implement government security policy. The police and prosecutors say the trial starting today is based on an entirely different legal foundation. The investigation has centred around the activities of the UVF in the Mount Vernon estate in north Belfast New legislation introduced in 2005, the Serious Organised Crime and Police Act, enables an accused to enter into a written agreement indicating that they will help the prosecution by giving evidence against other criminals. Where this happens, the court may take this into account when passing sentence. The journey that led to the trial beginning today began with an investigation by the former Police Ombudsman Nuala O'Loan into the activities of the UVF in Mount Vernon in north Belfast. In January 2007, she published the results of Operation Ballast. 'Impunity' It was a highly critical report which said members of RUC Special Branch had allowed UVF informers to act with impunity, and that the gang may have been involved in up to 15 murders. Mark Haddock wasn't named in the report, but was referred to as Informant 1. Alarmed by the findings, the then Chief Constable, Sir Hugh Orde, asked the Historical Enquiries Team (HET) to take over Operation Ballast. Then, in 2008, two brothers, Robert and David Stewart walked into Antrim police station, admitting that they were members of the UVF, and their role in more than 70 offences. They offered to give evidence against a number of alleged former comrades under the teams of the 2005 legislation. The HET then spent more than a year debriefing them, and arresting suspects as they went along. But, despite being given additional funding, the investigation became too big for the team to handle. In December 2009, the case was given over to the PSNI. The investigation is now led by Crime Operations Department headed by Assistant Chief Constable Drew Harris, and is now called Operation Stafford. As a result, just over four and a half years after Nuala O'Loan published her report, Mark Haddock and 13 others will appear in court on Tuesday. They will appear before a judge sitting without a jury because of fears of intimidation. Haddock and eight others are charged with the murder of Tommy English and a range of other offences. The remaining five face a range of charges, possession of firearms, kidnap and assault. The latest investigation into the Mount Vernon UVF began following a report by the former Police Ombudsman, Nuala O'Loan Sealed containers The two chief prosecution witnesses, the Stewart brothers, have been held in isolation at Maghaberry prison, protected by a team of highly trained guards. Their food is brought into the prison in sealed containers to ensure they are not poisoned. They have admitted a total of 74 offences, but were sentenced to just three years each because the judge took into account their offer to testify. Their sentence was determined in open court, not secretly by the Secretary of State. The 2005 legislation contains penalties. If it emerges that the assisting offender is guilty of serious crimes they may not have admitted to, they are in breach of the agreement. If this is discovered after the trial, they can be re-arrested and charged with the additional offences. If they tell the truth but re-offend at a later stage, they can be re-arrested and charged. Supporters say this system is much more open and transparent than the discredited system used in the 1980s. Those on trial, and their families and supporters, insist that only the name has changed.

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Tuesday, 6 September 2011

former MP Margaret Moran, who is to face 21 charges in relation to claims she made for parliamentary expenses.

File photo of former MP Margaret Moran
File photo of former MP Margaret Moran, who is to face 21 charges in relation to claims she made for parliamentary expenses. Photograph: Michael Stephens/PA

The former Labour MP who claimed for dry rot treatment on a home more than 100 miles from her constituency will be charged with fiddling her expenses by more than £60,000, prosecutors said today.

Margaret Moran, one of the last politicians investigated over the scandal, will appear before magistrates facing 21 charges relating to her parliamentary claims.

Moran, former MP for Luton South, will appear before City of Westminster magistrates' court on 19 September, the Crown Prosecution Service said.

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police have released images of 28 suspects they want to question about serious street disorder that “wreaked havoc” across Northern Ireland

The police have released images of 28 suspects they want to question about serious street disorder that “wreaked havoc” across Northern Ireland.

Detectives from a specialist public order inquiry team are hoping the public will help them identify the men in these images as part of their investigations into rioting in east Belfast and Ballyclare during June and July.

Three people were shot during three nights of sustained sectarian violence at an interface on the Lower Newtownards Road in Belfast in June.

In Ballyclare six officers sustained whiplash when a hijacked bus rammed a police vehicle during riots that erupted after Union and paramilitary flags were removed from lampposts in July.

Assistant Chief Constable Alistair Finlay said the response from the public appeals to date had been “positive”.

A second tranche of photographs will be released on Thursday showing suspects police want to speak to in connection with rioting in north and west Belfast during July.

Last month all of Northern Ireland’s main news organisations wrote to the PSNI Chief Constable to protest at having to hand over riot footage of trouble in east Belfast.

The letter highlighted to Matt Baggott the “genuine fear that terrorists and rioters will target the media whom they perceive to be evidence gatherers for the State” if the PSNI continues to demand the disclosure of material gathered for news purposes.

The PSNI has declined to comment on the source of these latest images.




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Teenager remanded over Malaysian student riot mugging

 

17-year-old has appeared in court charged with breaking the jaw of a Malaysian student and robbing him of his bicycle during the London riots. The teenager appeared at Thames Magistrates Court accused of causing grievous bodily harm of Ashraf Rossli in Barking, east London on 8 August. He was also accused of robbing the 20-year-old of a white bicycle. No plea was entered for the charges but Hannah Stephenson, defending, said he denied all the alleged offences. The teenager was also charged with violent disorder at a Tesco store in Barking and theft from the store on the same day. The 17-year-old appeared alongside his 15-year-old brother at a hearing. The brothers denied charges of violent disorder in Ilford and theft from a jewellers shop in Ilford, east London, on 8 August. The older brother was remanded in custody, with the younger brother given conditional bail. The conditions include observing a curfew with a tag. The brothers are due to reappear at Thames Magistrates Court on 12 September. They cannot be named for legal reasons.

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Monday, 5 September 2011

Gangs Squad investigates shootings

 

Gang-squad detectives are investigating the drive-by shooting of a family home in Blacktown four weeks ago. Investigators refused to comment on the case but have said all lines of inquiry are open. That includes whether the drive-by shooting was related to other shootings at homes linked to gang-members around western Sydney in the past few weeks. Police believe the shooting at Indigo Way at Blacktown on the night of August 9 was a case of mistaken identity. The Department of Housing property was formerly occupied by a family linked to the gang Notorious but had a family of six Afghan refugees living in it at the time of the shooting. No one was harmed despite three bullets penetrating the interior walls of house.

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Teenager who lured girls into house to be gang-raped by Asian gang is jailed for seven years

 

teenage girl who lured two young white girls on a night out to be raped by three Asian men was jailed for seven years yesterday. Stephanie Knight, then 17, told the 16-year-olds they were going for an 'exciting night' clubbing but instead plied them with vodka and drugs before forcing them to have sex with 'her boys'. The girls had been taken in a large 4x4 vehicle to a derelict house where they were subjected to a sickening sex attack by the three men, one of whom was on licence after being let out early from an eight-year prison sentence for robbery. Yesterday as the three attackers, Amjad Hussain, 34, Shahid Hussain, 37, and Tanveer Butt, 39, were jailed indefinitely at Preston Crown Court and ordered to serve at least seven-and-a-half years, a judge also sentenced Knight to seven years in a young offenders institute, saying she played a vital role. Judge Beverley Lunt said the teenager, who had been in care most of her life, had distorted views on morality and knew exactly what she was doing when she led them into the trap. She told Knight: 'You knew what has likely to happen when instructed by Amjad Hussain. 'You lured these two 16-year-girls from the safety of their homes and lured them into the clutches. 'You lied to them you said you were going on an exciting night out when there was no such intention.' She added: 'It is clear you have had a difficult life so there is no doubt you have distorted views on morality and appropriate behaviour. 'There is no question that you were badly used by these men. 'But this means that you knew what they were like and what their interests were yet your lured the girls into their clutches. 'But for you neither girl would have been exposed to the danger of that night and subjected to humiliating rapes. 'You played a vital part in this conspiracy and knew what you were doing.' Yesterday Knight, now 19, fought back tears as she stood in the dock alongside brothers Amjad and Shahid Hussain, and their cousin, father-of-four Butt. Addressing all four defendants Judge Lunt continued: 'It is a total lack of humanity shown by any of you as this girl was repeatedly raped which disturbing and horrifying in this case.' The case is the latest featuring Asian sex attackers preying on vulnerable young girls which has prompted former Home Secretary Jack Straw to warn that some Pakistani men in Britain see white teenagers as 'easy meat' for sexual abuse. Knight met the three attackers after one pulled up in the street beside her six months earlier in his car and asked for her number.

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Fugitive brothers collared in B.C.

 

It didn’t end as dramatically as Bonnie and Clyde, but alleged bank robbing brothers and their lovers, who are also sisters, were brought down by the law this weekend. Albertans Ian Michael Butz, 28, and Jason Avery Butz, 26, were being hunted in the Creston B.C. area, about 500 km southwest of Calgary, since Friday, wanted in connection to a pair of armed robberies at gas stations in the Peace River area, around 780 km north of Calgary. A shotgun and camouflage clothing were used in the robberies — in the small northern Alberta villages of Nampa and Donnelly, Aug. 31 — and an ATV was used as the getaway vehicle. Cops believe the Butz brothers’ girlfriends, 26- and 22-year-old sisters from Lethbridge, were involved in the robberies. The women were picked up at the Porthills/Rykert border crossing between B.C. and Idaho Friday evening around 8 p.m., riding the ATV., leading the RCMP in nearby Creston to believe their still fugitive boyfriends were in the area and might try to cross next. Active searching by cops and Canada Border Services Agency turned up nothing, until an off-duty Canadian Broder Services Agency officer happened across the brothers wandering on foot around 9 a.m. Sunday. “He spots them walking along Hwy. 21 at Erickson Rd., essentially in Creston. They’re still dressed in the camouflage,” said Cpl. Dan Moskaluk of the B.C. RCMP. “Both were arrested without incident, (but) we did not recover the firearm.” The Butz Brothers are charged with two counts of armed robbery each, and while investigation into the women’s involvement continues, Moskaluk said charges will be sought against them as well. He noted Creston is only 20 km from the same Canada-U.S. border crossing their girlfriends tried to get through. “We’re all relieved that they’re off the streets,” said Moskaluk, noting a high likelihood they would have offended again, given the nature of the accusations against them. The border service officers participating in this search are proud of the role they played, said CBSA spokeswoman Faith St. John. “Intercepting criminals is one of the ways that they support CBSA’s national security mandate,” she said. Moskaluk figures these fugitives’ time on the lam would have ended in Creston regardless of cops’ good fortune Sunday. “It’s a fairly small community, (and) their ears will certainly perk up when they hear there are people at large and armed,” said Moskaluk.

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Friday, 29 July 2011

Weapon found in gang member's cell,Riani, is a member of Chicago-based street gang Gangster Disciples, according to the sheriff's office.

James Riani wasn't just blamed for punching another inmate last week.

The detective who investigates crimes in the jail issued an arrest affidavit Tuesday stating Riani was caught with a 3-inch piece of metal in his cell.

Hernando County Sheriff's Detective Anthony Scarpati said the metal object – which had a string tied to the end of it and was hidden inside an air-condition exhaust vent – could have been used as an escape tool.

Either that or he could have used it as a weapon, Scarpati wrote.

The latest arrest comes days after he was charged with battery of a fellow inmate. Riani was accused of taking off his shirt, barging into another man's cell and accusing him of stealing from him.

He followed that by punching the man twice in the face, which caused the victim to lose consciousness, deputies said.

Assistant State Attorney Jason Smith, who is prosecuting Riani, said he considers him a dangerous criminal.

"Based on his history, I think that's reasonable to assume," Smith said.

Riani, a known gang member who goes by the nickname Wicked, was arrested in September 2010 on a litany of felony charges.

Deputies said Riani, 31, was seen riding a stolen motorcycle near his house the night he was arrested.

He tried to elude deputies, but fell off the bike, according to the sheriff's office.

After he was captured during a foot pursuit, he pulled out a 9mm handgun from his waistband, but it fell to the ground, deputies said.

He was searched and a loaded 9mm magazine was found tucked under his waistband, according to arrest records.

Deputies said they searched his backpack and found more weapons – including a loaded .40-caliber handgun and a 12-gauge shotgun with a filed-off serial number.

Aside from his weapons and drug counts, Riani also was charged with possession of a concealed handcuff key.

His trial is scheduled for Aug. 8, but most of his original charges have been dropped.

Smith said the U.S. District Attorney's Office might be pursuing the drug trafficking and weapons case against Riani.

However, Smith is still prosecuting the defendant for three felony charges related to his September 2010 arrest. Those charges are possession of a handcuff key, grand theft and habitual driving with a suspended or revoked license.


 

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Monday, 18 July 2011

Aryan Brotherhood of Texas leader who wanted the man "in intensive care or dead by midnight

