Los Angeles Times

‘Shrimp Boy’ is accused in rival’s murder

Key figure in the corruption scandal ordered the slaying, an indictment says.

- By Richard Winton

To ascend to the position of “dragon head” of one of San Francisco Chinatown’s fraternal organizati­ons-turned-criminal enterprise­s, Raymond “Shrimp Boy” Chow arranged the assassinat­ion of his predecesso­r, according to a federal grand jury indictment Friday.

The murder charge raises the stakes in an undercover five-year public corruption and organized crime probe that has already yielded racketeeri­ng charges against Chow and 28 others.

The investigat­ion also implicated a prominent former state Democratic senator, leading to his guilty plea.

Chow, 55, took control of Ghee Kung Tong in 2006 shortly after Allen Leung, its leader, was gunned down by a masked assassin at his import-export business.

At the time of his death Leung, 56, was involved in Chinese community brotherhoo­ds, or tongs, and had been appointed to city task forces by two San Francisco mayors.

Chow is accused of turn-

ing the fraternal organizati­on Leung had led into a criminal group that was behind the traffickin­g of stolen goods, narcotics, bulletproo­f vests and guns, while also unleashing violence.

Prosecutor­s allege that Chow’s racketeeri­ng enterprise laundered $2.6 million in cash from illegal bookmaking.

The undercover FBI investigat­ion led to a guilty plea from former state Sen. Leland Yee for taking bribes. Yee, the investigat­ion revealed, was a close associate of Chow.

He was accused of winning passage of a state Senate resolution honoring Chow’s organizati­on in exchange for a bribe, as well as offering to broker a weapons sale.

Prosecutor­s also are alleging in the indictment that Chow solicited the murder of Jim Tat Kong, a San Francisco gang member, in 2013.

On Friday, Chow pleaded not guilty to murdering Leung as well as charges including conspiracy to commit murder in “aid of racketeeri­ng.”

Two co-defendants in the racketeeri­ng case have pleaded guilty and implicated Chow in soliciting Leung’s and Kong’s killings, according to federal prosecutor­s.

Chow will face two separate trials. His racketeeri­ng and money laundering case is slated to begin next month. A federal judge on Thursday decided that additional charges, including murder, would have to be tried separately.

Chow has contended in the past that he is a reformed figure who has bounced back from conviction­s for armed robbery, assault and pimping.

His lawyers insist that he is being selectivel­y prosecuted while other public figures whose conversati­ons were captured in wiretaps were not indicted.

In a recent motion his lawyers named San Francisco Mayor Ed Lee.

Two Human Rights Commission officials affiliated with Lee’s 2011 election campaign were caught in wiretapped conversati­ons explaining how they planned to break up $10,000 donations — which exceed the limits under campaign finance law — into smaller amounts in the names of straw donors.

One told an undercover agent that Lee was aware of the scheme.

Lee has denied any wrongdoing.

 ?? Jen Siska Associated Press ?? A GRAND JURY accuses Raymond “Shrimp Boy” Chow, shown in 2007, of turning a fraternal group into a traffickin­g organizati­on after ousting its leader.
Jen Siska Associated Press A GRAND JURY accuses Raymond “Shrimp Boy” Chow, shown in 2007, of turning a fraternal group into a traffickin­g organizati­on after ousting its leader.

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