Pubdate: Sat, 24 Nov 2007
Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC)
Copyright: 2007 The Vancouver Sun
Contact:  http://www.canada.com/vancouver/vancouversun/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477
Author: Neal Hall
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/af.htm (Asset Forfeiture)

PAYING UP FOR COMMITTING THE CRIME

The Vancouver Sun created this list after examining court files and 
documents related to the assets seized so far under the province's 
Civil Forfeiture Act, which was passed last year

Compiled by Neal Hall Vancouver Sun

SEIZED: 4640 Woodburn Rd., West Vancouver.

Why: It is alleged that the co-owner of the home, Dale Alexander 
Prentice, has been directly involved in large-scale trafficking of 
marijuana and cocaine between Canada and the U.S., and he has been 
implicated in laundering large sums of money from criminal enterprises.

Defendants: Dale Prentice and Shannon Joanne Bennett.

Case synopsis: The $1-million-plus home in Upper Caulfeild was 
purchased by the defendants in 2005 for $953,000. Prentice was 
investigated in the U.S. by the Bureau of Immigration and Customs 
Enforcement (ICE), where he was arrested as a large-scale money smuggler.

His alleged associates, Andrew Crookbain and Jason Scott Hunter, were 
accused of conspiracy to import marijuana, conspiracy to distribute 
cocaine and engaging in money laundering.

A supporting affidavit filed by ICE agent Steve Cagen said Hunter was 
paid $4,000 to drive $220,000 US from New York to Los Angeles, then 
drove to Seattle with 20 kg of cocaine.

The affidavit says Crookbain is a Canadian detained in Maui last Jan. 
29 as a material witness and was escorted to Seattle, where he told 
police Prentice was growing marijuana in Canada. Prentice entered 
into a guilty plea agreement with U.S. authorities and was sentenced 
to a nine-year prison term. Hunter got four years. Crookbain wasn't 
charged in the U.S. but faces drug-related charges in Vancouver. 
Forfeiture proceedings are pending against the West Vancouver home.

- - - -

Seized: Condo at 4132 Halifax St., Burnaby, $17,000 cash, replica 
handgun, illegal drugs.

Why: Allegedly the proceeds or instruments of unlawful activity.

Defendant: Edison Tse, owner of the condo at the time.

Case synopsis: Tse was arrested at the residence along with Genesis 
Sotana. Both were charged with possession of drugs for the purpose of 
trafficking. Neither has gone to trial.

Status: The condo was sold last summer for $545,000 and the proceeds 
frozen; the government is seeking forfeiture of the funds.

- - - -

Seized: $93,130 US cash and $1,240 Cdn cash.

Where: 914 Third St., Nelson.

Why: The money is allegedly related to money laundering, 
marijuana-growing operations and drug trafficking.

Defendant: T'ai Me Love Lyon.

Case synopsis: Police executed a search warrant at Lyon's residence 
on Nov. 2, 2004, as part of a multi-jurisdictional undercover 
investigation. Police set up a company to provide money laundering 
services and Lyon allegedly delivered $226,900 to an agent in Denver, 
Colo., on Sept. 8, 2003, to be laundered. The case has been resolved, 
with the money forfeited to the government.

- - - -

Seized: House and property.

Where: 29445 Simpson Rd., Abbotsford.

Why: The home was allegedly purchased with profits made from a 
marijuana-growing operation.

Defendants: Ngoc Bich Doan and Chung Kim Diep.

Case synopsis: Doan and her husband were arrested Feb. 26, 2003, by 
Abbotsford police after a search warrant was executed after a tip 
from BC Hydro. Police seized 235 marijuana plants from the basement. 
The next year, Doan pleaded guilty to marijuana production and was 
sentenced to six months of house arrest and fined $1,000.

Doan stated she and her husband had earned money as labourers and 
profited from real estate deals before buying their home in 
Abbotsford. Divorce proceedings were initiated and the house, which 
was heavily mortgaged, was sold in 2006 for $560,000, with Doan and 
Diep each allowed to keep $48,300. About $129,000 was forfeited to 
the government.