Fraught with a wild temper unleashed by a wicked methamphetamine addiction, April Flanagan was sent to prison just months ago for conspiring to help blow the heads off a disgraced Aryan gang member and his girlfriend in East Texas.
The order came from an Aryan Brotherhood of Texas leader who wanted the man "in intensive care or dead by midnight."
Across the state in Lubbock, Chasity Clark is accused of helping her husband, a general in an arm of the same gang, run an organized criminal enterprise and ditching gang computer files before police could confiscate them.
But neither can compare to Tanya Smith, whose Bonnie-and-Clyde-like run with her man began in Houston and ended with two police detectives killed, the boyfriend shot dead, and Smith serving life in prison.
Prosecutors contend the three women are part of the little-known world of "featherwoods," a nickname often worn with audacious pride as they live and die in the trenches of "white-boy gangs."
The Aryan Brotherhood of Texas and the Aryan Circle were born in Texas prisons a generation ago to defend white inmates. They have since expanded to include a variety of criminal enterprises with influence in Houston, as well as across the state.
And the collective stories of the women said to be featherwoods, according to court records, offer yet another gritty tapestry of lawlessness, bad deeds and dead ends.
"They have grown up in the lifestyle," said Brandon Bess, a Texas Department of Public Safety agent specializing in gangs. "I would say they were destined for it."
Their crimes and times get little publicity, although court cases reveal they stand alongside their men through murders, robberies and drug trafficking — or even when they are passed around like property among gang members, beaten, abused and sometimes killed.
One such gruesome demise came to Tonia Porras when she was 29. Her head was wrapped in duct tape and her body methodically stabbed 26 times, tortured to death by an ex-boyfriend just out of the Harris County Jail.
Lured police to deaths
Few featherwoods have shown such a flair for flagrant criminal conduct as Smith, 27, now in prison for life.
Smith, who lived in La Porte, was inked with rage, from the large red swastika in the center of her back to the black one atop her left foot. She is serving two life sentences for the murders of two Bastrop, La., police officers killed at a motel in 2007 after a run from the law.
Smith lured them into Room 111, where her armed Aryan Circle boyfriend, Dennis Clem, was hiding in the bathroom. The renegade couple had already driven at least 800 miles on a zigzag journey from Houston, where Clem used a semi-automatic rifle to kill two black teens, one 15 and the other 19, during a confrontation.
Among the supplies in the gray Chrysler sedan they used to flee Houston was a sawed-off shotgun and other guns, wrapped in a red blanket and stashed on the rear floorboard. A police radio scanner helped them evade authorities near San Antonio, when they bolted back east toward Louisiana.
"It was real Bonnie-and-Clyde stuff," recalled Geary Aycock, a Louisiana prosecutor. "They hit the ground running and did not mind doing whatever they had to do to protect each other."
The pair met in the Rio Grande Valley, where Smith grew up, and were busted together in 2005 trying to sneak through a Border Patrol highway checkpoint with a gun and marijuana hidden on a commercial bus. After brief prison stints, they were together again, breaking the law, on the run.
Video from the motel's surveillance camera captured images of the detectives driving up to the couple's room across the street from the police department. The police were not even looking for Clem and Smith, but rather an unrelated burglary suspect.
Smith let them in. Seconds later, they came running out; Clem gunned them down on the sidewalk before either could draw a gun.
Dressed in white and wearing sunglasses, Smith slipped away.
She was arrested two days later, hiding in a Houston mobile home park considered a haven for Aryan gangsters.
Shirtless and with a pistol in each hand, Clem charged outside and was cut down by police gunfire.
"Many people talk of going out in a blaze of glory, but not many truly do it," said a woman who is a part of an Aryan gang and asked that her name not be printed. "I just wish we had him with us and all those lives hadn't been lost."
Paths of desperation
Smith declined a request for an interview, relaying a message through a friend that she did not want to relive dark chapters in her life and is pursuing a theology degree.
Like many men associated with the gangs, the women's lives often follow predictable paths of desperation.
They weave and punch their way through broken homes, drug addiction, low-wage jobs and bouts with the law that see them - as well as those around them - in and out of incarceration.
"As far as the women are concerned … you wonder what is in it for them," said John Bales, the top federal prosecutor for the Eastern District of Texas, where a dozen Aryan Brotherhood of Texas members and featherwoods have recently been convicted of federal crimes.
"They are fascinated by the culture, usually have drug issues themselves, and there is a strange hold over the women that the guys have," Bales continued. "There is usually no good end to it."
As for April Flanagan, 31, who supplied the shotgun used in the planned double homicide, she is adamant that she does not share racist views and insisted that she got involved with Aryan Brotherhood members only to buy drugs.
She grew up with curfews and rules, said her mother, who noted that Flanagan was a phlebotomist and tried to take care of elderly relatives, as well as continue with school, when she began using methamphetamine.
"At that point in her life, she was so deep in the drug world that she was lost," said her mother, Dana Griggs.
She said her daughter pleaded guilty rather than stand trial and face a lengthier prison sentence.
Flanagan wore an orange jail jumpsuit and shackles during a Beaumont hearing in which she was sentenced to 15 years in prison; a half-dozen family members looked on while sitting side by side.
"She was basically backed into a corner, not given a chance to make facts known … ," said Griggs, who also denied Flanagan is a racist.
Dangerous ideology
Dena Marks, associate director for the Anti-Defamation League's southwest region, which includes Houston, said it is not just the gangs' crimes that are dangerous, but their ideology.
"It is important for people to understand that some of these acts are motivated by white supremacy," Marks said, noting that the ADL monitors both the Aryan Brotherhood of Texas and the Aryan Circle.
In another recent instance of women involved in Aryan Brotherhood brutality, Rachel Tutt in May was sentenced to 10 years in prison for her part in the 2009 kidnapping and beating of a Lufkin woman.
The victim's gang member boyfriend, Stephen "Cave Man" Wallace, thought she was trying to dump him.
Tutt, who was having an affair with Wallace, drove the car while he beat the kidnapped woman. They drove to a cemetery, where the beating continued.
She lived to testify; her attackers went to prison.
Tonia Porras, born in the Texas coastal town of Port Arthur, nearly escaped the featherwood life in 2005. Instead, the past caught her in a grisly way.
She had broken up with her Aryan Brotherhood boyfriend, Corey Schuff.
Fueled by jealousy and perhaps a rumor that Porras was talking to police, Schuff and another gang member attacked her.
Schuff stabbed her repeatedly, leaving wounds a medical examiner said were consistent with torturing someone to make them talk.
Porras' petite body was found lying beside the stuffed animals belonging to her child, who was not home, Jefferson County prosecutor Ramon Rodriguez Jr. said.
"If there were merciful forces at work, bludgeoning to the head knocked her out," he said. "Otherwise she suffered … what could be described as torture wounds."
During Schuff's trial, a dispatcher testified that Porras had made a panicked call asking for increased sheriff's patrols near her home after her ex-boyfriend was released from jail.
"She told me she definitely believed he was going to kill her," the dispatcher testified. "I believe he promised her he would do it."

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Mexican cartels are very, very powerful, and in a place like Miami that is heavily Hispanic, they've been able to blend right in.


