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Re: Why the mob war in Montreal may be far from over
[Re: antimafia]
#909003
03/20/17 07:16 AM
03/20/17 07:16 AM
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Joined: Sep 2011
Posts: 301 Canada
eurodave
Capo
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Capo
Joined: Sep 2011
Posts: 301
Canada
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Re: Why the mob war in Montreal may be far from over
[Re: eurodave]
#909026
03/20/17 02:42 PM
03/20/17 02:42 PM
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Joined: Jul 2011
Posts: 2,861
antimafia
OP
Underboss
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OP
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Joined: Jul 2011
Posts: 2,861
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^^^^ Paul Cherry's article on this developing story will be found at the link below: Charges to be stayed in major Montreal Mafia bust Project Clemenza http://montrealgazette.com/news/local-ne...roject-clemenzaFrom the article: Charges are expected to be be stayed against the following accused: Hussein Abdallah, Giuseppe Arcoraci, Ali Awada, Davide Barberio, Antonio Bastone, Roberto Bastone, Mathieu Bouchard, Martino Caputo, Alberto Castronovo, Steve Cecere, Gina Conforti, Liborio Cun trera, Jocelyne Daoust, Mike Di Battista, Michele Di Marco, Sophie Dubé, Alain Duhamel, Giuseppe Fetta, Jaime Flores, Giovanni Gerbasi, Louis-Marie Hébert, Mona Hrtschan, Robert Jetté, Hicham Kachouh, Mike Markos Karounis, Michele Lanni, Fenel Milhomme, Roberto Olacirequi-Martinez, Marcello Paolucci, Andrew Michael Poux, Riccardo Preteroti, Marco Pizzi, Pasquale Silvano, Patrizio Silvano, Luigi Simeone, Jenica Teleu, Angelo Testani, Frédéric Tremblay-Cazes.
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Re: Why the mob war in Montreal may be far from over
[Re: antimafia]
#909081
03/21/17 08:07 AM
03/21/17 08:07 AM
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Joined: Jan 2016
Posts: 13,222
Ciment
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Joined: Jan 2016
Posts: 13,222
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ANALYSIS CLEMENZA, THE SHARQC OF THE MAFIA DANIEL RENAUD LA PRESSE March 21,2017 On hearing yesterday of the news that serious charges against 36 close to the Mafia are being withdrawn today, former RCMP civilian analyst Pierre De Champlain tweeted that the Clemenza project, under which These people were apprehended, is the new "Italian SharQc", referring to the end in fish tail of the famous operation of 2009 which was aimed at eradicating the Hells Angels, which today are stronger than they Were.
M. De Champlain does not think so. If Clemenza, which was to be an even larger investigation than Colosseum, is now a sword in the water, the release of some thirty people will have other impacts. Several of them will give oxygen to the Montreal mafia, which is in the shambles, weakened by internal struggles for years by Operation Magot of November 2015.
Many of the individuals who will benefit from a halt to the judicial process are not choirboys. They are suspected of being major traffickers and importers with dozens, if not hundreds, of pounds of cocaine. Some of them were accused of controlling a warehouse in which a machine gun, seven submachine guns, laser scanners, silencers, bulletproof vests and explosives were discovered in February 2011 in Montreal.
Others are involved in the kidnapping of a man to whom his captors claimed 1 million and who owed his salvation only to the interception of the text messages of his torturers by the investigators and to the providential arrival of Policemen of the tactical intervention group while being handcuffed to a bed in a Napierville farmhouse.
The individuals released this morning belong to groups that have been at the heart of the Montreal Mafia war in recent years.
If they had not been killed in 2013, clan leader Giuseppe De Vito and his right-hand man Vincenzo Scuderi were reportedly accused in the Clemenza opration. Assassinated Saturday in the district of Anjou, Nicola Di Marco had been arrested and sentenced in the wake of Clemenza. Another who is due to be stopped in the judicial process today will receive his posthumously, as he was killed last January, while a fifth was the victim of an attempted murder in the fall of 2012. Not to mention Marco Pizzi, who is one of the 11 individuals who remain accused and tried to kill last summer.
WHAT ABOUT THE SEQUEL?
The decision announced today will certainly be hard to swallow for public opinion, which sees judicial judgments halt successively since the abrupt end of the SharQc trial in October 2015 and the Jordan judgment on the time limits given by the Court Supreme Court in 2016. The case of Clemenza is also frustrating for the police, some of the released individuals would have been ready to settle after the plea of ​​Raynald Desjardins, but the prosecution would not have seized the pole, we were told .
