Vancouver Sun

Police brace for fallout after Angel slain

- KIM BOLAN

Law enforcemen­t agencies across the region are bracing for any potential fallout after a prominent Hells Angel was found murdered in Maple Ridge on the weekend.

Cpl. Frank Jang of the Integrated Homicide Investigat­ion Team said his agency is co-ordinating with other gang enforcemen­t teams in the Lower Mainland after the slaying of Chad John Wilson, a full-patch member of the Hardside Hells Angels.

“IHIT will be engaging with our numerous partners from the gang enforcemen­t units throughout the Lower Mainland region. They will be working to mitigate any ongoing violence,” Jang said at a Surrey news conference. “While the motive for Mr. Wilson’s murder has not been confirmed, this is yet another example, another reminder, of the significan­t dangers that are posed to one’s life by being part of a criminal organizati­on.”

Chief Superinten­dent Trent Rolfe, head of the anti-gang Combined Forces Special Enforcemen­t Unit, said even prominent members of outlaw motorcycle gangs like the Hells Angels “are not immune to gang violence or their connection to the gang landscape, both as perpetrato­rs and victims.”

Two years ago, another highprofil­e Hells Angel, Bob Green, was shot to death by an associate in the 856 gang after an all-night drinking party at the 856’s clubhouse.

Within days, another young gangster who was at the party was found slain and mutilated at the side of a Langley road.

Green’s killer, Jason Wallace, who later pleaded guilty to manslaught­er, said he was told in a threatenin­g phone call to kill himself, or turn himself into the Hells Angels and they would do it.

Wilson, 43, began his biker career in San Diego, joining the Hells Angels Dago chapter there on Jan. 28, 2005, as a prospect and becoming a full-patch member a year later.

He pleaded guilty in South Dakota in 2009 to being an alien in possession of a firearm and was sentenced to four years in jail. The charge stemmed from a 2006 shootout with rivals from the Outlaws biker gang. Wilson wounded several Outlaws, paralyzing one of them, but was acquitted of an attempted murder charge after claiming self-defence.

“If I didn’t shoot back, they would have kept shooting me until I was dead,” he testified.

When Wilson returned to Canada, he joined the Haney Hells Angels. And last year he transferre­d over to the newest chapter of the notorious biker gang, Hardside. He got married earlier this year, wearing his colours — or Hells Angels vest — to the ceremony.

Postmedia has learned that Hardside has an associatio­n with the Brothers Keepers, a younger drug-traffickin­g gang that has been locked in a bloody gang war with rivals who were once associates.

Police are trying to figure out the motive behind Wilson’s death, looking at whether he got caught in the violence of his junior associates or was targeted for some past crime, including the South Dakota shootout and a conviction in Spain for smuggling half a tonne of cocaine into the country.

“Right now, behind the scenes, there is a lot of activity going on,” Jang said.

Jang urged Wilson’s biker brethren who may have “intimate knowledge” of what happened to contact police and help in the investigat­ion.

“We will go to wherever you are, we will sit down and speak with you, and we will treat you with the utmost respect,” he said. “We want to solve your friend’s — your associate’s — murder as much as you do. Please reach out to IHIT today.”

The reality is that the murders of Hells Angels have rarely led to charges in B.C. aside from the case of Green’s killer, who turned himself into police the day after the slaying.

Nanaimo Hells Angels prospect Michael Gregory Widner was found slain near Sooke in March 2017. He was made a full-patch member posthumous­ly. No one has been charged.

Nor have charges been laid in the 2010 murder of former East End Hells Angel Juel Ross Stanton, the 2008 disappeara­nce of Vancou- ver Angel Cedric Baxter Smith, the 2002 disappeara­nce of Haney member Rick (Blackie) Burgess, the 2001 murder of Nomad Donny Roming, the 1997 slaying of former Haney member Ernie Ozolins, or the 1993 disappeara­nce of Michael (Zeke) Mickle, then-president of the Nanaimo Hells Angels.

Combined Forces Special Enforcemen­t Unit Sgt. Brenda Win- penny said the agency has been working to educate the public about the risk that the Hells Angels and other outlaw motorcycle gangs “pose to the public, due to the level of violence they engage in to conduct their business.”

 ??  ?? Chad Wilson, right, seen with fellow Hardside Hells Angels member Jamie Yochlowitz, was found slain in Maple Ridge last weekend.
Chad Wilson, right, seen with fellow Hardside Hells Angels member Jamie Yochlowitz, was found slain in Maple Ridge last weekend.

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