Peacocks lounging in mango trees and coconut groves swaying with the ocean winds are part of the landscape in South Florida -- one of the world's favorite tourist destinations.
When the sun sets, the party scenes come alive at nightclubs and beaches where all kinds of drugs flow like the sea waves that ebb in and out of the coastline.
It seems that the golden days of Florida's cocaine trade hardly ended when law enforcement rounded up the state's legendary kingpins of the late 1970s and early 1980s.
One of the events from then that's etched in Miami's memory was the 1979 shooting spree reminiscent of Mexico's drug violence today.
Two men jumped out of an armored truck at the Dadeland Mall and shot two men inside a liquor store. Police identified the victims as a drug dealer from Colombia and his bodyguard.
"I was there when the mall shooting occurred," said George McNenny, a former U.S. Customs Service agent who retired in El Paso. "It was during the 'cocaine cowboy' days."
McNenny, a native of Havana, Cuba, also served in the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives as a special agent with assignments in various cities that included Miami.
Miami's "cocaine cowboys" era was marked by legends like Carlos Lehder and Max Mermelstein, both major drug barons, and Griselda Blanco, a Colombian woman whose Miami organization was suspected in at least 200 homicides. Drug violence was so rampant that Miami by then had the highest homicide rate in the United States.
Sandy Gonzalez, a former DEA official in El Paso and a native of Cuba, also served in the Miami area.
"After the 'cocaine cowboys,' the Colombians were the big guys, the cocaine source and suppliers, who dominated the drug trade in Florida," Gonzalez said. "The Cuban gangs were the distributors. After that, the focus changed to the Mexican cartels.
DEA busy
"The DEA's biggest division at the time was based in Miami, and we had a lot of agents working in Florida."
McNenny said "the Mexican cartels are very, very powerful, and in a place like Miami that is heavily Hispanic, they've been able to blend right in."
About a million Latinos of Cuban descent live in Miami. Other Latinos come from Puerto Rican, South American, Central American or Mexican backgrounds.
Gonzalez and other anti-drug investigators worked hard to disrupt the cocaine trafficking routes between Colombia, the Caribbean islands and Florida. He was part of "Operation BAT" that broke up the pipeline that the cocaine dealers had established through the Bahamas.
Fernando Vasquez, a retired Cuban businessman in Miami, said not much has changed since he arrived in Florida about 30 years ago.
Easy to get drugs
"It's very easy for people to get drugs in the Miami area," Vasquez said. "My work focused mainly on the tourist industry, and it was hard not to notice the drug scene. I remember the big deal they made when the police arrested the so-called 'cocaine cowboys,' but nothing's really changed."
Drug investigators said Mexican drug cartels, particularly the Sinaloa cartel run by Joaquin "Chapo" Guzman, have filled the void left by the earlier cocaine kings and queens.
Guzman's cartel is the same one that's waging a bloody battle at the border for control of the Juárez-El Paso smuggling corridor.
Florida has two designated High-Intensity Drug-Trafficking Areas (HIDTA's) that keep track of drug-trafficking in the north and south parts of the state.
"Colombian and Mexican (drug trafficking organizations) supply most of the available illicit drugs in the South Florida HIDTA region to African American, Caucasian, Cuban, Dominican, Haitian, Hispanic, Jamaican and Puerto Rican distributors, and to street gang members," according to the HIDTA's 2010 Market Analysis.
"Midlevel and retail-level drug distribution typically occurs at open-air drug markets, in clubs, apartment buildings, motels, and vehicles, (and) on beaches and at prearranged meeting sites such as parking lots," the report also said.
In other words, drugs are everywhere.
Sinaloa cartel
The Sinaloa cartel appears to have increasingly strong ties to Florida. Four years ago, a Gulfstream II jet crashed in Mexico's state of Yucatan stuffed with several tons of cocaine.
The cocaine and plane, which had first flown out of Fort Lauderdale, Fla., picked up drugs in Colombia and crashed in Mexico, belonged to Guzman. Guzman had bought 50 similar planes, Mexican authorities said.
Once the drugs arrive in South Florida, an estimated 370 street gangs work to distribute and sell them throughout the region, federal officials said.
Vasquez said, "The airport is one of the busiest in the world. An airplane departs or arrives at the Miami International Airport every 52 seconds."
That kind of air traffic is too tempting for drug dealers to resist. Last year, the DEA arrested 27 people at the Miami International Airport on suspicion of drug-trafficking.
The Miami Police Department tries to keep on top of drug law violators with a drug surveillance unit that supports the DEA and FBI, which have broader jurisdiction to handle international investigations. Miami Police Officer Jeffrey Giordano reported that one of the unit's recent cases netted six arrests in the 3000 block of Northwest 11th Place, along with the seizure of an AK-47 and ammunition.
"The charges ranged from possession of marijuana to possession of a firearm and ammunition by a convicted felon," Giordano said.
The levels of drug violence in Miami are not what they were in the 1980s, and they are far from the astounding numbers reported in Juárez, but the weapons and methods are the same.
Police said the latest trend they are battling in the Miami area is the proliferation of a clandestine pain-pill industry. Some of these drugs are made in labs in other U.S. states and brought into Florida to be dispensed by some of the pain-management clinics that popped up in recent years.
Lots of money
"There's a lot of money in Miami," said McNenny, who will appear in a History Channel special on the drug trade later this year. "And this also means there's going to be money-laundering."
This is evident from the new high-rises in beach communities where popular singer Gloria Estefan and her composer-husband Emilio Estefan have opened a couple of hotels and restaurants.
Marc Anthony and Jennifer Lopez, who recently split up, bought a $9 million penthouse in one of the new high-rises in a neighborhood filled with an endless list of other rich and famous people.
Another group emerging from South Florida's drug trade are Venezuelans. Authorities have traced some of the state's drug-trafficking to Venezuela sources.
Many affluent Venezuelan business owners moved to Doral, a young incorporated city in the Miami area, after disagreeing with the policies of controversial Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez. They have set up their stores and services in Doral. And some are suspected of running money-laundering ventures.

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Wednesday, 22 June 2011

Mexico catches reputed leader of La Familia cartel

Mexican federal police Tuesday captured the leader of La Familia, one of the country's most powerful criminal gangs, whose brutality against its rivals led President Felipe Calderon to launch his far-from-finished crackdown on organized crime nearly five years ago.
Agents arrested Jose de Jesus Mendez Vargas - widely known as El Chango, or "The Monkey" - without incident in a small town in central Aguascalientes state. The arrest comes after weeks of violence between La Familia and a breakaway gang that calls itself the Knights Templar that has killed dozens in recent days.
"With this capture, the remnants of the command structure of this organization is destroyed," said Alejandro Poire, the government's national security spokesman. Calderon, via his Twitter account, called the arrest a "big blow" against organized crime.
For all of that, Mendez's arrest hardly means immediate peace in the territories where La Familia holds sway. The killings or capture of other Mexican drug lords - such as Arturo Beltran Levya in December 2009 - unleashed gangland feuds that killed hundreds.
Rooted in - and closely identified with - the western state of Michoacan, La Familia burst into the public consciousness in 2006 when it went to war with the Zetas, the vicious band based along the South Texas border.
La Familia assassins in September of that year rolled the detached heads of five rivals onto the floor of a disco in the Michoacan city of Uruapan - the first time decapitations were used in Mexico's gang wars.
Had code of 'ethics'
Promoting themselves as protectors of the Michoacan people, La Familia leaders issued a code of ethics for its members, executing those who broke it, and professed a quasi-religious social philosophy.
"La Familia doesn't kill for money, doesn't kill women, doesn't kill innocents," declared a placard left with the disco heads. "Those who die deserve to die.
"Let everyone know," it warned. "This is divine justice."
Those early beheadings appalled Mexico, providing Calderon reason to send thousands of troops into Michoacan - the president's native state and a leading source of immigrants to the United States - in an effort to bring peace.
Calderon quickly deployed the military and federal police to gangster-infested areas across much of Mexico. Gangland violence exploded. Now, after some 40,000 dead, the bloodshed continues in Michoacan and most everywhere else.
Despite its supposed high-mindedness, La Familia grew into one of the most feared of Mexico's seven major gangs, with a firm grip on Michoacan, parts of neighboring states and the outskirts of Mexico City.
Originally specializing in manufacturing methamphetamine for export north, it later branched into extortion, kidnapping and street-level drug trafficking.
Mendez had assumed command of La Familia following the December killing by security forces of Nazario Moreno, known as "The Craziest One." But Moreno's death led to a split between Mendez and other La Familia bosses, who formed the Knights Templar. Those other leaders - Servando Gomez and Enrique Plancarte - remain at large.
Rivals killing members
More than three dozen men have been killed since late last week as the Knights Templar have executed alleged La Familia members, leaving notes promising to free Michoacan communities from crime.
Amid the new killing, the breakaway group announced last week that La Familia had become allies again with the Zetas. Mendez was captured Tuesday near the state line of Zacatecas, a Zetas stronghold.
"This is what happens to those who support Chango Mendez, the Zetas and all their allies," warned a note left with some recent victims. "Thieves, kidnappers, extortionists, rapists and all those who act against our state will follow."

