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Monday, April 29, 2013

Rock Machine honcho J.P. Beaumont’s prison death not suspicious: Cops

Wednesday, February 06, 2013 ...... The prison death of a high-ranking Rock Machine member last fall has been deemed to be not suspicious. J.P. Beaumont, who defected to the Rock Machine after previously having ties with the Hells Angels and its former puppet club, the Zig Zag Crew, was found dead at the Brandon Correctional Centre on Oct. 14. Brandon police and the RCMP serious crimes unit were called in to investigate the 39-year-old's death, which at the time was considered suspicious. On Wednesday, Brandon police said Beaumont's death was non-criminal. They declined further comment, citing privacy laws. Beaumont had a lengthy history with the justice system that dated back to the 1990s. A trial was slated to start in Winnipeg just days after his death on a number of charges, including dangerous driving, flight from police, and several other offences.

'Elite' bikers from outside Manitoba mixed up in Project Dilemma sting

First posted: Wednesday, April 03, 2013 It was an in-depth, costly and clandestine investigation into a feared biker gang which featured all the usual police hallmarks: a well-paid civilian informant, wiretaps and plenty of covert surveillance. But the RCMP’s recent Project Dilemma wasn’t without a few surprises, including the sudden and curious arrival of an inter-provincial “wrecking crew” to assist the Manitoba Rock Machine (RM) chapter as it worked towards bolstering its ranks, developing drug turf and throwing cold water on any potential police heat, court documents fleshing out details of the months-long probe show. Local RM leaders announced the arrival of two members of a Quebec-Ontario support club called the “SS Elite” during a Nov. 8 “church” meeting held at the home of the paid police agent, himself then a full-patch RM member. He is not identified by name in the documents. The new faces on the local biker scene — described as the first among the SS Elite “strike force” to travel to western Canada — were sent to “provide security, support, enforcement and logistics,” to the Manitoba RM chapter, local leaders told their small band of gathered members and prospects. The SS Elite was described by RM leaders as being modelled after the SS Waffen, “created to protect Hitler and other Nazis.” “As SS Elite members, they ultimately report to RM members in Montreal but are also required to protect and support the local chapter members,” the court papers say. One of the new arrivals said his instructions were to “’enforce the law.’” The other described how he was instructed to “be there for Winnipeg chapter members when they are in need and to make sure that they don’t get hurt.” Their incentive was to eventually be patched into the Rock Machine as full members, the documents state. Local RM leadership “assured” the SS Elite gangsters “they could become full-patch RM members if they proved themselves.” At this time, police say Winnipeg’s RM chapter was considered “provisional” because it didn’t have at least five full-patch members. One of the SS Elite members asked about potentially selling drugs in Dauphin. It was no problem, he was advised, despite the area’s drug turf being operated by a former RM member who was previously voted out of the club. “The north is a money maker,” the SS Elite member said. “You are in RM country ... Manitoba is RM country,” was the reply, the documents say. “As full patch SS Elite members, they could do whatever they want wherever they want within the province of Manitoba,” they were told. The RM’s local cocaine supply — referred to as the “food” situation — as well as the Rock Machine’s future plans were also discussed, according to the documents. Ideas to undermine police and investigations were also talked about: One high-ranking member called for the creation of a “legitimate company” called “Rock Machine Media Incorporated.” Its purpose was to weaken any police claim the RM was a criminal organization, the documents state. “This business ... would allow RM members to claim that they are shareholders in a legitimate business and that they derive income from it ... the goal is the long term viability and sustainability of the RM for the benefit of all.” By Jan. 18, something had changed, as the SS Elite “had been dissolved,” the documents state. No reason is stated. At a meeting that day at an Inkster Boulevard restaurant, it was unanimously decided one of the former SS Elite members would be granted prospect status. Thirteen days later, RCMP carried out raids across Winnipeg and collared 11 suspects, 10 of whom were directly indicted into the Court of Queen’s Bench to face trial. Along with pounds of cocaine and other drugs, RCMP also seized guns, pipe bombs and other explosives as well as Rock Machine paraphernalia. MANITOBA ROCK MACHINE: KEY DATES September 2008: Police monitor a meeting said to be the first public gathering of a newly formed Rock Machine in the province. Members seen at the meeting had no known ties to the former RM gang based in Quebec, but ties to other gangs. January 2010: Members of the Manitoba Hells Angels and support crew Redlined begin a series of violent attacks on RM members. They continue throughout the year with no retaliation from the RM. Spring 2011: The RM begin to retaliate against the Hells Angels and Redlined. The “biker war” reaches a fever pitch over the summer months, with several shootings and fire-bombings linked to the feud. The RM support club, the Vendetta Crew, emerges. By the fall, fighting decreases. June 2011: Winnipeg police seize a copy of the Rock Machine Canada constitution, dated Sept. 16, 2010. The document sets out the structure of the gang and its various chapters. March 2012: Project Flatlined, a crackdown on the Hells Angels and Redlined, takes a number of their members off the streets. This same month, high-ranking RM local RM members are reported to travel to Montreal to meet with Quebec-based members. August 2012: The RCMP Drug Section begins Project Dilemma. A full-patch RM member agrees to snitch on the activities of his gang for police. January 2013: Project Dilemma ends with raids across the city and the arrests of 11 suspects. — Source: Court documents and news archives