- - - -

Seized: $240,820 found in the trunk of a Nissan Maxima, along with 
two kilograms of cocaine.

Where: near Cambie and West 10th Avenue, Vancouver.

Why: Money allegedly related to drug trafficking.

Defendants: Troy Minh-Tri Tran, Emby Chan Tha Kim and Jesse Alan Reimer.

Case synopsis: Vancouver police officers on patrol on Oct. 21. 2005, 
were advised over police radio about the theft of a Nissan sedan. The 
car was pulled over on West 10th. The officers found a large amount 
of cash in the trunk, as well as two plastic-wrapped "bricks" of 
cocaine. Tran and Reimer were both known to Calgary police.

Reimer and Kim failed to file statements of defence, so default 
judgments were entered against them. Tran consented earlier this year 
to a forfeiture order. The money was paid to the B.C. minister of finance.

- - - -

Seized: Home at 3766 Cambridge St., Burnaby, and $126,000 in home furnishings.

Why: The home was allegedly purchased with money from drug trafficking.

Defendants: Robert (Robbie) Della Penna, Mario Della Penna, Guiseppe 
Della Penna, Michela Della Penna.

Case synopsis: Robbie Della Penna, a 37-year-old former boxer, was 
arrested in October 2004 in a reverse-sting undercover police 
operation. Police had observed him travelling to a home in Mission, 
which was a suspected marijuana-growing operation. A police bust on 
March 5, 2004, found 1,448 live plants and another 1,427 dried plants 
were seized.

Police later used a DEA informant to contact Robbie Della Penna to 
help broker a 50-kilogram cocaine deal. The accused was arrested as 
he delivered $575,920 Cdn cash to buy the first 25 kilograms of cocaine.

The home was recently sold to new owners for $1.3 million. About $1.1 
million was forfeited to the government.

- - - -

Seized: $200,500 Cdn cash.

Why: Police allege the money is from drug trafficking.

Defendant: Hamed Rahmani.

Case synopsis: On Oct. 5, 2005, Vancouver police stoped a BMW driven 
by Rahmani when he was observed, during a police surveillance 
operation, leaving the residence of a suspected drug dealer. The 
seized money has been forfeited.

- - - -

Seized: 2003 Hummer and 2002 GMC Yukon Denali.

Why: The vehicles were allegedly bought with drug-trafficking money 
and used for drug transactions.

Defendants: David James Endicott and Kathleen Rose Dorward.

Case synopsis: The vehicles were registered in the name of Dorward, 
whose occupation is listed as "sex trade worker."

Endicott bragged to Victoria police officers that he was a mid-level 
drug dealer making about $60,000 a month, using family members to 
conduct his business. Sgt. Grant Hamilton states he talked to 
Endicott on Oct. 9, 2005, when Endicott said he was running a drug 
trafficking business for five years and was making $100,000 a month, 
paying up to $40,000 to "clean" the money.

He told another officer that he and Dorward were selling cocaine and 
he also ran a paging business. Forfeiture proceedings are pending.

- - - -

Seized: House at 2940 Waterford Place, Coquitlam.

Why: The house was bought with profits from drug-trafficking.

Defendants: Tuan Anh Vu, Phiet Vu and Minh Thi Nguyen.

Case synopsis: Police were called to the residence on Jan. 11 this 
year to investigate a home invasion. Officers were met at the door by 
Anh Vu, who appeared to be wounded. He advised police four or five 
men dressed in black had entered the residence but he managed to 
eject them. Police found a marijuana-growing operation in the 
basement of the home, which was purchased in 2002 for $395,000 by 
Phiet Vu and Nguyen. Forfeiture proceedings are pending.

- - - -

Seized: House at 4093 Braefoot, Victoria.

Why: Part of the house was bought with funds gained from unlawful 
activity -- fraudulent investment schemes.

Defendants: David Joseph Shannon, Evagelia Biros and John Biros.

Case synopsis: David Joseph Shannon was a partner of Kevin J. Steele 
in a number of investment schemes that constituted fraud. His wife, 
Evagelia, is a school teacher. Her father John Biros is named because 
he advanced $200,000 to purchase the $700,000 home by way of a second 
mortgage and remains unpaid. The home was bought in 2004 for $551,000.