 

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Monday, 13 June 2011

The RCMP have expelled a mother and her three children from the federal witness protection program about 11 years after her testimony helped secure four murder convictions in a Hells Angels contract killing.



Tina Potts and her children have been living under a new government-issued identity since 2000, after she gave evidence against a Hells Angel and three associates — including Ottawa’s Steve Gareau, who is now serving life in prison for his role in the killing.

The national police force has cut Potts adrift because she agreed to be interviewed in documentary on outlaw bikers that aired on The History Channel earlier this spring.

“As a result of the security breaches ... your safety and security has been significantly compromised and the RCMP can no longer be responsible for your and your dependent children’s safety and security as required pursuant to the Witness Protection Program Act,” states a May 4 termination notice signed by RCMP Assistant Commissioner Stephen White, head of federal and international operations.

Potts, who was paid $1,000 plus travel expenses to be interviewed, says she has lost all faith in the Mounties and that she had better protection when she ran with criminals.

“(The RCMP) take you away from your family and friends and tell you everything’s going to be OK and you will be safe. Then after trial, you never hear from them again,” Potts said.

The documentary goes over old ground, but highlights embarrassing details about the RCMP that were reported in the Ottawa Citizen in 2002 — notably that the Mounties were told about the murder plot days before it happened but didn’t try to stop it.

An internal RCMP memo written by an assistant commissioner and obtained by The Ottawa Citizen says the force’s reputation could be “tarnished” if the public found out they were warned about the plot.

Potts’s husband, Paul Derry, alerted the Mounties about the Hells Angels’ murder plot days before it unfolded in the lobby of a Halifax apartment building.

Derry, a longtime RCMP informant, was the getaway driver and his wife, Potts, was in the back seat. Together, they buried the killer’s handgun and burned his clothes following the October 2000 contract killing.

They were both arrested in the plot, but signed a contract giving them money and immunity in exchange for their testimony.

They now live somewhere in Canada, and move frequently to avoid being detected by old enemies who would have little trouble recognizing them in the documentary.

It is against the law in Canada to reveal the new identity or location of someone in the witness protection program.

Derry, 45, and Potts told the Mounties in 2009 that they were going to participate in the documentary. The Mounties didn’t want them to co-operate, and while they said they couldn’t stop them, they made a point of telling them they must, at least, be disguised.

It is grounds for termination if a protected witness reveals their new identity or location, according to witness protection legislation.

To protect their identity, they had a contract with the documentary producers that stated their interviews would be done in “a safe and secure manner respecting the identity constraints in place by my involvement in the witness protection program.”

But in the documentary their voices were not altered and their faces, while blurred, are not shadowed out.

“Anyone who knows us under our new names can easily identify us,” Derry told The Ottawa Citizen.

In fact, an 8-year-old boy recognized them after seeing parts of the documentary.

The Toronto entertainment company based its documentary on Derry’s book Treacherous, and its in-house lawyer who drafted the contract no longer works for them.

 

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yesterday, an armed group went to a rehabilitation center located in the colony Campesina, Chihuahua, and executed three men who were in the place .

 yesterday, an armed group went to a rehabilitation center located in the colony Campesina, Chihuahua, and executed three men who were in the place .

Two of the bodies of the victims were at the gate of the place , while the other on the sidewalk. In addition, a fourth man was wounded, but the attackers managed to flee, ran for several blocks until he received help and was taken to a hospital in the town .

Elements of the Ministry of Security Service cordoned off the center Sirek, located between the street Pericos and Avenida Zarco, in order to begin the hearings for the crime.


Personal Service Coroner moved the bodies to their premises, but so far unknown identities of the executed.

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POLICE raid on a Hells Angels clubhouse yesterday proved to be only a skirmish in the war on bikies promised before last year's state election.



Heavily armed police went to the fortified clubhouse and three houses in Melbourne's suburbs but found only a shotgun and a stash of cannabis, which leads to concerns that outlaw motorcycle gangs are on the alert.

The Hells Angels will say, of course, that little was found because there is little to find.

Legislation to allow police to tear down fortifications at clubhouses is still to be finalised and gangs in the meantime are preparing a legal challenge.

If raids produce little more than was found, it is unlikely it would be enough to activate legislation similar to that thrown out by the South Australian Supreme Court in that state's fight against bikie gangs.

Laws to enable police to crack down on gangs in Victoria were to be passed by the Labor Government in the weeks before the election in November.




That did not happen and then opposition leader Ted Baillieu promised sterner action under a Coalition government.

That is still to happen and in the meantime gangs such as the Hells Angels, the Bandidos and the Commancheros, to name only a few, have had time to move guns and other weapons and drugs.

Members of Task Force Echo, which was formed in February to crack down on outlaw bikies, carried out yesterday's raids with Australian Federal Police from the serious and organised crime unit.

The raids follow serious assaults and firearms offences and allegations of drug trafficking by gangs, but police face resourceful adversaries and will need evidence to make use of the promised laws.

The Baillieu Government is under extreme pressure on its handling of law-and-order issues. The bikie war is one it must win after a lack of action led to outlaw gangs moving to Victoria.

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Tuesday, 31 May 2011

AUSTRALIAN prisons are increasingly being used by gangsters, nationally and internationally, to further their illegal activities and networks.



The FBI believes Mexican drug cartels have extended their reach into Australia and would use our prison system to further criminal associations.

"The Mexican gangs' influence is far and wide and no doubt would have infiltrated Australia," FBI Special Agent Herb Brown said.

"They use any means to further criminal activity, including social networks and prisons internationally."

The Australian Crime Commission has brought members of the FBI, the UK's Serious Organised Crime Agency and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police to Australia for a conference to discuss ways of fighting the growth of crime and gangs within prisons.

The ACC believes a national approach to gathering and sharing criminal intelligence is needed.





"At present there is not a Commonwealth body which oversees the prison system. We know from our own intelligence that prison walls are not a deterrent for hardened criminals to continue their illegal enterprises," ACC chief executive John Lawler said.

Mr Lawler said prisons were obvious places for criminals to make contacts and a national strategy was needed to gather and disseminate intelligence from jails across the country.

Tomorrow the ACC will host an international forum in Canberra on challenges faced by authorities in monitoring criminals inside jail.

"We have seen trends overseas and know from cases here and our intelligence that criminal networks continue to exist within prison. Being incarcerated is not a deterrent to continue criminal behaviour," Mr Lawler said.

"Prisoners make associations which will perpetuate their criminality and help them extend it beyond the correction systems."

Mr Lawler said an ACC officer was already attached to Corrective Services NSW: "We are working with Commissioner Ron Woodham towards a memorandum of understanding between the two organisations."

