National Post

Biker strikes back at Crown

- Brian Fitzpatric­k

Noel Harder, who is suing the Crown and RCMP for allegedly failing to keep him safe after he turned on his gangland associates, is now trying to stop the Canadian government from hiding his lawsuit from public view.

Once a high-ranking member of the Fallen Saints Motorcycle Club, Harder was the star witness in Project Forseti, a police and RCMP operation against the Hells Angels, Fallen Saints and others in Saskatoon that saw more than 200 guns and $8 million in drugs seized in January 2015.

Harder and the Fallen Saints had long run huge amounts of drugs into Saskatoon from Vancouver, using his constructi­on business as their base. He first agreed to co-operate with police after being caught with guns in 2014, and he, his wife and two children began the process of entering the Witness Protection Program when the Forseti raids were made.

Although his double-dealing led to the fall of numerous gang operatives, a claim filed at the Court of Queen’s Bench in Regina in March says RCMP failings after he fled town left Harder and his family financiall­y crippled and in acute danger.

Among the agreements that Harder says were reneged upon was a $50,000 payment for ensuring one particular Hells Angel went to prison for eight years.

Now, citing legal subsection­s dealing with “the means and methods by which protected persons are protected,” the government says Harder’s lawsuit should be heard without the press or public present.

The applicatio­n is set to go before a judge at the Court of Queen’s Bench in Regina on Thursday.

Harder’s lawyer says authoritie­s want to hide the case because it makes them look bad.

“This attempt to stop the media has nothing to do with the safety of anybody,” said Regina lawyer Tony Merchant, who represents the former gangster and his family. “It certainly doesn’t have anything to do with my clients because they’re not getting any protection.

“It’s just to stop the public from seeing the evidence of how bad the Witness Protection Program really is. Once you give the government what they want, they have you in their control and they misuse that control. You don’t get the protection you think you’re getting.”

Among a catalogue of allegation­s in Harder’s 24-page statement of claim is one alleging the RCMP, which runs the Witness Protection Program, badly mismanaged businesses, properties and vehicles he left behind in Saskatoon. He claims police endangered the family by failing to provide them with name changes on time; used handling methods that gave away their whereabout­s; and left Harder unprotecte­d in a Saskatoon hotel room for two days as he took the stand in a Forseti case.

Once he was gone from Saskatoon, the “Crown’s representa­tives allowed members of the Fallen (Saints) Motorcycle Club to go through (Harder’s) office unsupervis­ed and remove what they wished,” the claim says. In hiding, the claim says the family was frequently threatened that their involvemen­t in the program would be terminated, adding that it felt like a “death sentence.”

None of the allegation­s has been proven in court.

The claim says the entire family was eventually ousted, involuntar­ily, from the program. Merchant said that Harder is no longer receiving any protection. The protection status of the rest of the family, however, is unclear. A message left for Harder via Merchant’s office was not returned.

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Noel Harder

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