Discussion:
Hell's Angel Courtenay James Lafreniere Haney Chapter 8 Other Defendants Face $460k Of Asset Seizure But Oddly And Wrongly No Criminal Charges Despite Illegal Drugs And Weapons Seizures.
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Greg Carr
2022-09-27 22:37:56 UTC
Permalink
Hells Angel and several others allegedly involved in B.C. trafficking ring
The B.C. government wants more than $460,000 seized last year by the Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit forfeited as proceeds of crime.

Author of the article:Kim Bolan
Publishing date:Sep 27, 2022 • 7 hours ago • 4 minute read • 7
A full-patch Hells Angel and several others across B.C. are alleged to have been involved in a large-scale illicit drug operation that earned them hundreds of thousands of dollars.

And now the B.C. government wants more than $460,000 seized last year by the Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit forfeited as proceeds of crime, along with a Chrysler 300C and a Rolex.
.
Neither Courtenay James Lafreniere, of the Angels’ Haney chapter, nor any of the other eight defendants named in the recent civil forfeiture lawsuit have been criminally charged in the current investigation.

All are denying the government’s allegations in their responses filed this month in B.C. Supreme Court.

CFSEU Sgt. Brenda Winpenny said Monday that the anti-gang agency has submitted its report to the Public Prosecution Service of Canada to decide whether charges will be laid in the investigation.

“The CFSEU investigation has concluded. The disclosure package has been submitted to Crown counsel, and we are awaiting their review in support of laying any criminal charges,” Winpenny said.

According to the director of civil forfeiture, Lafreniere, Jonathan Lutar and a now-deceased man named David Oppenheim operated a criminal organization and worked with others to facilitate their illicit drug ring.

From September 2020 to July 5, 2021, the trio “conducted multiple meetings indicative of drug trafficking” with the defendants Oakley Charest, of Vernon; Courtney Bemister-Burns, of Victoria; Matthew Alcaraz Shaw, of Delta; Gregory Wilson, of Maple Ridge; and Vancouver residents Denny Savicic and Allan Arcangel.

The group used a high-rise Yaletown apartment on Pacific Street as a stash house where a range of illicit drugs were seized, the government lawsuit said.

Oppenheim, who died in February 2022, and Bemister-Burns were observed meeting in March 2021 for what appeared to be a drug transaction. When Bemister-Burns was arrested afterward, police “located 11 bundles of Canadian currency totaling $53,660, a portion of the money, 251.07 grams of cocaine and a cellphone.”

Four months later, on July 5, several arrests were made and search warrants executed, the statement of claim said.

In Charest’s 2005 Chrysler 300C, police found 56 grams of carfentanil mixed with caffeine, 252 grams of cocaine, 213 grams of cocaine and phenacetin, as well as a billy club, bear spray and an iPhone.

In Oppenheim’s vehicle, they found a box wrapped with Christmas paper containing 10 bundles of Canadian currency totalling $41,895.

At Charest’s Vernon house, police found another $19,555, as well as more cocaine, psilocybin, dimethyltryptamine — a hallucinogenic drug known as DMT — and phenacetin, a cutting agent.

They also found a prohibited handgun “confirmed to be stolen,” a prohibited magazine and ammunition, plus brass knuckles, a weigh scale and two more cellphones.

At Lafreniere’s Maple Ridge home, police found $65,570. Some of it was bundled with elastic bands. There was also benzocaine, cocaine and 2.4 kilograms of cannabis.

Police also seized “a black leather Hells Angels’ vest,” a prohibited taser prod, more brass knuckles, and a “56-pound tank of nitrous oxide.”

The director of civil forfeiture said the biker also had records of drug transactions known as score sheets, showing sales, collections and debts.

More than half the seized cash — $234,141 — was found in Lutar’s Olympic Village suite, as well as the Rolex, more cocaine drug packaging material, and a money counting machine.

At Shaw’s house, officers found $24,970, score sheets, six cellphones, and keys to the stash house.

Lafreniere, Lutar, Shaw and Arcangel filed a joint statement of defence on Sept. 16, denying that any of the cash or the Rolex came from illegal activities. And Lafreniere and Lutar denied they were members of a criminal organization.

Wilson filed his response Sept. 14, claiming CFSEU officers violated his Charter rights when they searched his Maple Ridge home last year. He denied they found any cocaine in the suite despite an allegation that more than four kilograms was seized. The $5,800 found was not related to criminal activity but was legitimate income, he said.

The lawsuit was the second in five years by the B.C. government agency naming Lutar as a defendant. He was also targeted in a 2017 Vancouver Police investigation in which officers found almost $300,000 in the Marinaside Crescent condo where he was living at the time. In 2019, a court ordered all but $15,000 of the seized cash forfeited to the government.

***@postmedia.com

twitter.com/kbolan

https://vancouversun.com/news/local-news/hells-angel-and-several-others-allegedly-involved-in-trafficking-ring

Good reporting again by Kim Bolan the number one crime reporter in BC. Hope she and her employer win their lawsuit against conspiracy kook Dennis Watson of Surrey, BC who also claims the N.S. spree killer was innocent.

Good that they are trying to seize the assets of crime but why no criminal charges brass knuckles are illegal a taser prod is illegal prohibited firearms are obviously illegal all sorts of addictive drugs often fatal are listed as seized so why no charges? Why Channel 21 not mentioned this?
notmyrealname carr
2023-09-30 17:22:04 UTC
Permalink
Post by Greg Carr
Hells Angel and several others allegedly involved in B.C. trafficking ring
The B.C. government wants more than $460,000 seized last year by the Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit forfeited as proceeds of crime.
Author of the article:Kim Bolan
Publishing date:Sep 27, 2022 • 7 hours ago • 4 minute read • 7
A full-patch Hells Angel and several others across B.C. are alleged to have been involved in a large-scale illicit drug operation that earned them hundreds of thousands of dollars.
And now the B.C. government wants more than $460,000 seized last year by the Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit forfeited as proceeds of crime, along with a Chrysler 300C and a Rolex.
.
Neither Courtenay James Lafreniere, of the Angels’ Haney chapter, nor any of the other eight defendants named in the recent civil forfeiture lawsuit have been criminally charged in the current investigation.
All are denying the government’s allegations in their responses filed this month in B.C. Supreme Court.
CFSEU Sgt. Brenda Winpenny said Monday that the anti-gang agency has submitted its report to the Public Prosecution Service of Canada to decide whether charges will be laid in the investigation.
“The CFSEU investigation has concluded. The disclosure package has been submitted to Crown counsel, and we are awaiting their review in support of laying any criminal charges,” Winpenny said.
According to the director of civil forfeiture, Lafreniere, Jonathan Lutar and a now-deceased man named David Oppenheim operated a criminal organization and worked with others to facilitate their illicit drug ring.
From September 2020 to July 5, 2021, the trio “conducted multiple meetings indicative of drug trafficking” with the defendants Oakley Charest, of Vernon; Courtney Bemister-Burns, of Victoria; Matthew Alcaraz Shaw, of Delta; Gregory Wilson, of Maple Ridge; and Vancouver residents Denny Savicic and Allan Arcangel.
The group used a high-rise Yaletown apartment on Pacific Street as a stash house where a range of illicit drugs were seized, the government lawsuit said.
Oppenheim, who died in February 2022, and Bemister-Burns were observed meeting in March 2021 for what appeared to be a drug transaction. When Bemister-Burns was arrested afterward, police “located 11 bundles of Canadian currency totaling $53,660, a portion of the money, 251.07 grams of cocaine and a cellphone.”
Four months later, on July 5, several arrests were made and search warrants executed, the statement of claim said.
In Charest’s 2005 Chrysler 300C, police found 56 grams of carfentanil mixed with caffeine, 252 grams of cocaine, 213 grams of cocaine and phenacetin, as well as a billy club, bear spray and an iPhone.
In Oppenheim’s vehicle, they found a box wrapped with Christmas paper containing 10 bundles of Canadian currency totalling $41,895.
At Charest’s Vernon house, police found another $19,555, as well as more cocaine, psilocybin, dimethyltryptamine — a hallucinogenic drug known as DMT — and phenacetin, a cutting agent.
They also found a prohibited handgun “confirmed to be stolen,” a prohibited magazine and ammunition, plus brass knuckles, a weigh scale and two more cellphones.
At Lafreniere’s Maple Ridge home, police found $65,570. Some of it was bundled with elastic bands. There was also benzocaine, cocaine and 2.4 kilograms of cannabis.
Police also seized “a black leather Hells Angels’ vest,” a prohibited taser prod, more brass knuckles, and a “56-pound tank of nitrous oxide.”
The director of civil forfeiture said the biker also had records of drug transactions known as score sheets, showing sales, collections and debts.
More than half the seized cash — $234,141 — was found in Lutar’s Olympic Village suite, as well as the Rolex, more cocaine drug packaging material, and a money counting machine.
At Shaw’s house, officers found $24,970, score sheets, six cellphones, and keys to the stash house.
Lafreniere, Lutar, Shaw and Arcangel filed a joint statement of defence on Sept. 16, denying that any of the cash or the Rolex came from illegal activities. And Lafreniere and Lutar denied they were members of a criminal organization.
Wilson filed his response Sept. 14, claiming CFSEU officers violated his Charter rights when they searched his Maple Ridge home last year. He denied they found any cocaine in the suite despite an allegation that more than four kilograms was seized. The $5,800 found was not related to criminal activity but was legitimate income, he said.
The lawsuit was the second in five years by the B.C. government agency naming Lutar as a defendant. He was also targeted in a 2017 Vancouver Police investigation in which officers found almost $300,000 in the Marinaside Crescent condo where he was living at the time. In 2019, a court ordered all but $15,000 of the seized cash forfeited to the government.
twitter.com/kbolan
https://vancouversun.com/news/local-news/hells-angel-and-several-others-allegedly-involved-in-trafficking-ring
Good reporting again by Kim Bolan the number one crime reporter in BC. Hope she and her employer win their lawsuit against conspiracy kook Dennis Watson of Surrey, BC who also claims the N.S. spree killer was innocent.
Good that they are trying to seize the assets of crime but why no criminal charges brass knuckles are illegal a taser prod is illegal prohibited firearms are obviously illegal all sorts of addictive drugs often fatal are listed as seized so why no charges? Why Channel 21 not mentioned this?
4 plead guilty in Hells Angels drug trafficking investigation: CFSEU-BC

