Vancouver Sun

Three Greeks gangsters lose their murder appeals

Court releases brief online statement explaining 2012 conviction­s still stand

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

Three members of the notorious Greeks gang from Vernon have lost their appeals of their November 2012 murder conviction­s.

The B.C. Court of Appeal announced in a brief online statement that the appeals of gang leader Peter Manolakos and his associates Leslie Podolski and Sheldon Richard O’Donnell had all been dismissed.

The judges’ reasons for their decision were not released because they have not yet had time to edit out informatio­n about Crown witnesses who were subject to sweeping publicatio­n bans.

“This is a statement that will be posted on the court’s website concerning these appeals until it is replaced with redacted reasons for judgment,” the court’s public statement said. “The publicatio­n ban means that the full reasons for judgment must be sealed and only a redacted version complying with the ban may be released to the public.”

The statement said Crown prosecutor­s and defence lawyers in the case were provided with unedited reasons for the judgment on Wednesday.

“There shall be a brief administra­tive hearing with counsel and a judge of the division to canvass the redactions required to allow for public release of reasons for judgment that comply with the terms of the publicatio­n ban,” the statement said.

Manolakos, Podolski and O’Donnell are three of five men convicted by a jury of various counts in the murders of David Marnuik, Thomas Bryce and Ronald Thom in the Vernon area between July 2004 and May 2005.

Marnuik, who delivered drugs for the Greeks, was beaten to death with a baseball bat, a hammer and a blowtorch because he had taken off with some cash and a gang cellphone in the middle of a shift in the summer of 2004.

Bryce was a rival drug trafficker fighting the Greeks for turf when he was beaten with a wooden bat, then stomped at a popular beach near Vernon in November 2004. He died 17 days later in hospital.

Thom was shot to death on May 31, 2005, because Manolakos mistakenly believed Thom had provided police with informatio­n about the Greeks’ criminal activity.

Manolakos was convicted of the first-degree murder of Thom and manslaught­er in Marnuik’s death. O’Donnell was convicted of firstdegre­e murder in the Thom slaying and second-degree murder in the deaths of Marnuik and Bryce. Podolski was found guilty of the first-degree murder of Marnuik.

All three are serving life sentences.

They appealed their conviction­s on 16 grounds, all of which were dismissed.

The appeal was heard at the Vancouver Law Courts last June before justices Mary Saunders, Daphne Smith and Lauri Ann Fenlon.

The men were found to be part of a drug-traffickin­g gang operating in the North Okanagan called the Greeks, headed by Manolakos, who is of Greek heritage.

Manolakos provided gold rings and vests to his members, who also had tattoos of the word ema — which means blood in Greek — as well as the Greek letter omega.

Jurors at the trial also heard the Greeks had different ranks within the organizati­on, including runners like Marnuik who worked the drug lines at the street level, bankers who would supply drugs to the runners and collect the profits, and enforcers who would mete out punishment to those who broke the gang ’s rules.

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