Times Colonist

Vancouver-area drug gang smashed; 94 charges laid

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DELTA — Police say 94 charges have been laid, many against suspected gang members, after police smashed a ring that supplied drugs in south Delta and Vancouver.

A Delta Police Department statement said officers were alerted in March 2017 to the drug line that was operated out of Richmond and allowed purchasers to place orders by phone, in a process known as a dial-a-dope operation.

During the 16-month probe, investigat­ors first targeted street-level drug purchases, then gradually identified line managers and suppliers, with Delta police saying most are known Red Scorpion gang members and associates.

Evidence seized in raids last fall included a Red Scorpion ring, up to $100,000 in drugs such as fentanyl, cocaine and heroin, weapons including two assault rifles, $52,000 in cash, $30,000 in jewelry, four luxury vehicles and the master phone that controlled the dial-a-dope ring.

Police said four Red Scorpion members, Kyle Latimer, Khaadim Coddett, Jacob Pereira and Andeuele Pikeintio, all aged between 22 and 27, face a total of 66 charges, ranging from possession for the purpose of traffickin­g to firearms offences. Thirty-three-year-old Billie Kim, who police said is a Red Scorpion associate, is charged with 14 counts of possession for the purpose of traffickin­g and firearms offences while James Souliere, 27, is charged with 10 counts of traffickin­g and 27-year-old Darryl Whitson faces four counts.

The project targeted many of the same people named in a multi-agency gang investigat­ion announced last week by Vancouver police but Delta said its probe was separate, although its officers communicat­ed with members of the Vancouver-led task force.

Staff Sgt. Heath Newton with Delta Police said the probe was primarily interested in targeting trafficker­s, not drug users. “If we can break the illicit drug trade supply lines, even if it’s only temporaril­y, we can save lives and reduce connected property crime stemming from drug addiction,” Newton said.

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