The logo of B.C.'s Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit, which probes gangs and organized crime, is seen in this image. (Credit: Twitter/cfseubc)The logo of B.C.'s Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit, which probes gangs and organized crime, is seen in this image. (Credit: Twitter/cfseubc)

CTV.

Published Sept. 29, 2023 2:23 p.m. PDT

Investigators from B.C.'s anti-gang police unit say four men have pleaded guilty after being charged with several criminal offences following a "large-scale" drug trafficking investigation that began three years ago.

The Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit of B.C. provided the update in a news release Thursday, saying the early 2020 investigation quickly led police to believe the individuals involved were suspects in an inter-provincial drug trafficking operation on behalf of a criminal organization.

"On Dec. 6, 2022, seven men were charged by the Public Prosecution Service of Canada with drug-related offences," the CFSEU-BC said in the release. "The investigation resulted in the seizure of firearms, various illegal drugs, and 25 criminal charges against individuals, including a full-patch member of the Hells Angels Motorcycle Club's Haney Chapter."

Hells Angels member Courtney Lafreniere pled guilty to proceeds of crime on Sept. 27, and Jonathan Lutar pled guilty to drug trafficking on Sept. 25.

On May 31, Matthew Shaw entered a guilty plea for possession for the purpose of trafficking. On the same day, Oakley Charest pled guilty to drug trafficking, possession of a firearm and possession of a prohibited firearm.

The CFSEU-BC said Roman Tassone's next court appearance is in October as he's awaiting the judicial process.

"This was a complex, multi-jurisdictional investigation affecting several communities," Sgt. Brenda Winpenny said in the release. "Illegal drugs, including fentanyl, which is an extremely dangerous drug that is proving to have widespread consequences in our province. This investigation is a testament to the dedication and tenacity of our investigators to hold those, who deal in drugs are involved in criminal activity, to account and brought to justice."

The CFSEU-BC said it worked closely with partners from the Vancouver Police Department, Vernon North Okanagan RCMP and the Lower Mainland District Emergency Response Team throughout this investigation.
================
During those searches, police seized $650,000 in cash, a nine-millimetre handgun, a .45-calibre handgun, three rifles, a shotgun, ammunition and prohibited gun magazines.

They also seized body armour, two vehicles, and a cocaine press, along with the following approximate amounts of drugs and additives, police said.

Two kilograms of cocaine
One kilogram of MDMA
One kilogram of fentanyl
200 grams of ketamine
10 kilograms of cannabis
16 kilograms of cutting agent

Why does our Federal Govt not just ban them like they have the Proud boys or Atom Waffen? Scared gutless? Remember when pot head Trudeau said legalizing reefer would get organized crime out of it well yet again organized crime is involved in a big pot bust. Why does the Prov. govt not make it illegal for H.A. ppl to work in licensed establishments? Kelly's Pub in Newton the bar manager Darren Chow is openly H.A. and carries a knife ppl like Jason and Jeremy Dyck the H.A. ppl sell drugs there only bar in 5 years I saw stolen property being peddled only bar with prostitution.