Steele pleaded guilty to fraud in 2006 and was sentenced to six years 
in prison after admitting he defrauded more than 200 investors of $9 
million. A Chicago court also ordered Steele, 34, who falsely 
portrayed himself as a hot-shot commodities trader, to pay $7.4 
million US restitution to his victims. In 2006, Shannon transferred 
his interest in the property to his wife, which is alleged to be a 
fraudulent conveyance. Shannon and another Victoria man were paid 
more than $900,000 in commissions for soliciting investors, mainly in 
New Denver and other towns in the Slocan Valley. Forfeiture 
proceedings are pending against the home.

- - - -

Seized: $100,000 Cdn from a vehicle on Highway 1 in Abbotsford.

Why: The money is allegedly from drug production and trafficking.

Defendant: Mark William Wing

Case Synopsis: Wing is the registered owner of a Lincoln Navigator 
that was stopped while heading westbound on Highway last Jan. 11. The 
driver was Wing's brother, Jonathan Mark Wing, and the passenger was 
Michael James Kiely. It is alleged that all three men are known 
members of the UN Gang, which is based in Abbotsford. Forfeiture 
proceedings began Nov. 9.

- - - -

Seized: $206,975 cash in Delta.

Why: The money is allegedly related to drug-trafficking.

Defendant: Jarrod Francis Nicol, who has a criminal record for 
production of marijuana, possession of drugs for trafficking and 
currently is in custody at the Fraser Regional Correctional Centre in 
Maple Ridge.

Case synopsis: Last May 4, Nicol was driving a Dodge Ram truck 
pulling a trailer when he was stopped by Delta police. Nicol wasn't 
the registered owner of the truck and provided the officer with a 
copy of his parole release conditions. The officer searched the 
vehicle and found the cash and a bag containing 65 tablets believed 
to be the designer-drug ecstacy. Nicol was unable to explain how he 
obtained the money. Forfeiture is pending.

- - - -

Seized: $13,500 Cdn. cash

Why: The money was alleged being transported from Terrace to 
Vancouver for drug trafficking.

Defendant: William Robin Dudoward.

Case synopsis: The money was seized from Dudoward on Aug. 1, 2005, 
and detained by the civil forfeiture office on Aug. 21, 2006. The 
money was forfeited to the government after the defendant's lawyer, 
Sid Simons, signed a consent order, dismissing the proceedings 
against the defendant without costs, on Oct. 26, 2006.

- - - -

Seized: $65,540 from a vehicle near Greenwood.

Why: The source of the money is alleged to be cocaine trafficking.

Defendant: Sandra Gray of Richmond.

Case synopsis: A rented Dodge Durango was involved in an accident 
near Greenwood on Oct. 19, 2005, killing the driver of the other car. 
The driver of the Durango and the passenger, Gray, were taken to 
hospital for treatment. Found in the back of the vehicle was a black 
nylon bag containing bundles of cash.

Gray initially claimed the money. The driver of the Dodge allegedly 
told police that Gray had delivered drugs to Grand Forks and was on 
her way back to Vancouver with the cash.

Surrey RCMP Const. Danny Michaud said Reich and Gray were 
kilogram-level cocaine dealers. Last Sept. 6, $13,000 of the money 
was released to Gray. Another $30,473 was claimed by the Canada 
Revenue Agency and the rest was forfeited.

- - - -

Seized: $500,000.

Why: The money was part of a restitution deal worked out with the 
B.C. Securities Commission to compensate B.C. investors, most of whom 
were Christian evangelicals, who lost $1.3 million in an illegal 
U.S.-based investment scheme.

Defendants: John DeVries, the former leader of the New Life Church of 
Kelowna, who now lives in the Turks and Caicos Islands in the 
Caribbean; and Ernest Reed Grafke, who had been a pastor at the 
Gateway Church in Southlake, Texas.

