Pubdate: Mon, 30 Apr 2012
Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC)
Copyright: 2012 The Vancouver Sun
Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/letters.html
Website: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477
Author: Kim Bolan

DEAD GANGSTER HAD FLED TO MEXICO AFTER THREATS

Police fear Metro Vancouver gang war that started after a shooting in
Kelowna is spreading south

Slain B. C. resident Tom Gisby left for Mexico in late January after
learning he might be targeted in retaliation for the August shooting
in Kelowna that left Jonathan Bacon dead, The Vancouver Sun has learned.

And Gisby knew of the threat against him even before his motorhome was
firebombed Jan. 16 near Whistler, an attack in which the 47- year-old
suffered superficial burns.

Gisby was gunned down in a Starbucks in Nuevo Vallarta Friday night by
two armed gunmen who fled the scene.

Now police in B. C. are on high alert, fearing a gang war that started
in Metro Vancouver is spilling over into Mexico.

The January attempt on Gisby's life came the same day that a B. C.
gangster in the United Nations gang, Salih Abdulaziz Sahbaz, was shot
to death in the Mexican state of Sinaloa.

Just a day later, gangster Sandip Duhre was gunned down in the lobby
of the Sheraton Wall Centre in Vancouver.

All three dead men had connections to a loose group of gangsters known
as the Dhak-Duhre- UN group that was blamed for the Kelowna shooting
by a rival alliance made up of Bacon's Red Scorpions, some Hells
Angels and some in the Independent Soldiers.

Supt. Dan Malo, head of the Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit,
said Sunday that Gisby did have links to the deadly dispute that has
left several dead and injured across B. C. and in Mexico in recent
months.

And Malo confirmed that some associates of Gisby's were among the
high-profile gangsters who have been warned by police in recent weeks
that they could be targeted.

Asked specifically if police in B. C. had intelligence about a plot to
kill Gisby, Malo said: "I am not going to share that."

Malo did speak out about Gisby's shooting to warn the public of
escalating gang tensions that could result in more violence.

And Malo wanted those involved in the violence to know that gang
specialists within his agency will be targeting them with stepped-up
surveillance and enforcement.

Despite the possibility that Gisby was killed in response to other B.
C. gang slayings, Malo said the motive is still unknown.

Gisby, a major international drug trafficker, had connections with
several criminal organizations and a multitude of enemies, Malo told
The Sun.

"Is it a case of a hit and miss and then they kept on him?" Malo said.
"Were they hunting him? I am sure he had more than one enemy."

Malo said the RCMP'S E Division would be following up with Mexican
police to see if they want any assistance in the probe.

And the CFSEU will be increasing resources in gathering intelligence
on the gang scene in B. C., as well as stepping up enforcement against
those willing to use violence in the lengthy local dispute.

"We have visited many of these high-profile gang members and had
discussions with them," Malo said, adding police intervention has
prevented shootings in B. C. in recent weeks.

Gisby was born in the Fraser Valley, but owned property in downtown
Vancouver. He had been involved in the B. C. drug trade for more than
20 years and had connections with major crime figures from the Hells
Angels to the Dhak group.

In fact, the late Gurmit Dhak, who was gunned down outside Metrotown
mall in October 2010, was very close to Gisby.

It was Dhak's 2010 murder that led to a series of tit-for-tat
shootings across B. C. as traffickers broke into two loosely formed
rival groups.

Gisby had connections on both sides in the conflict, so felt he would
not be targeted.

But that all changed after the Kelowna shooting when Hells Angel Larry
Amero was wounded and the niece of a Hells Angel chapter president was
paralyzed from the neck down.

Gisby had connections in Mexico that made him feel secure despite the
drug-fuelled violence in that country.

"Gisby has been dealing with Mexicans and Colombians directly for over
20 years," a police source said. "It is very unlikely he didn't know
how to stay on their good side in business after that long. He was a
good businessman and experienced in the cocaine importation world."
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