Hope the asset seizure in this case works.
Greg Carr
2023-10-02 13:21:17 UTC
Permalink
Post by notmyrealname carr
Post by Greg Carr
Hells Angel and several others allegedly involved in B.C. trafficking ring
The B.C. government wants more than $460,000 seized last year by the Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit forfeited as proceeds of crime.
Author of the article:Kim Bolan
Publishing date:Sep 27, 2022 • 7 hours ago • 4 minute read • 7
A full-patch Hells Angel and several others across B.C. are alleged to have been involved in a large-scale illicit drug operation that earned them hundreds of thousands of dollars.
And now the B.C. government wants more than $460,000 seized last year by the Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit forfeited as proceeds of crime, along with a Chrysler 300C and a Rolex.
.
Neither Courtenay James Lafreniere, of the Angels’ Haney chapter, nor any of the other eight defendants named in the recent civil forfeiture lawsuit have been criminally charged in the current investigation.
All are denying the government’s allegations in their responses filed this month in B.C. Supreme Court.
CFSEU Sgt. Brenda Winpenny said Monday that the anti-gang agency has submitted its report to the Public Prosecution Service of Canada to decide whether charges will be laid in the investigation.
“The CFSEU investigation has concluded. The disclosure package has been submitted to Crown counsel, and we are awaiting their review in support of laying any criminal charges,” Winpenny said.
According to the director of civil forfeiture, Lafreniere, Jonathan Lutar and a now-deceased man named David Oppenheim operated a criminal organization and worked with others to facilitate their illicit drug ring.
From September 2020 to July 5, 2021, the trio “conducted multiple meetings indicative of drug trafficking” with the defendants Oakley Charest, of Vernon; Courtney Bemister-Burns, of Victoria; Matthew Alcaraz Shaw, of Delta; Gregory Wilson, of Maple Ridge; and Vancouver residents Denny Savicic and Allan Arcangel.
The group used a high-rise Yaletown apartment on Pacific Street as a stash house where a range of illicit drugs were seized, the government lawsuit said.
Oppenheim, who died in February 2022, and Bemister-Burns were observed meeting in March 2021 for what appeared to be a drug transaction. When Bemister-Burns was arrested afterward, police “located 11 bundles of Canadian currency totaling $53,660, a portion of the money, 251.07 grams of cocaine and a cellphone.”
Four months later, on July 5, several arrests were made and search warrants executed, the statement of claim said.
In Charest’s 2005 Chrysler 300C, police found 56 grams of carfentanil mixed with caffeine, 252 grams of cocaine, 213 grams of cocaine and phenacetin, as well as a billy club, bear spray and an iPhone.
In Oppenheim’s vehicle, they found a box wrapped with Christmas paper containing 10 bundles of Canadian currency totalling $41,895.
At Charest’s Vernon house, police found another $19,555, as well as more cocaine, psilocybin, dimethyltryptamine — a hallucinogenic drug known as DMT — and phenacetin, a cutting agent.
They also found a prohibited handgun “confirmed to be stolen,” a prohibited magazine and ammunition, plus brass knuckles, a weigh scale and two more cellphones.
At Lafreniere’s Maple Ridge home, police found $65,570. Some of it was bundled with elastic bands. There was also benzocaine, cocaine and 2.4 kilograms of cannabis.
Police also seized “a black leather Hells Angels’ vest,” a prohibited taser prod, more brass knuckles, and a “56-pound tank of nitrous oxide.”
The director of civil forfeiture said the biker also had records of drug transactions known as score sheets, showing sales, collections and debts.
More than half the seized cash — $234,141 — was found in Lutar’s Olympic Village suite, as well as the Rolex, more cocaine drug packaging material, and a money counting machine.
At Shaw’s house, officers found $24,970, score sheets, six cellphones, and keys to the stash house.
Lafreniere, Lutar, Shaw and Arcangel filed a joint statement of defence on Sept. 16, denying that any of the cash or the Rolex came from illegal activities. And Lafreniere and Lutar denied they were members of a criminal organization.
Wilson filed his response Sept. 14, claiming CFSEU officers violated his Charter rights when they searched his Maple Ridge home last year. He denied they found any cocaine in the suite despite an allegation that more than four kilograms was seized. The $5,800 found was not related to criminal activity but was legitimate income, he said.