Prison term for Rock Machine member who sold trafficked in drugs, guns and dynamite

Wednesday, April 03, 2013......... John Adam Curwin admits he trafficked drugs, guns and dynamite. But the 30-year-old’s lawyer says the criminal acts weren’t done to line his pockets. Instead, they were committed for the brotherhood of Manitoba’s Rock Machine and to foster his own sense of belonging, the judge who sentenced him to 9 1/2 years in prison on Wednesday was told. The resolution to Curwin’s case comes just three months after he and the others were collared in the latest high-profile RCMP biker-gang dragnet, dubbed Project Dilemma. Curwin, 30, was the first of four reputed full-patch Rock Machine (RM) members arrested to resolve his charges. A handful of prospect members and others were also nabbed. Curwin pleaded guilty to four crimes, including trafficking a shotgun and possessing dynamite in association with a criminal organization on various dates between October and January. He also admitted to trafficking 1,806 tablets of BZP, a synthetic drug analogous to ecstasy. “It wasn’t about money. It wasn’t about violence. It was about brotherhood,” defence lawyer Eric Wach told Court of Queen’s Bench Justice Morris Kaufman. “He lived very modestly. Hand to mouth.” The months-long covert probe saw RCMP employ a paid police agent — a high-ranking RM member — to snitch on the gang’s activities between last August and January. According to a statement of facts tabled by the Crown, Curwin took an active role in the gang’s recent recruitment efforts, including being present at a Sept. 21 “meet and greet” with members of the “Crazy Indians” gang at an Osborne Village bar. He also socialized with a potential prospect from Nanaimo who came to Winnipeg after he connected with Curwin over Facebook. Curwin was lukewarm about his role in the gang’s drug activities, the court document said. “Curwin frankly explained to the agent that he wasn’t very good at drug-trafficking and that really wasn’t what he was in the club for. He commented he that he was there to ‘do the dirt,’ meaning the dirty work. Curwin stipulated that as long as he didn’t have to show his face that the club could rely on him to commit violent acts on their behalf,” the document said. Curwin made the comments as he arranged to sell the agent a stick of dynamite for $100. The purpose of the explosive wasn’t revealed, but Curwin told the agent “they (the RM club) could use the dynamite to blow up a car or basement.” Curwin is a former member of the now-defunct La Familia gang, which was linked to the Bandidos. He was handed a six-year prison term in 2007 for kidnapping, extortion and aggravated assault. After being granted parole, Curwin went straight for some time, diligently working a construction job and being a proud father to his child, Kaufman was told. “Slowly and surely,” he started to go downhill and got pulled back into gang life, Wach said. Curwin continues to have the support of his parents and others, Wach said. “I’ve seen Adam do the impossible,” a friend wrote in a letter read to the court. “He’s kind. He’s caring.” http://www.winnipegsun.com/2013/04/03/prison-term-for-rock-machine-member-who-sold-trafficked-in-drugs-guns-and-dynamite