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Friday, 6 May 2011

Housam El-Afchal jailed for four years over involvement in ATM raids

A SYDNEY father of two took time off from a family beach holiday to drive the getaway car in a raid on a Brisbane bank's ATM which netted $118,000, a court has been told.

The Brisbane District Court was told today that Housam El-Afchal, 33, was nabbed when an off-duty police officer spotted him wiping down an abandoned getaway car and jumped into another vehicle.

Police later spotted the second car parked at Dreamworld, on the Gold Coast, and laid in wait to follow El-Afchal back to his Surfers Paradise holiday unit where he and his wife, Alison Renee Afchal, were both arrested.

However, the court heard El-Afchal had made such steps at rehabilitation while on bail he could tender references from elite national sporting stars Anthony Mundine and Justin Hodges, as well popular Ipswich mayor Paul Pisasale, property developer John Samios, and the Federal Member for Oxley Bernie Ripoll.


El-Afchal was jailed for four years after pleading guilty to one count each of break, enter and stealing from an ATM, receiving stolen property and unlawful use of motor vehicle on December 6, 2008.

Judge Nick Samios recommended El-Afchal be eligible for parole on May 5 next year.

Alison Afchal, also 33, was sentenced to two years probation after pleading guilty to receiving tainted property between December 5 and December 9, 2008.

Prosecutor David Meredith detailed how New South Wales police had started an operation - codenamed "Picadilly 2" - after a spate of daring raids on ATMs in that state.

The raids - known as "gas attacks" - involve pumping oxyceteline gas into the ATMs and setting it alight causing them to explode - thereby giving the bandits access to the money cylinders.

Mr Meredith that on December 5 two other men had broken into car dealerships and a plumbing supply business to steal two cars and some oxyceteline equipment.

About 4am on December 6, a group of men went to the Bank of Queensland branch in Robinson Road, Geebung in Brisbane's north, and gas-attacked it.

After an explosion, which destroyed the ATM, the group stole about $118,000 in $50 and $20 notes.

Mr Meredith said some time later an off-duty policeman spotted two men wiping down a car in the nearby suburb of Nundah.

Mr Meredith said in all about $43,000 - some of it badly burnt - was never recorded by police.

He said this case was the first time anyone had been before a Queensland Court on charges of blowing up an ATM.

Barrister Tony Kimmins, for El-Afchal, said has client had not been a member of any organised gang and had been called in at the last minute to drive the getaway car.

He said El-Afchal was promised a third of the loot and that was what he had received.

Mr Kimmins said El-Afchal had been detained in Queensland while on bail for two-and-a-half years while his family resided in Sydney.

He said, however, during that time El-Afchal had become a valued employee in mainly property development.

 

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Thursday, 21 April 2011

Man arrested as Mexico cartel leader once lived in Yakima County

A man who Mexican authorities say is a leader in a violent drug cartel responsible for the deaths of more than 200 people once lived in Yakima County in the Tieton area, friends and acquaintances said Tuesday.

The man, identified as 34-year-old Martin Omar Estrada Luna, was arrested Saturday by the Mexican navy. Several other suspected members of Los Zetas drug cartel also were arrested.

Friends and acquaintances in the Yakima Valley say the man who was paraded before the Mexican media Sunday had plenty of run-ins with authorities here before being deported.

They and local law-enforcement officials said Tuesday the Estrada they knew was headed for trouble at a young age. He dropped out of school and took up a life of crime.

"Martin made his own choices. He went where the streets took him," said a close boyhood friend who works in Yakima and asked not to be identified.

"A career criminal"

Tieton Police Chief Jeff Ketchum said he has known Estrada since Ketchum started working for the Police Department in 1994, about a year after Estrada started racking up his first criminal charges in juvenile court.

"I would label Martin as a career criminal. He got away with a lot of stuff. He got named in a lot of stuff, but you could never pin it on him," Ketchum said.

Mexican authorities arrested Estrada in a house Saturday in Ciudad Victoria, the capital of the state of Tamaulipas in northeastern Mexico. But acquaintances and police officials question whether Estrada could have risen to a post as high in the cartel as Mexican authorities allege.

Mexican authorities, who put up a $1.2 million bounty for his arrest, said Estrada was one of the leaders of the Zetas' San Fernando cell, which they blame for killing more than 200 people found in mass graves in Tamaulipas.

Authorities there began uncovering bodies in mass graves in early April after reports that passengers were being pulled off buses at gunpoint in the township of San Fernando.

There has been speculation that the Zetas gang was forcibly recruiting extra members for its fight against the rival Gulf cartel over access to key drug-trafficking routes into the United States.

As of last week, 145 bodies had been found in 26 graves. San Fernando is the same place where 72 Central and South American migrants were found slaughtered last August.

It was unclear when Estrada, who was last deported in 2009, would have built such strong ties to one of Mexico's leading drug gangs.

"I can't see it, but who knows? I don't know what the investigation part of it established," Ketchum said.

Local records show Estrada falling into the gang life instead of making it to school with any regularity.

Acquaintances said he left the Highland School District well before he would have graduated in 1995. That year, he pleaded guilty to second-degree burglary in connection with the theft of a Ford Taurus from the district.

Ketchum said Estrada openly admitted to being a gang member, and court records show "El Kilo" as his nickname in the 1990s. The friend said Estrada picked up the nickname from a fragment of a lyric in a rap song by the late rapper Eazy-E.

Besides the burglary charge, his adult felony convictions in Yakima County involved a burglary and brandishing a knife in Tieton.

When he was sentenced in 2006 for an immigration violation, federal prosecutors pointed out that he had amassed 16 felony and misdemeanor convictions.

Records show he has multiple aliases, including Estrada-Delamora, the name he was charged under in federal court.

"Mr. Estrada-Delamora has not learned how to live in society without preying on others," an assistant U.S. attorney wrote in a request for a higher sentence.

Estrada was ultimately sentenced to 41 months for returning to the United States a third time after being deported twice before.

Immigrations and Customs Enforcement (ICE) said Tuesday that he was deported in 2009 from Reno, Nev., after completing his sentence.

The ICE database shows no contact with Estrada since that deportation.

Family still in state

However, the friend of Estrada's said that the last time they had contact, Estrada was living in Laredo, Texas, just across the border from Nuevo Laredo.

The friend said he encouraged Estrada to be a good person and to reconnect with his young daughters, who live in the Yakima Valley.

Estrada's ex-wife, who also lives in the Yakima area, declined to comment Tuesday. Other relatives could not be reached or did not respond to messages.

Regardless of his history and the accusations against him, the friend said Estrada had another side to him.

"He was a nice guy. He would let you borrow money, his car or his clothes," the man said.

But he said Estrada always wanted to be a leader, not a follower.

Ketchum said he occasionally checked a MySpace account believed to be Estrada's. Pictures there show a heavily tattooed Estrada, consistent with the memories of Ketchum and a Yakima County sheriff's deputy who once arrested him.

 

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Saturday, 16 April 2011

600 people marched to New Scotland Yard to call for a public inquiry into Smiley Culture's death.

A crowd of around 600 people marched to New Scotland Yard to call for a public inquiry into Smiley Culture's death.

