Toronto Star

‘Tony Large’ preferred ‘little’ crimes

Freelance mobster’s Hamilton grow-op might just have been big enough to provoke his 2017 murder in Etobicoke

- PETER EDWARDS STAFF REPORTER

There was no mystery about how Antonio (Tony Large) Sergi got his nickname.

The Etobicoke mobster sometimes tipped the scales at 350 pounds, which made him girthy, even on his six-foot-four frame.

Tony Large’s weight varied through the years, but only so much. No one had ever thought of calling him “Tony Small.”

He wasn’t called “Antonio Sergi” much either. It was “Tony Large,” or maybe “Tony L.”

He moved in nasty circles, but neighbours in his quiet Etobicoke neighbourh­ood on La Rush Drive seemed to think he was a nice guy.

He had lived there for a couple of decades and his wife could sometimes be seen walking their dog.

Their home was a solid bungalow; nothing too flashy.

In his business world, he wasn’t particular­ly fearsome or hated either. He certainly wasn’t anything like Sal Calautti, a GTA restaurate­ur and hit man who truly seemed to revel in violence and who was eventually murdered outside a Vaughan banquet hall in 2013. Calautti was much smaller than Tony Large, and much more dangerous.

Tony Large, 53, was something far different.

“He wasn’t that major of a player,” a police officer who specialize­d in organized crime said. “He was almost like a harmless guy … did his little crimes and made his money.”

Tony Large wasn’t a member of any one crime group, but more of an active freelancer.

His name popped up from time to time during investigat­ions into lucrative, but essentiall­y non-violent, crimes like cigarette smuggling and cargo theft.

He was arrested and charged with possession of marijuana and hashish, as well as possession of the proceeds of crime in February 2014’s Project Green Giant, which targeted illegal bulk marijuana shipped from B.C. for sale in the GTA.

Police then said they found $2.4 million squirrelle­d away in safety deposit boxes across the GTA. It was mostly Canadian and American dollars, packed in bundles of $100 and $50 bills, but also included a sprinkling of euros and British pounds.

Project Green Giant investigat­ors said their total drug seizure amounted to more than 200 kilograms of marijuana and 3 kg of hashish. They also said they shut down a large-scale hashish production lab housed in an industrial unit.

But the charges against Tony Large were eventually withdrawn.

Legal changes regarding medical marijuana were a point of concern for the underworld, as well as an opportunit­y.

Legislatio­n came into effect in April 2014 that meant the federal government no longer licensed users or sold weed. Personal production also wasn’t allowed.

The incoming legislatio­n meant the prescripti­on of marijuana would be left to doctors and nurse practition­ers. The marijuana they prescribed had to be from licensed producers, who were expected to supply a high-quality, sanitary product.

The move presented a massive business opportunit­y for criminals — if they handled things correctly.

There had been about 37,500 licensed users in Canada at the time the law changed, but Health Canada estimated that by 2024 there would be more than 450,000 people using marijuana for medical reasons.

That projected to an estimated $1.3 billion in annual sales. There was also a chance for producers to legally import and export cannabis. Gone were the days when they had to sneak pot in vehicles or boats. Now they could declare their cargo upfront to customs officials.

Tony Large already had more than a toe in the pot business when the laws changed. Aside from the smuggling charges that were dropped, he had already attempted to form a provincewi­de union for medical marijuana workers. That venture ultimately fizzled.

Not everyone was happy with how he channelled his ambitions.

In March 2015, a BMW SUV in his driveway was torched.

Then, at about 2:30 a.m. on March 31, 2017, Tony Large was returning home in his grey Range Rover when there was a loud bang.

By the time police arrived, he was laying in the driveway near some recycling bins and his Range Rover

He was shot at least once in the head.

Toronto paramedics pronounced him dead at the scene.

Tony Large didn’t stand a chance. His bulk made him a slow-moving, easy target.

The man who ended his life was considerab­ly smaller, but he had the element of surprise and a loaded gun.

The suspect was described by police as male, about five-foot-11 to six-one, with an average build. He wore a dark blue tuque and dark clothing.

Why someone felt the need to end Tony Large’s life isn’t known for sure.

Educated guesses point to the burgeoning medical marijuana business.

Two weeks after his murder, Hamilton police searched a property connected to Tony Large on Kenilworth Avenue in East Hamilton. It was the former home of Boomers strip club and no one would call it pristine. It had been leased by Tony Large and converted into a medical marijuana greenhouse.

Neighbours who had learned to live with Boomers now complained about the smell given off by the new pot operation.

There was something decidedly anticlimac­tic when a police tactical squad raided Tony Large’s former workplace. The pot and pot-growing equipment were long gone and he was dead.

Tony Large had licensing and zoning headaches at the time of his murder.

The City of Hamilton only allows growing and harvesting marijuana in some rural and industrial areas, and the Boomers site didn’t fall into either category.

Tony Large was also a partner in another pot-growing enterprise based in a Brampton industrial mall. That operation apparently outlived Sergi.

Det. Sgt. Stephen Matthews of the Toronto Police homicide squad declined to comment on possible reasons for Sergi’s murder.

“We had some co-operation from witnesses, but would still like to hear from more,” Matthews said in an email.

“As this is still an unsolved case, I think it would be premature to speak to motive or who may have been involved in Mr. Sergi’s murder. One of the challenges we faced with this case was the location, it was not a busy or well-travelled area, especially at the time of the murder.”

Antonio Sergi, a.k.a. ‘Tony Large,’ moved in nasty circles, but neighbours in his quiet Etobicoke neighbourh­ood on La Rush Drive seemed to think he was a nice guy. He had lived there for a couple of decades and his wife could sometimes be seen walking their dog. Their home was a solid bungalow; nothing too flashy

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 ?? METROLAND PHOTOS ?? Tony Large, left, was killed as he returned home at about 2:30 a.m. on March 31, 2017. His body was found in the driveway near recycling bins and his silver Range Rover. He was shot at least once in the head.
METROLAND PHOTOS Tony Large, left, was killed as he returned home at about 2:30 a.m. on March 31, 2017. His body was found in the driveway near recycling bins and his silver Range Rover. He was shot at least once in the head.

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