Times Colonist

Dutch court convicts 17 members of criminal gang, three get life in prison

- MIKE CORDER

AMSTERDAM — A Dutch court convicted 17 suspects on Tuesday in the long-running trial of an underworld gang that planned a string of killings.

Judges handed life sentences to three of them, including the gang’s “undisputed leader,” Ridouan Taghi, once the Netherland­s most-wanted fugitive.

The trial and three more murders linked to the case have enthralled and rattled the Netherland­s, exposing the deadly reality of the country’s drugfuelle­d criminal underworld.

Taghi and several co-defendants did not attend the final day of their trial at a tightly guarded courthouse on the outskirts of the Dutch capital.

Heavily armed police officers wearing body armour, helmets and ski masks patrolled streets around the court as cars carrying some of the defendants swept into an undergroun­d parking lot for the hearing.

The court convicted Taghi in five murders and called him the “undisputed leader” of a “murder organizati­on.”

“He decided who would be killed and spared no one,” the presiding judge said. “The amount of suffering Taghi caused to the victims and their loved ones is barely imaginable.”

The court ruled that Taghi used extreme violence to intimidate enemies and potential police informants.

“By doing so, he prevented people from co-operating with the police. Such terror has a disruptive effect on society,” the presiding judge said. Court officials asked media not to identify the judges by name because of security concerns.

The brother of a key witness, identified only as Nabil B., his lawyer and a journalist who acted as a confidante for the witness were all killed in the nearly six years since the trial opened.

Lawyer Derk Wiersum was gunned down outside his home in Amsterdam on Sept. 18, 2019. Two men have been convicted of murder in his killing.

Journalist Peter R. de Vries was shot in Amsterdam as he walked to his car from a television studio on July 6, 2021. He died nine days later of his injuries. Prosecutor­s have sought life sentences for three of the suspects in his killing.

The murders gave the already grim trial “a pitch-black edge,” the presiding judge told a packed courtroom.

The judge lamented that De Vries “will never again sit in the press bench” at the court.

Dutch King Willem-Alexander called De Vries’ shooting “an attack on journalism, the cornerston­e of our constituti­onal state and therefore also an attack on the rule of law.”

Taghi was one of the Netherland­s’ most-wanted men until he was arrested in Dubai in 2019 and flown home to face trial. He and other defendants were charged with involvemen­t in six murders and four attempted murders.

The Public Prosecutio­n Service alleged that the defendants were part of a “completely unscrupulo­us murder organizati­on, which has carelessly and indifferen­tly killed people.” They said the fallout from the murders had “not only been felt for the next of kin, but have also had after-effects more broadly in society.”

Lawyers for the suspects had sought their acquittal. The court rejected defence arguments that the trial was unfair and that the suspects had already been convicted in the court of public opinion.

 ?? PETER DEJONG, AP ?? A vehicle carrying suspects in a long-running criminal gang trial arrives at court in Amsterdam on Tuesday.
PETER DEJONG, AP A vehicle carrying suspects in a long-running criminal gang trial arrives at court in Amsterdam on Tuesday.

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