The lawsuit was the second in five years by the B.C. government agency naming Lutar as a defendant. He was also targeted in a 2017 Vancouver Police investigation in which officers found almost $300,000 in the Marinaside Crescent condo where he was living at the time. In 2019, a court ordered all but $15,000 of the seized cash forfeited to the government.
twitter.com/kbolan
https://vancouversun.com/news/local-news/hells-angel-and-several-others-allegedly-involved-in-trafficking-ring
Good reporting again by Kim Bolan the number one crime reporter in BC. Hope she and her employer win their lawsuit against conspiracy kook Dennis Watson of Surrey, BC who also claims the N.S. spree killer was innocent.
Good that they are trying to seize the assets of crime but why no criminal charges brass knuckles are illegal a taser prod is illegal prohibited firearms are obviously illegal all sorts of addictive drugs often fatal are listed as seized so why no charges? Why Channel 21 not mentioned this?
4 plead guilty in Hells Angels drug trafficking investigation: CFSEU-BC
The logo of B.C.'s Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit, which probes gangs and organized crime, is seen in this image. (Credit: Twitter/cfseubc)The logo of B.C.'s Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit, which probes gangs and organized crime, is seen in this image. (Credit: Twitter/cfseubc)
CTV.
Published Sept. 29, 2023 2:23 p.m. PDT
Investigators from B.C.'s anti-gang police unit say four men have pleaded guilty after being charged with several criminal offences following a "large-scale" drug trafficking investigation that began three years ago.
The Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit of B.C. provided the update in a news release Thursday, saying the early 2020 investigation quickly led police to believe the individuals involved were suspects in an inter-provincial drug trafficking operation on behalf of a criminal organization.
"On Dec. 6, 2022, seven men were charged by the Public Prosecution Service of Canada with drug-related offences," the CFSEU-BC said in the release. "The investigation resulted in the seizure of firearms, various illegal drugs, and 25 criminal charges against individuals, including a full-patch member of the Hells Angels Motorcycle Club's Haney Chapter."
Hells Angels member Courtney Lafreniere pled guilty to proceeds of crime on Sept. 27, and Jonathan Lutar pled guilty to drug trafficking on Sept. 25.
On May 31, Matthew Shaw entered a guilty plea for possession for the purpose of trafficking. On the same day, Oakley Charest pled guilty to drug trafficking, possession of a firearm and possession of a prohibited firearm.
The CFSEU-BC said Roman Tassone's next court appearance is in October as he's awaiting the judicial process.
"This was a complex, multi-jurisdictional investigation affecting several communities," Sgt. Brenda Winpenny said in the release. "Illegal drugs, including fentanyl, which is an extremely dangerous drug that is proving to have widespread consequences in our province. This investigation is a testament to the dedication and tenacity of our investigators to hold those, who deal in drugs are involved in criminal activity, to account and brought to justice."
The CFSEU-BC said it worked closely with partners from the Vancouver Police Department, Vernon North Okanagan RCMP and the Lower Mainland District Emergency Response Team throughout this investigation.
================
During those searches, police seized $650,000 in cash, a nine-millimetre handgun, a .45-calibre handgun, three rifles, a shotgun, ammunition and prohibited gun magazines.
They also seized body armour, two vehicles, and a cocaine press, along with the following approximate amounts of drugs and additives, police said.
Two kilograms of cocaine
One kilogram of MDMA
One kilogram of fentanyl
200 grams of ketamine
10 kilograms of cannabis
16 kilograms of cutting agent
Why does our Federal Govt not just ban them like they have the Proud boys or Atom Waffen? Scared gutless? Remember when pot head Trudeau said legalizing reefer would get organized crime out of it well yet again organized crime is involved in a big pot bust. Why does the Prov. govt not make it illegal for H.A. ppl to work in licensed establishments? Kelly's Pub in Newton the bar manager Darren Chow is openly H.A. and carries a knife ppl like Jason and Jeremy Dyck the H.A. ppl sell drugs there only bar in 5 years I saw stolen property being peddled only bar with prostitution.
Hope the asset seizure in this case works.
The street scum a few of them White and Asian gave me the gears a bit yesterday guess their slavemasters in H.A. don't like my post all were poor and unattractive. 11 Google Groups views alone of this post.
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