The Province

Witness says Vallee caught on video near shooting

Ex-gangster testifies that he ‘would be willing to place a bet’ that surveillan­ce recording shows accused

- KIM BOLAN kbolan@postmedia.com twitter.com/kbolan

An ex-United Nations gangster testifying at the Cory Vallee murder trial said he is confident the person seen on a video near the fatal shooting of a stereo installer is the accused killer.

The man, who can only be identified as D due to a sweeping publicatio­n ban, said he would be willing to bet that one of the men he identified on the May 9, 2008 video at a Burnaby McDonald’s restaurant is Vallee.

During cross-examinatio­n in B.C. Supreme Court on Monday, D was shown a videotaped statement he made to police several years ago as he watched the surveillan­ce video from the McDonald’s.

“It looks to me like this guy right here is Frankie,” he said to the officer at the time, using one of Vallee’s nicknames. “If I was a betting man, and I am, I would be willing to place a bet that that’s Frankie.”

Vallee defence lawyer Eric Gottardi grilled D about how he could have concluded the grainy image was Vallee.

D said there were a number of reasons why he thought the video showed Vallee, who he testified earlier was a hit man hired by the UN gang to help hunt the Bacon brothers and their Red Scorpion associates.

“The thing that stuck out to me the most — talking about the demeanour briefly — is the way that he was walking. It just jives, if you will, with the way I knew Frankie to walk,” D said.

And D told Judge Janice Dillon that the video image had the same body shape as Vallee as well as his “funny-looking ears.”

“More importantl­y, the body type matches. He is about the same size as I knew Frankie to be. It is the ear that did it for me,” D testified.

Gottardi asked D if he was confident enough to bet the final instalment of the $300,000 he was paid by the RCMP for agreeing to testify against his former gang.

“Would you bet the $50,000 you just received from the police?” Gottardi asked.

D’s reply sparked laughter in the courtroom.

“Talking hypothetic­als, I would bet $50,000 of your money,” he said.

Vallee is charged with conspiracy to kill the Bacon brothers and their Red Scorpion associates over several months in 2008 and 2009. During the hunt, stereo installer Jonathan Barber was gunned down in Burnaby on May 9, 2008, after he was mistaken for one of the Bacons.

Vallee is also charged with firstdegre­e murder for the fatal shooting of Bacon pal Kevin LeClair outside a Langley strip mall on Feb. 6, 2009.

D testified Monday that several UN gang members, including himself, had secret compartmen­ts, known as “spots,” installed in their vehicles.

But he told Gottardi that he didn’t believe Vallee and his alleged accomplice Jesse Adkins had one in the dark blue minivan they were driving around the time of the LeClair murder.

“I had no reason to believe they had a secret compartmen­t. I would be surprised to find out that they did,” D testified.

Responded Gottardi: “You would be surprised if the hired hit man had a secret compartmen­t in his vehicle?” “Yes sir,” D answered. D is expected to finish his testimony Tuesday after two weeks on the stand. The next witness scheduled to testify is also a former UN gangster whose identity will also be covered by the ban.

The trial continues.

 ?? GLENN BAGLO/PNG FILES ?? Jonathan Barber was inside this Porsche when he was killed in 2008. Cory Valley is charged in his murder.
GLENN BAGLO/PNG FILES Jonathan Barber was inside this Porsche when he was killed in 2008. Cory Valley is charged in his murder.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada