Gangs, drugs, horrid tragedy

Narcotics fuel incidents like banquet-hall fatal shooting

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A recent wave of gang-related violence -- including this weekend's brazen mass shooting and killing inside a Winnipeg wedding reception -- is likely being fuelled by a growing demand for drugs by Winnipeggers who cross all ethnic, social and geographical boundaries.

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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 28/07/2009 (6114 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

A recent wave of gang-related violence — including this weekend’s brazen mass shooting and killing inside a Winnipeg wedding reception — is likely being fuelled by a growing demand for drugs by Winnipeggers who cross all ethnic, social and geographical boundaries.

Police and justice sources say the general public probably doesn’t realize the direct links between addiction and crime. Gang members are stockpiling weapons, settling old scores and running wild as they compete for big profits. The risks of being caught or even killed are simply seen by most as the cost of doing business.

And what a business it is. Crack cocaine has become prevalent on the streets of Winnipeg and is finding its way into the homes and hands of people from all walks of life. The recent downfall of the Manitoba Hells Angels has only created opportunity for several lower-level organizations to try to fill the void.

Family photo
Cheryl Roberts
Family photo Cheryl Roberts

Police have not officially confirmed Saturday night’s attack at Club 13 is tied to gang activity but sources say it is obvious. The unidentified gunman opened fire on a large crowd of people attending a function that included several members of the Manitoba Warriors street gang. There was no robbery attempt and no other plausible motive or explanation.

Sources believe the gang associates were the intended targets, though none was shot. Unfortunately, three innocent bystanders were hit, including a 50-year-old woman who was struck in the head as she looked at raffle prizes. Her common-law husband was hit in the back, while another woman was grazed with a bullet. Both have been treated and released from hospital.

Police have no description of the suspect, who fired several shots through an open rear door before fleeing into the night. Investigators have seized video footage from inside the Main Street facility and are looking at photographs taken by guests.

The Manitoba Warriors have a long local criminal history and are currently at odds with at least two main rivals — the Native Syndicate and the Indian Posse. At least 10 other people have been shot in recent weeks in the North End, which is territory the three groups routinely frequent. One of those victims was killed.

Julian Sher, a Canadian expert on organized crime who has penned several books on the subject, said the sudden spike in violence isn’t surprising. He said police have made great strides in cutting off the legs of the local Hells Angels through two recent sting operations that saw two presidents and several other full-patch members arrested and jailed.

"Crime on the streets follows the law of the jungle. When one of the big predators is taken out of the picture, other predators move in," Sher said in an interview Monday. He said the Hells are clearly at the "top of the criminal food chain" that would be responsible for importing and selling much of the drugs in Winnipeg.

Sources believe much of the recent violence is a continuation of long-simmering tensions between the Manitoba Warriors and Native Syndicate, which escalated into a riot at Stony Mountain prison in January.

Sources have told the Free Press one of the groomsmen at the wedding has ties to the Manitoba Warriors. The man and several fellow gang associates fled the facility as the bullets started flying, but police located and questioned them later. Sources say associates of the Hells Angels were seen in the area at the time but no direct link has been established.

www.mikeoncrime.com

 

WRONG PLACE, WRONG TIME: Innocent people victimized by gang violence in Winnipeg

"ö Oct. 10, 2005: Phil Haiart, 17, was caught in the middle of a shootout between the Mad Cowz and the African Mafia. Haiart was walking near Maryland Street and Sargent Avenue to see his girlfriend, when he was shot to death. A 25-year-old male bystander was wounded, but not fatally.

"ö July 22, 2007: Five people were injured after a gunman opened fire on a crowd outside Metro Nightlife, a former Garry Street nightclub.

 

"ö Oct. 27, 2007: Four bystanders were hit by gunfire inside the former Empire Cabaret on Main Street after two groups of men got into a confrontation and one person pulled out a gun and started firing. Winnipeg Police Service spokesman Sgt. Kelly Dennison said members of different street gangs were in the nightclub at the time.

 

"ö May 10, 2008: Darcy Douglas Coutu, 34, was gunned down on the patio of the Quality Inn’s Winn City Pub on Pembina Highway by known gang associate Garrett Alexander Gamble. Police say Coutu died only because he was with his cousin — the intended target of the bullets.

Mike McIntyre

Mike McIntyre
Reporter

Mike McIntyre is a sports reporter whose primary role is covering the Winnipeg Jets. After graduating from the Creative Communications program at Red River College in 1995, he spent two years gaining experience at the Winnipeg Sun before joining the Free Press in 1997, where he served on the crime and justice beat until 2016. Read more about Mike.

Every piece of reporting Mike produces is reviewed by an editing team before it is posted online or published in print — part of the Free Press‘s tradition, since 1872, of producing reliable independent journalism. Read more about Free Press’s history and mandate, and learn how our newsroom operates.

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