The Daily Courier

B.C. to appeal clubhouse decision

Courts ruled in June that Kelowna, Nanaimo homes must be returned to bikers

- By KIM BOLAN

The B.C. government is appealing a court ruling that rejected its claim that three Hells Angels clubhouses in Vancouver, Kelowna and Nanaimo should be forfeited as instrument­s of criminal activity.

The June 11 ruling by B.C. Supreme Court Justice Barry Davies also found that part of the Civil Forfeiture Act was unconstitu­tional and outside of the jurisdicti­on of the provincial government.

This week, B.C.’s attorney-general filed an appeal of Davies’ finding on the act itself, while the Director of Civil Forfeiture is appealing the decision against forfeiting the three clubhouses.

In the notice of appeal, the director is seeking to have Davies’ order overturned and to grant his original request to have the proceeds of the sale of all three clubhouses forfeited to the government.

The long-running civil case began in November 2007 when the director filed a lawsuit seeking the Nanaimo clubhouse’s forfeiture after an RCMP raid.

In 2012, the civil forfeiture case was expanded to include both the East End clubhouse at 3598 East Georgia St. in Vancouver and one in Kelowna at 837 Ellis St.

Also that year, the Hells Angels countersue­d the government, making their successful claim that the Civil Forfeiture Act is unconstitu­tional.

The Hells Angels have had access to both the Kelowna and East End clubhouses throughout the proceeding­s, but the Nanaimo chapter was prevented from entering the dilapidate­d building at 805 Victoria Rd. until last month.

Postmedia observed club members putting up a new illuminate­d sign there on June 26. And the bikers still operate a newer clubhouse they developed on a neighbouri­ng property.

It is likely that legal bills in the epic civil case now total almost as much as the value of the three properties.

The Nanaimo house is currently assessed at $120,600. The Kelowna property is assessed at $824,000, and the value of the Vancouver clubhouse has fallen to $1.142 million, according to the B.C. Assessment Authority.

The B.C. Supreme Court trial lasted for 49 days, stretching over a year.

And while Davies heard from police, former Toronto Hells Angel-turned-police-agent

Dave Atwell and Micheal Plante, who infiltrate­d the Angels for police in B.C., he ultimately ruled that the director had not proven that the clubhouses “play an important role in enabling and empowering members of the Hells Angels to engage in serious crime for financial gain.”

Davies said that while the director presented evidence of crimes inside in the East End clubhouse in the mid-2000s, they were committed by individual­s without proof they were done for the benefit of the Hells Angels as an organizati­on.

And he said there was no evidence presented at the year-long trial that the Nanaimo and Kelowna clubhouses had been used to commit crimes, despite the conviction­s of several members of each chapter.

But Davies noted that “no conviction­s for criminal organizati­on offences have been entered against any member or associate of the Hells Angels in British Columbia, although such charges have been advanced by the Crown.”

“The director has not proven that any offence committed by any of those members of the Hells Angels in British Columbia for which a conviction was entered was committed either at the direction of or for the benefit of a chapter of the Hells Angels or the Hells Angels as a worldwide criminal organizati­on.”

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