It may now be asked whether the same fate awaits the 11 individuals arrested in the last phase of Clemenza in May 2016 and still accused. Details of the technology used to intercept the suspects' text messages and their weaknesses, which would involve Research in Motion (RIM) and the United States, and which the prosecution does not want to disclose to the defense, Of the problem. If the rest of the case gives reason to the defense, then how will the fate of the remaining 11 accused be different?
It seems that the RCMP and the prosecution would not have been on the same wavelength in the management of this arm, which would have given rise to some animated discussions.
As if that was not enough, our sources tell us that the protégé of Raynald Desjardins, Vittorio Mirarchi, and his accomplices, who should receive in June their sentence for the murder of the aspiring godfather Salvatore Montagna, would not stay very long in prison.
Like the Hells Angels, believed to be moribund in 2009, the Montreal mafia will rise again.
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Re: Why the mob war in Montreal may be far from over
[Re: Ciment]
#909111
03/21/17 02:57 PM
03/21/17 02:57 PM
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Joined: Jul 2011
Posts: 2,861
antimafia
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Joined: Jul 2011
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"11 who remain accused in Project Clemenza will have a hearing in May" http://montrealgazette.com/news/local-ne...-hearing-in-mayFrom the article: Included among the people who no longer face any charges is Liborio Cun trera, 48, of Laval, a man alleged to be one of the current leaders in the Montreal Mafia. Cun trera’s father, Agostino, was murdered in St-Léonard in 2010 when the Rizzuto organization was under attack. Cun trera was charged last year with trafficking in cocaine on May 17, 2011. Another two charges that were stayed on Tuesday alleged that he and Marco Pizzi, 47, of Montreal North, conspired to traffic in cocaine during a nine-day period in 2011. Pizzi faces charges in another indictment filed in Project Clemenza and he is one of the 11 accused who still have charges pending.
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Re: Why the mob war in Montreal may be far from over
[Re: antimafia]
#909620
03/28/17 08:55 AM
03/28/17 08:55 AM
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Joined: Jan 2016
Posts: 13,222
Ciment
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Joined: Jan 2016
Posts: 13,222
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Re: Why the mob war in Montreal may be far from over
[Re: antimafia]
#909779
03/30/17 08:31 AM
03/30/17 08:31 AM
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Joined: Jan 2016
Posts: 13,222
Ciment
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Joined: Jan 2016
Posts: 13,222
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Re: Why the mob war in Montreal may be far from over
[Re: antimafia]
#910576
04/12/17 04:17 PM
04/12/17 04:17 PM
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Joined: Jan 2016
Posts: 13,222
Ciment
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Joined: Jan 2016
Posts: 13,222
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Re: Why the mob war in Montreal may be far from over
[Re: antimafia]
#910578
04/12/17 04:22 PM
04/12/17 04:22 PM
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Joined: Jan 2016
Posts: 13,222
Ciment
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Joined: Jan 2016
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Re: Why the mob war in Montreal may be far from over
[Re: antimafia]
#910925
04/19/17 09:49 AM
04/19/17 09:49 AM
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Joined: Jan 2016
Posts: 13,222
Ciment
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Joined: Jan 2016
Posts: 13,222
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Re: Why the mob war in Montreal may be far from over
[Re: Ciment]
#910939
04/19/17 12:01 PM
04/19/17 12:01 PM
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Joined: Jul 2011
Posts: 2,861
antimafia
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So in the earlier part of this Project Cendrier investigation, law enforcement indicated cocaine headed for Montreal got there via Los Angeles and Houston--see http://www.rcmp-grc.gc.ca/en/news/2016/7...pects-arrested. The Quebecers just arrested all seem to be French-Canadian. From the article in the thread you started a few weeks ago about the cocaine trafficking ring that saw cocaine from California going to Ontario ( http://www.gangsterbb.net/threads/ubbthr...0297#Post910297), we learned from the RCMP that traffickers shipping coke from the US to Ontario often use LA and Houston as distribution centres, "along major highways to Canadian land ports in Ontario, including Windsor, Sarnia and Sault Ste. Marie." The individuals arrested in the Waterloo Region in Ontario appeared to be a mix of Greek-Canadians, Serbian- or Croatian-Canadians, and some other ethnicities. The cocaine trade in Canada is too big to be dominated by any one crime group. Yes, there are big players. But even the big players have not been able to reverse the direction of the flow of cocaine--the US is still a transshipment point for coke that is on its way to Canada. This is why I get so frustrated when control of the Port of Montreal is cited as a reason or even the reason for the mob war in Montreal. A mob war that, incidentally, may be far from over.
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