Case synopsis: DeVries was president and sole shareholder of Amber 
Enterprises, which encouraged B.C. investors to put $5.8 million of 
their money with a U.S. company, which would purportedly buy 
inexpensive goods in bulk from overseas suppliers and sell them to 
major retailers such as Home Depot and Costco. Investors were 
promised returns of 25 to 50 per cent within three to six months, 
which they could donate to charity. The investment turned out to be a 
fraudulent Ponzi scheme. The seized money is being distributed to 
investors who lost money.

- - - -

Seized: $137,770 cash.

Where: Vancouver International Airport, Richmond.

Why: The money is allegedly related to drug trafficking.

Defendant: Sol Maya Trickey of Toronto.

Case synopsis: Police dog Casey sniffed Trickey's baggage and 
detected the scent of illegal drugs on Jan. 29, 2004. The bags were 
checked and found to contain a significant amount of cash. Trickey 
also had cash in his pockets. Canada Customs filed a claim for 
$88,913, leaving $48,857 frozen pending forfeiture.

- - - -

Seized: $242,505 US seized July 29, 2003 from Van de Nguyen; $180,570 
seized Sept. 10, 2003, from Thuy Ngoc Pham.

Where: Vancouver.

Defendants: Pham and de Nguyen, who at the time of the seizures were 
fugitives wanted in Washington State to face money-smuggling charges.

Synopsis: The U.S. investigation into cross-border money smuggling 
involved an undercover agent who infiltrated the alleged smuggling 
ring that allegedly smuggled $3.4 million into Canada from the U.S. 
during a nine-month period ending Sept. 10, 2003. Forfeiture is pending.

- - - -

Seized: $482,005 Cdn cash, a diamond ring appraised at $73,800 were 
among the contents of a safety deposit box raided by police with a 
search warrant. The box also included a Piaget watch purchased for 
$13,500, two gold chains, a jade pendant and other jewelry. Also 
seized were $90,000 US cash and another $14,410 in Canadian currency.

Where: Various locations in Vancouver, Richmond and Delta.

Why: The police allege the items in the safety deposit box were the 
"instruments of unlawful activity" and the cash allegedly was related 
to marijuana-growing operations.

Defendants: Tsz Wing Ching and Miu Wan (Vivian) Chan.

Case synopsis: An investigation was conducted by the Combined Forces 
Special Enforcement Unit. Between May 16, 2002 and March 14, 2003, 
police executed search warrants at a number of homes leased or owned 
by Chan, which were found to contain marijuana operations with a 
plants estimated to be worth $2.8 million at the street level.

In the search at Chan's home at 6480 Woodwards Rd. in Richmond, 
police seized $90,000 US from a canvas bag found in the back of a 
BMW. Another $14,410 Cdn cash was found in her purse. Chan was 
charged with cultivating marijuana and released on bail.

On July 10, 2003 police executed a final search warrant on a safety 
deposit box jointly held by Ching and Chan, seizing the contents. The 
Canada Revenue Agency laid claim to $523,881 of the seized money for 
unpaid taxes and penalties, leaving $73,293 Cdn, plus the jewelry, 
which was forfeited.

According to court documents, before the final seizure, Chan disposed 
of five or six properties she had bought for almost $2 million 
between 2001 and 2003. Her current whereabouts are listed as unknown.

- - - -

Seized: A house and a Commodore 2660 Regal boat.

Where: 13475 57th Ave., Surrey

Why: Part of the home was used for unlawful activity and the boat was 
allegedly bought with the proceeds of crime.

Defendant: David Dennis Peterson.

Case synopsis: The home was under police suspicion by late 2002. It 
wasn't until 2005 when police busted a marijuana operation in the 
garage. Police seized 300 pot plants and 46 pounds of "bud" in baggies.

Peterson was charged with production of marijuana and pleaded guilty 
on Feb. 22 last year. He was sentenced to one year in jail. The 
property was bought for $323,000 in 2001 and now has an assessed 
value of $720,000. The boat was purchased for $60,000 by refinancing 
the house mortgage.

The case went to court last April when the trial judge, in an interim 
ruling, allowed the house to be sold for not less than $720,000. The 
home was sold for $840,000 last June. The court ordered the proceeds 
to be placed in an interest-bearing trust account pending a final disposition.
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