The Province

Hells Angels cocaine conspiracy trial ends, ruling to come Sept. 30

- KIM BOLAN kbolan@postmedia.com twitter.com/kbolan Blog: vancouvers­un.com/tag/real-scoop

The months-long cocaine conspiracy trial of two Kelowna Hells Angels and three of their associates wrapped up Wednesday in B.C. Supreme Court.

Justice Carol Ross said she would hand down her ruling in the judge-only case on Sept. 30.

Hells Angels David Giles and Brian Oldham and associates James Howard, Michael Read and Shawn Womacks were charged with conspiracy to import cocaine following a 2012 reverse sting by Mounties posing as members of a South American drug cartel. Three other co-accused have already pleaded guilty in the case.

Since the trial started in February, Ross has heard from undercover cops who tricked the B.C. men into believing they could provide hundreds of kilograms of cocaine.

Intercepte­d conversati­ons and surreptiti­ously-recorded video evidence were also key evidence in the Crown’s case.

Defence lawyer Ian Donaldson concluded final arguments on behalf of Oldham Wednesday, saying the evidence was not enough to convict the biker of conspiracy.

Prosecutor Chris Greenwood said in his closing that while Oldham only got involved “at the tail end of the conspiracy,” he played a key role when he attended a meeting with Giles and an undercover cop.

“He backed up the deal. In his capacity as a Hells Angel, he agreed to stand in Mr. Giles’ place for the express purpose of ensuring the cocaine could be obtained,” Greenwood said.

But Donaldson said the conversati­on that took place during the meeting does not prove Oldham had knowledge of the cocaine deal.

“There are a variety of explanatio­ns that can be put upon Oldham’s presence there. They include that Giles needs somebody at that meeting to demonstrat­e that person is a fellow motorcycle enthusiast — he’s an Angel, shows a tattoo, that there’s somebody available if something happens to him,” Donaldson said.

He said the evidence leading up to the meeting is “vague, nebulous. It would be manifestly unsafe to draw the inference that he knew everything, that he had to know, in order properly to be found guilty.”

Donaldson was brought into the case during closing arguments earlier this month after Oldham stood up in court and said he no longer had confidence in his original trial lawyer, Robert DeBou.

Because Donaldson represente­d Kevin Van Kalkeren, who earlier pleaded guilty in the case, he was familiar with the evidence and able to step in.

In his closing, Greenwood urged Ross to convict all five, describing the evidence as “overwhelmi­ng.”

He described Giles and Van Kalkeren as the leaders of the conspiracy who shored up the first shipment of cocaine during meetings in Panama City in March 2012 that were secretly recorded by police.

Giles’ lawyer Paul Gill earlier argued that while his client may have agreed to traffic 200 kilograms of cocaine, there is no evidence he wanted to import the drug into Canada.

He said Giles was “played” by police at a time when he was sick and broke.

 ?? WAYNE LEIDENFROS­T/PNG FILES ?? RCMP Superinten­dent Brian Cantera holds a photo of Hells Angel Brian Oldham, who was in B.C. Supreme Court on Wednesday on charges of conspiracy to import cocaine.
WAYNE LEIDENFROS­T/PNG FILES RCMP Superinten­dent Brian Cantera holds a photo of Hells Angel Brian Oldham, who was in B.C. Supreme Court on Wednesday on charges of conspiracy to import cocaine.

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