First guilty plea in Project Dilemma sting of Rock Machine biker gang

First guilty plea in Project Dilemma sting of Rock Machine biker gang By James Turner ,Winnipeg Sun First posted: Wednesday, March 06, 2013 07:45 PM CST | Updated: Wednesday, March 06, 2013 A Rock Machine outlaw motorcycle gang prospect recently snapped up in an undercover sting which RCMP say decimated the gang in Manitoba has become the first of 11 suspects to face the music. Shannon Chad Campbell, 35, pleaded guilty Wednesday to possession of ammunition while prohibited and a court-order breach and was sentenced to 60 days in jail for his minor role in Project Dilemma. Judge Lee-Ann Martin also placed Campbell on probation for 18 months with conditions he have no contact with Rock Machine members or possess any gang paraphernalia or support gear. In October 2012, the paid police agent helping RCMP on the project visited Campbell at a Lockport Road home and saw him handling an assault rifle, court heard. He was on bail at the time and bound by a weapons prohibition. He was under conditions to be living elsewhere, Martin was told. When police carried out a search of the home in January, they found a baggie of 24 .22-calibre cartridges in the home’s laundry room. There was no mention of what became of the gun. “Mr. Campbell was not charged with criminal organization offences but there was a body of evidence about his involvement with the Rock Machine,” Crown prosecutor Mike Desautels said. Along with the ammo, RCMP also seized his prospect vest, support gear and a large hydraulic press. “And I don’t mean for automobiles,” Desautels said. Hydraulic presses are routinely found in drug labs. Campbell was not facing drug-related charges. Campbell was only “peripherally involved” in the overall investigation, defence lawyer Adam Masiowski said. The father of four has since cut ties with the Rock Machine and secured an order of separation from them while in custody, Masiowski said. “Mr. Campbell doesn’t want anything to do with these individuals any more ... he didn’t know them for very long,” he said. “The house that he rented was their property — that was the catalyst for a friendship that developed.” Campbell was the only Project Dilemma suspect to not be directly indicted into the Court of Queen’s Bench to face trial without a preliminary hearing. Currently nine remain in custody, with only one having secured bail so far. The project saw the unidentified civilian police agent paid in the range of $400,000 to snitch on members of the gang. Police and RCMP say they seized 13 pounds of cocaine, 1,800 tablets of Benzylpiperazine (a party pill also known as BZP), about eight pounds of marijuana, firearms, ammunition, two pipe bombs and eight other commercial explosive devices, a 2009 Audi S5, a significant amount of cash and Rock Machine-related clothing and paraphernalia.

Rock Machine off the map: RCMP

Rock Machine off the map: RCMP By Jim Bender,Winnipeg Sun First posted: Thursday, January 31, 2013 The Rock Machine Motorcycle Club will no longer ride their crime wave through the streets of Winnipeg. A total of 11 men, including many connected to the Rock Machine, have been charged with a number of offences related to drug and firearms trafficking and other criminal activities, RCMP announced Thursday. “We have in custody the entire Winnipeg chapter of the Rock Machine members,” said Insp. Len DelPino, the officer in charge of drug and integrated organized crime. “As a result, Winnipeg streets are safer today,” said RCMP assistant commissioner Kevin Brousseau. About 140 RCMP and Winnipeg police officers searched 13 different locations, arresting 11 people at 10 of the locations Wednesday, including a Wall Street business where explosives were found. Rock Machine members John Adam Curwin, Cameron Adam Hemminger, Todd Kenneth Murray and Joseph John Strachan were charged, RCMP said, along with Rock Machine prospect Shannon Chad Campbell. The other men charged were Christopher Lee Camara, Teagveer Singh Gill, Patrick La, Richard Dennis Lund, Donny Syraxa and Danny Vu Tran. The arrests came as the result as the RCMP’s Project Dilemma investigation that started in August 2012. “The long-term investigation responds to one of main concerns of the communities we serve across Manitoba, that being violence associated with drugs,” Brousseau said. Police and RCMP seized 13 pounds of cocaine, 1,800 tablets of Benzylpiperazine (a party pill also known as BZP), about eight pounds of marijuana, firearms, ammunition, two pipe bombs and eight other commercial explosive devices, a 2009 Audi S5, a significant amount of cash and Rock Machine-related clothing and paraphernalia. More arrests could be coming. “As the result of (Wednesday’s) searches, we’ve seized a number of items,” DelPino said. “That will lead us to other locations, possibly other people, further charges. Until we’ve got a full tally of what we have, we’re not finished our investigation.” DelPino would not speculate on whether the Rock Machine was preparing for any sort of biker war, considering the explosives — including sticks of dynamite — and firearms seized. “It does concern every Manitoban when you see these people having these types of things,” he said. “We’re just happy to be able to get it off the streets before it was used.” Charges in Project Dilemma: John Adam Curwin, 31, Rock Machine member Winnipeg, Manitoba Trafficking in Benzylpiperazine x 2 Firearms Trafficking x 1 Offer to Traffic a Firearm x 1 Possession of Proceeds Crime x 2 Trafficking Benzylpiperazine in Association with a Criminal Organization x 1 Firearms Trafficking in Association with a Criminal Organization x 1 Cameron Adam Hemminger, 42, Rock Machine member Winnipeg, Manitoba Trafficking Cocaine in Association with a Criminal Organization x 1 Trafficking Cocaine x 1 Possession of Proceeds Crime x 1 Todd Kenneth Murray, 43, Rock Machine member Winnipeg, Manitoba Trafficking in Cocaine x 3 Possession of Proceeds Crime x 3 Conspiracy to Traffic Cocaine x 1 Trafficking Cocaine in Association with a Criminal Organization x 1 Conspiracy to Traffic Cocaine in Association with a Criminal Organization x 1 Instructing Persons to Commit Offences in Association with a Criminal Organization x 1 Participating in the Activities of a Criminal Organization x 1 Joseph John Strachan, 42, Rock Machine member RM of East St. Paul, Manitoba Trafficking in Cocaine x 1 Possession of Proceeds Crime x 1 Conspiracy to Traffic Cocaine x 1 Trafficking Cocaine in Association with a Criminal Organization x 1 Conspiracy to Traffic Cocaine in Association with a Criminal Organization x 1 Instructing Persons to Commit Offences in Association with a Criminal Organization x 1 Participating in the Activities of a Criminal Organization x 1 Shannon Chad Campbell, 35, Rock Machine prospect RM of St. Andrews, Manitoba Possess Ammunition While Prohibited x 1 Fail to Comply with Conditions of a Recognizance x 2 Christopher Lee Camara, 33 Winnipeg, Manitoba Trafficking in Cocaine x 2 Possession of Proceeds Crime x 2 Teagveer Singh Gill, 28 Winnipeg, Manitoba Trafficking in Cocaine x 2 Possession of Proceeds Crime x 2 Patrick La, 26 Winnipeg, Manitoba Trafficking in Cocaine x 2 Possession of Proceeds Crime x 2 Richard Dennis Lund, 29 Winnipeg, Manitoba Trafficking in Cocaine x 1 Possession of Proceeds Crime x 1 Donny Syraxa, 27 Winnipeg, Manitoba Trafficking in Cocaine X 2 Possession of Proceeds Crime x 2 Danny Vu Tran, 27 Winnipeg, Manitoba Trafficking in Cocaine x 2 Possession of Proceeds Crime x 2 After-effects of 2012 gang war still being felt The Rock Machine were one of the key players in a gang war that appears to have climaxed in 2012. In December 2009, the Manitoba Angels' original puppet club, the Zig Zag Crew, was decimated in a major police project that saw the arrests of many of its members. The Redlined started taking over responsibilities, cops say. But the Rock Machine — first sited in Winnipeg in 2008 at a Notre Dame Avenue hotel with four people wearing "Rock Machine Nomads" vests — had other plans. By January 2010, the violent feud between the Rock Machine and its rivals had erupted, police say, and the tensions boiled over in the summer of 2011 with more than a dozen shootings and fire bombings in a battle over drug turf. UNREPORTED But court documents suggest there was far more gunfire, arsons and assaults that were kept private. "Since January 2010 there have been in excess of 20 reported and almost as many unreported incidents of violence between the Redlined/ Hells Angels and Rock Machine," the documents said. In November 2011, a makeshift bomb was tossed at the home of a Hells Angel in the middle of the night. The device, which looked like it was made out of shotgun shells and ballbearings, extinguished without detonating and without injuring anyone. No one called the cops. Later that same day, a man was beaten, court documents state. He declined medical treatment. The documents, prepared by police as part of the application to stick roughly 10 members of Hells Angels and Redlined under crime prevention- related peace bonds, suggest members gather intelligence on enemies and "have assembled in convoys to go on the hunt for rival Rock Machine members," court documents state. Sometimes, these "hunting missions" culminate at an enemy's property in a home invasion, dubbed "knock knock ginger man," the court documents state. Last month, Winnipeg police busted nine alleged Hells Angels and Redlined members in Project Flatlined — a clear dig at the name of the friend club. In spite of the arrests, police said the conflict is anything but over. "The war has been quiet in the past few months, but the rivalry is still existent and it appears the Rock Machine outlaw motorcycle gang are still intent on expanding their presence here and across Canada," police wrote in 2012. "More violence is predicted between these groups." http://www.winnipegsun.com/2013/01/31/rock-machine-off-the-map-rcmp