Times Colonist

B.C. man with gang links slain in Mexico

- KIM BOLAN

VANCOUVER — A West Vancouver man associated with the Hells Angels has been shot to death in Mexico, Postmedia News has learned.

Guiseppe Bugge, 42, died in a hail of bullets Thursday night at a posh shopping centre in an exclusive neighbourh­ood of Guadalajar­a, Mexico.

Mexican news reports said three vehicles pulled up about 9:30 p.m. Eight to 10 men jumped out and fired at Bugge, who has a long history of fraud in B.C.

More than 140 bullets were fired at him, killing him instantly and injuring one of his MexicanAme­rican associates and two bystanders.

Jalisco prosecutor Raúl Sánchez Jiménez said at a news conference that the state government had asked the Canadian and American consulates for informatio­n about Bugge and the injured man.

Sgt. Brenda Winpenny of the Combined Forces Special Enforcemen­t Unit said Bugge is known to police in this province.

“He is associated with the Hells Angels and involved in drug traffickin­g,” Winpenny said.

Global Affairs Canada said in a statement that the federal government is providing “consular services” to the victim’s family.

The Canadian government has issued advisories warning people not to travel to several northern and western states in Mexico “due to the high levels of violence and organized crime.”

But the state of Jalisco, where the city of Guadalajar­a is located, is not under an advisory.

Bugge had been living in a West Vancouver house with a 2018 assessed value of more than $5 million.

In March, he incorporat­ed a company called G.S. Crypto Currency Ltd. with the B.C. corporate registry. He was listed as the sole director.

In July, Bugge and his new company sued the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce after it froze his corporate account to do an investigat­ion of a transactio­n.

“As a business, Crypto exchanges currency for a digital currency known as Bitcoin,” Bugge’s suit says.

The court documents say Bugge was notified that his account was under investigat­ion on June 4 over a $134,408 US cheque he took from a customer to buy Bitcoin.

He filed his suit days later, saying in it that “Bugge was not prepared to tolerate an indefinite block of the accounts.”

He won a default court order to release the funds on July 5 because CIBC filed no response, Bugge’s court documents state.

Bugge also operated several moving companies over the years that were the subject of many customer complaints and at least one criminal probe.

In June 2005, Bugge was kidnapped in what police described as a drug trade-linked extortion.

He later showed up at a stranger’s door beaten, handcuffed in plastic straps and suffering from cuts.

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