The reggae singer, whose real name was David Emmanuel, died of a single stab wound through the heart after four Metropolitan Police officers executed a search warrant at his home in Surrey on 15 March.

His family has been told he stabbed himself while making a cup of tea despite the presence of officers in his home. Smiley Culture's family responded to the police explanation of his death, calling it "bizarre".

Smiley Culture's nephew, Merlin Emmanuel, said the singer's funeral had been held on Friday.

Speaking to Channel 4 News he said: "(The) facts are Smiley died whilst under their custody, they had a duty of care to protect my uncle. They failed miserably. As a consequence you would expect at least a letter of condolence from the police force."

What I do know... is that Smiley would still be alive had they not gone and executed that warrant at his house.
Merlin Emmanuel

He added: What I do know beyond reasonable doubt is that Smiley would still be alive had they not gone and executed that warrant at his house. I have my ideas as to what happened but of course its speculative 'cause I wasn't there.

 

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Sunday, 3 April 2011

legislation is targeting the Arellano Feliz, Beltran Leyva, La Familia Michoacana, Los Zetas and Sinaloa and Gulf cartels — the most violent and successful cartels in Mexico.

Drug cartels may find themselves in even more trouble than normal if new legislation in Congress passes.

Rep. Michael McCaul, R-Austin, introduced a bill Wednesday that, if passed, will designate six top Mexican cartels as “foreign terrorist organizations.”

If the cartels are indeed labeled terrorist organizations, the US State Department would be able to charge drug and gun traffickers with supporting terrorism. According to McCaul spokesman Mike Rosen, this is the first time any member of Congress has tried to designate what the cartels are doing as acts of terrorism.

The legislation is targeting the Arellano Feliz, Beltran Leyva, La Familia Michoacana, Los Zetas and Sinaloa and Gulf cartels — the most violent and successful cartels in Mexico. The war on drugs has already claimed nearly 35,000 lives since 2006.

The proposal is more than just a new title — the distinction would allow prosecutors to tack on 15 years to any conviction of providing aid or supplies to cartels. It would also level a federal death sentence against any cartel action that results in death.

McCaul recognizes that cartel actions are not religiously motivated, but said in the Chronicle that the organizations are routinely found “using similar tactics to gain political and economic influence,” as well as utilizing “kidnappings, political assassinations, attacks on civilian and military targets, taking over cities and even putting up checkpoints in order to control territory and institutions.”

Frankly, any label that can be used to stop the cartel’s criminal operations is fine. Label them terrorists, mafiosos, drug traffickers — the end result is the same.

To put the cartel’s 35,000 death count into perspective, that’s more than 7 times the casualties the US has sustained in the Iraq war — and the cartels have racked it up in half the amount of time America has spent overseas.

McCaul seems to have the right idea. If a label is what’s needed to crack down on the violence south of the border, then a label is what Congress should provide.

 

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Wednesday, 30 March 2011

Shot girl, 5, is one of Britain's youngest gun crime victims


A five year old girl is in a critical condition in hospital after being caught in the crossfire when teenage gangsters opened fire on rivals.


The girl, who has not been named, was shot in the chest while a 35-year-old man was shot in the face.
The shootings happened inside a newsagent in Stockwell, south London, at 9.15pm on Wednesday night.
The girl, who was visiting a relative at the store with her mother, is one of Britain’s youngest ever victims of gun crime.
Police said that the girl and the man, who are said to be Sri Lankan but not related, were innocent victims of a gangland feud.
The intended victims, two black youths, had been chased into the store and were hiding when their rivals, three black youths, opened fire from outside the shop. The suspects escaped on bicycles.

Kirubakaran Nantheesparan, a family friend of the shop owners, witnessed the shootings. She said: “They were screaming at each other and throwing the bottles. Then I saw one pull out a gun and fire the shots.
“I saw the gun right next to me. I heard the shots fired. At first we thought they had been hit by bottles but there was too much blood. We didn't know that the girl had been shot. She was lying down in the shop in shock.
“The girl was lying on the ground and the mum ran over to her. She screamed ‘call the police, call the police’, there was so much blood. It was everywhere.
"She’s a little girl. She was in shock and on the ground, not saying anything.”
Local resident Mareh Silva, 34, was coming out of the shop with friends at about 9pm and said she saw three black youths, faces covered with scarves and balaclavas drop their bikes outside.
“I looked in and saw a lot of blood on the floor but I didn’t want to look at what had happened and I was very scared,” she said.
Stockwell Road was sealed off at both ends while forensic officers searched for evidence.
Detective Chief Inspector Tony Boughton said that the male victim lived in a flat above the shop while the girl was with her mother visiting the store owner, whom they are related to.
Mr Boughton said: “This is a very serious case. They (the victims) could have died and may still do. If you fire a gun into a crowded shop, there is a chance you will kill someone.
“The assumption is at the moment is that the firearm is fired through the open door because there is no damage on the outside.”

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Andrew Ross, of Hawarden, Flintshire, admitted conspiring to smuggle cocaine at Mold Crown Court in 2009.


Following an investigation into his assets, Ross will have £20,000 seized under proceeds of crime laws, a judge at Mold decided on Monday.

The rest of the money can be pursued if Ross comes into funds in future.

A second member of the gang, who made £620,000, was given a confiscation order for £1,689.

Keiran Foulkes, of Halkyn, Flintshire, had previously been sentenced to 18 months after admitting being involved in supplying cocaine.

Again, the rest of the money can also be pursued in future.

Nine members of the gang were jailed in September 2009 for a total of more than 44 years.

The court was told that Ross, helped by others, organised the distribution of cocaine.

Drugs went from Rhyl, Denbighshire, to Anglesey and also into Flintshire, where they were further diluted at a house in Halkyn.

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Police arrested 21 of London's most dangerous gangsters

Police arrested 21 of London's most dangerous gangsters during a series of dawn raids today.

Eight gangs were targeted in a huge operation involving hundreds of officers. It came as the Met announced it has compiled a database of more than 1,000 of the most active and violent criminals.

The raids on 41 homes in seven boroughs - part of efforts to disrupt organised criminal networks - also saw the seizure of drugs and £10,000 in cash. The 21 men arrested on suspicion of conspiracy to supply class A drugs are aged between 15 and 35.

The Standard joined more than 20 riot officers from the Territorial Support Group as they smashed down the door of a Battersea flat and arrested a man in his thirties. Sources said he was believed to be a senior figure in the SUK (Stick'em Up Kids) gang.

At another address officers found 30 drug wraps and dealing kits. Deputy Mayor Kit Malthouse, who attended the raids, said: "These are all about taking out the really wicked individuals luring young people into gangs. We want to hammer the gangs in London and get them off the streets."

Other gangs thought to have been targeted by the Met today include a Mitcham-based group known as Terror Zone. Detective Superintendent Mick McNally said: "All of the people arrested have links to gang violence."

Territorial Policing Commander Steve Rodhouse said: "Today's raids demonstrate our determination to continue dismantling the gang networks responsible for a disproportionate amount of criminality in London."

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Virginia Tech fined $55K for response to shootings





Nearly four years after the worst mass shooting in U.S. history, victims' family members and campus safety advocates say it isn't the fine amount of $55,000 Virginia Tech faces that matters, but that the school finally will pay for the mistakes it made during the rampage.
 
The U.S. Department of Education on Tuesday fined the school for waiting too long to notify students about the shootings on April 16, 2007.
 
"The bottom line is just having a monetary amount points out what they did was wrong. There's really no way you can replace 32 people, or even seek to equate that with money," said Andrew Goddard, whose son Colin was shot but survived. "Even if they charged them a dollar, it would have done the same thing."
 
Department of Education officials wrote in a letter to the school that the sanction should have been greater for the school's slow response when student Seung-Hui Cho shot and killed 32 students and faculty and then himself. The amount was the most the department could levy for Tech's two violations of the federal Clery Act, which requires timely reporting of crimes on campus.
 
"While Virginia Tech's violations warrant a fine far in excess of what is currently permissible under the statute, the Department's fine authority is limited," wrote Mary Gust, director of a department panel that dictated what punishment the school would receive for the violation.
 
The university avoided the potentially devastating punishment of losing some or all of its $98 million in federal student aid. While that's possible for a Clery Act violation, the department has never taken that step and a department official said it was never considered for Virginia Tech.
 
University officials have always maintained their innocence and said they would appeal the fine, even though it's a relatively small sum for a school of more than 30,000 full-time students and an annual budget of $1.1 billion. The amount would cover tuition and fees for one Virginia undergraduate student for four years, or two years for an out-of-state undergrad.
 
"I don't think any amount of money would ever be enough, because it's not about that," said S. Daniel Carter, director of public policy for Security On Campus, a nonprofit organization that monitors the Clery Act. "It's about accountability, and it's about making sure students at Virginia Tech and across the country are kept are safe."
 
Only about 40 schools have come under review for Clery Act violations in the 20 years the law has been in place. The largest fine to be levied was $350,000 against Eastern Michigan University for failing to report the rape and murder of a student in a dormitory in 2006.
 
Carter said it's "a shame" the department had only really began fining schools for noncompliance in 2005.

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dawn raids were part of a new Metropolitan Police initiative to try to tackle organised crime in the capital,

Metropolitan Police have made 22 arrests in a series of raids across London targeting gang-related crime.

A total of 41 addresses in Wandsworth, Merton, Sutton, Kingston, Waltham Forest, Lambeth and Croydon were targeted on Wednesday.

Twenty-one men aged from 15 to 35 were arrested for conspiracy to supply class A drugs. One woman was arrested for breaching her bail conditions.

Police also seized drugs, £10,000 in cash and various stolen goods.

All of the men arrested are being questioned at police stations across south London.

The dawn raids were part of a new Metropolitan Police initiative to try to tackle organised crime in the capital, called Operation Connect.

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Wednesday, 9 March 2011

Raymond “Raymo” Gutierrez, 31, and Alvaro “Tito” Saldana, 26, are facing first-degree murder charges with gang enhancements

Raymond “Raymo” Gutierrez, 31, and Alvaro “Tito” Saldana, 26, are facing first-degree murder charges with gang enhancements in the death of Roger Villanueva on May 25, 2008.

Villanueva was shot to death in the backyard of an Angelus Street home during a memorial barbecue to Moses Rodriguez, who was murdered in Turlock in 2006.

On Monday Stanislaus County Deputy District Attorney Thomas Brennan presented a gang expert witness to prove the prosecutions claim that the killing of Villanueva was done to benefit the NorteƱo street gang.

Stanislaus County Sheriff’s Deputy Paul Teso, a classification and a gang specialist deputy testified to the gang culture inside the Stanislaus County Jail that Gutierrez and Saldana are accused of being a part of.

Teso’s testimony included detailed descriptions of the NorteƱo’s organization behind bars and what is expected of the members.

When an inmate comes into the jail and they claim a certain gang affiliation or the intake deputy uses other indicators like tattoos to establish a likely gang affiliation, they are placed in segregated housing to protect the general population from recruitment and assaults.

According to Teso’s testimony, new inmates to the jail who claim NorteƱo affiliation are required by the gang’s hierarchy to fill out a new arrival questionnaire listing everything from their name to the charges against them. These questionnaires are written on “wellas” referring to the tiny handwriting on small bits of paper that gangs use, Teso said.

Both Gutierrez and Saldana had filled out new arrival questionnaires for the gang that were later confiscated during a cell search, Teso said.DISCLAIMER:Text may be subject to copyright.This blog does not claim copyright to any such text. Copyright remains with the original copyright holder.

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Judy Moran put on a show for the cameras.

Judy Moran put on a show for the cameras.

With a smile and a wave to the assembled media, the gangland widow known for her blow-waved tresses and flamboyant dress headed off to jail on Wednesday for orchestrating her brother-in-law's execution.

Earlier, she looked down, her face reddened and she clasped a tissue in her hands as a Victorian Supreme Court jury declared it had found her guilty of murdering Des "Tuppence" Moran.

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She pursed her red lips and appeared stony-faced in a courtroom packed with lawyers and journalists.

At 66, Moran, who has already buried two husbands and two sons to gangland murders, may now spend the rest of her days behind bars for killing off another Moran.

The jury of nine men and three women accepted that, although she didn't pull the trigger, Moran entered into a pact with gunman Geoffrey "Nuts" Armour to murder the brother of her second husband Lewis Moran.

Jurors deliberated for seven days following a month-long trial, and were given several extensions of time after having trouble reaching a unanimous verdict.DISCLAIMER:Text may be subject to copyright.This blog does not claim copyright to any such text. Copyright remains with the original copyright holder.

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Tuesday, 1 March 2011

Mexico Arrests Drug Boss Linked to US Agent's Death | Americas | English

Mexico Arrests Drug Boss Linked to US Agent's Death | Americas | English: "Mexico's military has arrested the alleged regional head of the Zetas drug cartel in connection with the recent murder of a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement special agent.

Navy officials say Sergio 'El Toto' Mora was detained, along with five other men, during a raid Sunday in the northern state of Coahuila.

Authorities say Mora was directly in charge of Julian Zapata Espinoza, who was arrested last week for allegedly carrying out the killing of agent Jaime Zapata."

:Text may be subject to copyright.This blog does not claim copyright to any such text. Copyright remains with the original copyright holder.

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Jockey Danny Nikolic quizzed after murder of father-in-law Les Samba | Herald Sun

Jockey Danny Nikolic quizzed after murder of father-in-law Les Samba | Herald Sun: "Nikolic presented himself at the St Kilda Rd offices of the crime department this morning to discuss the cold-blooded street execution of the millionaire racing identity.

He spoke to officers for about two hours, denying involvement in the killing.

The champion jockey was not accompanied by a lawyer.

Homicide squad chief Det-Insp. John Potter said Nikolic was not being treated as a suspect.

Nikolic is the former husband of Mr Samba’s daughter Victoria, who was a Melbourne Spring Carnival ambassador.

Nikolic, who rode Thorn Park to win the 2004 Stradbroke Handicap for Samba, yesterday said the death was a major surprise.

'It's a huge shock,' Nikolic said."

:Text may be subject to copyright.This blog does not claim copyright to any such text. Copyright remains with the original copyright holder.

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