The Province

Gangster who aided Surrey Six killers gets statutory release

Man who helped Surrey Six killers get inside highrise receives his statutory release

- KIM BOLAN kbolan@postmedia.com blog: vancouvers­un.com/tag/real-scoopwitte­r.com/kbolan

A B.C. gangster who helped killers get into the Surrey highrise where they slaughtere­d six people in 2007 has been granted release from prison. But Sophon Sek’s freedom may be short-lived as a deportatio­n order already has been issued against the drug trafficker for his history of serious criminalit­y.

In a Sept. 23 ruling, the Parole Board of Canada imposed special conditions on Sek’s statutory release — which almost all inmates get after serving two-thirds of their sentence. Board member Patrick O’Brien said Sek must stay away from criminal associates, live in a halfway house, have only one cellphone and provide all of his financial records to a parole supervisor.

He also must stay away from the family of the Surrey Six victims.

O’Brien acknowledg­ed Sek isn’t reformed, despite taking several courses inside prison while serving four years of an almost six-year sentence.

“Throughout your sentence, your commitment and sincerity have been questioned due to reliable informatio­n that strongly suggests continued involvemen­t and leadership with security-threat groups,” he said in his written ruling. “You dispute the assertions. However, the concerns were so pronounced that you were transferre­d out of your region and a return to that area on statutory release is being discourage­d over concerns of your safety, as well as the safety of the community. These are serious allegation­s and concerns that, if at all founded, create potential for significan­t threats to public safety.”

Sek, 39, pleaded guilty in 2015 to breaking and entering for his role in the Surrey Six murders and received a oneyear sentence. A manslaught­er charge was dropped. The sentence was added to a fiveyear term he got in 2014 for several drug-traffickin­g and firearms conviction­s.

Sek maintained he never knew Red Scorpion gangsters Matthew Johnston, Cody Haevischer and a man who can be identified only as Person X planned to kill people inside Suite 1505 at the Balmoral Tower when he helped them get inside the building. Two of the victims, Chris Mohan and Ed Schellenbe­rg, were bystanders caught up in the gangland murders.

O’Brien’s ruling noted that in 2017 B.C. parole board members denied Sek’s release because he “seriously minimized (his) criminal behaviour, was deceitful and remained active with security-threat groups.” And the board member said Sek’s involvemen­t in traffickin­g took place while on bail on his Surrey Six charges.

“You were found to have been dealing an abundance and wide array of drugs from your place of business. A search of your home uncovered restricted weapons and ammunition,” O’Brien said. “The weapons were for protection and you readily acknowledg­ed the dangerous nature of the drug world. Police believe that you have long been associated with drug-dealing through assorted criminal gangs.”

O’Brien said “the nature, volume and variety of drugs, coupled with possessing a machine-gun for protection, give reason to believe that your traffickin­g activities were extensive and linked to organized criminals.”

Sek, who came to Canada from Cambodia as a toddler, began to go astray as a youth.

“Child welfare became involved, you turned to the street, your education was interrupte­d and your employment history is limited,” the ruling said.

 ??  ?? Sophon Sek, shown at a 2009 poker tournament, will be released from prison, but with several strict restrictio­ns.
Sophon Sek, shown at a 2009 poker tournament, will be released from prison, but with several strict restrictio­ns.

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