The West End Gang (French: Gang de l'ouest) is a Canadian organized crime group in Montreal, Quebec. An Irish mob group originating from the Irish-Canadian ethnic enclave of Pointe-Saint-Charles in the 1950s, the majority of the gang's earnings were initially derived from truck hijackings, home invasions, kidnapping, protection rackets, extortion, and armed robbery, with its criminal activities focused on, but not restricted to, the west side of Montreal. The West End Gang came to prominence via a series of high-profile bank robberies between the 1950s and the 1970s, a period when Montreal was known as "Bank Robbery capital of North America". Due to the gang's control of illegal activity at the Port of Montreal, it moved into drug trafficking and became one of the most influential criminal organizations in Canada.[5]
Founded | 1950s |
---|---|
Founding location | Montreal, Quebec, Canada |
Years active | 1950s–present |
Territory | Greater Montreal |
Ethnicity | Predominantly Irish Canadian and French Canadian |
Membership (est.) | 125–150 members and associates[1] |
Leader(s) | Frank Ryan Allan Ross Gerald Matticks |
Activities | Drug trafficking, contract killing, extortion, racketeering, illegal gambling, gun-running, prostitution, and money laundering |
Allies | Cali Cartel[2] Cotroni crime family Hells Angels MC[3] Irish Republican Army Rizzuto crime family[3] Rock Machine MC[4] |
Notable members | Raymond Desfossés |
Over the years many members have been murdered or convicted of murder, most notably the 1984 assassination of one time West End Gang boss Frank "Dunie" Ryan.[6] Subsequent revenge killings weeks later are believed to have been organized by replacement leader Allan "The Weasel" Ross.[6] Under Ross' leadership, the West End Gang formed a partnership with the Cali Cartel, transporting large quantitites of cocaine into Canada from the United States.[2] After Ross was convicted in 1992, leadership of the West End Gang was assumed by Gerald "Big Gerry" Matticks.[7]
History
editOrigin
editThe West End Gang originated as a network of loosely affiliated Irish-Canadian gangsters in Montreal.[8] The gang, which emerged in the 1950s, was known at first as the Irish Gang, and the name West End Gang seems to have been adopted in the late 1970s.[9] A disproportionate number of the gang's members come from the predominantly Irish working-class Pointe-Saint-Charles district of Montreal.[10] Other West End Gang members are from the Goose Village and Griffintown neighbourhoods.[8] Additionally, bars and motels in the Notre-Dame-de-Grâce district have served as headquarters and meeting places for members of the gang.[5]
Describing the origins of the West End Gang and how it differs from the other prominent crime groups in Montreal, the journalist Julian Sher said: "The thing about the Hells Angels and the Mafia is those are global organizations... The West End Gang could only be born and thrive in this city and in a particular neighbourhood of this city. They had no desire to take over Toronto or even the north of the city. This was such an English-Montreal product. It's like Fairmount Bagels".[5] On the significance of the gang's ethnic makeup and the location from which it merged, Julian explained: "One of the reasons the West End Gang was able to thrive is that they were able to some degree to fly under the radar, in a largely French city with a largely French police force. The West End Gang came out of a community that was doubly marginalized. They're an English minority in a French city, but they're also poor and they're Irish in English Montreal. They're poor in a largely middle-class anglophone community. The Lachine Canal and the Ville-Marie Expressway could've been a fortress wall".[5]
Bank robbery
editFrom the 1950s to the 1970s, Montreal was known as the "Bank Robbery capital of North America" as Montreal had more bank robberies than any other city in North America.[11] The journalist D'Arcy O'Connor used as an example that in the six months between January-June 1969, Montreal had 51 bank robberies with only a quarter with the thieves being arrested, while the city of Los Angeles had 36 bank robberies in the period January-June 1969 with 60% of the thieves being arrested.[12] The West End Gang were some of the most successful bank robbers in Montreal in this period.[13] Montreal's status as the "Bank Robbery capital of North America" was largely due to the light sentences handed by Quebec courts, which normally gave only 5 years in prison for convicted thieves as compared to the 20 years in prison normally handed down by American courts, which allowed the gangs of Montreal to build up a cadre of experienced thieves.[13] The largest bank robbery ever in Canadian history adjusted for inflation, namely the theft of some $20,000 in cash from the vault of the Brockville Trust & Saving Company in Brockville on 4 May 1958 was a joint operation of the West End Gang and the Cotroni family.[14] Commander André Bouchard of the Montreal police stated about the West End Gang that they: "...weren't thugs selling drugs on the street like the French and the Italians...They had the best safecrackers and the best hijackers. Some of those guys were sixteen years old and today they're still at it".[15]
Typical of the West End Gang members were William "Billy" Morgan who was born in poverty to Irish-Canadian parents in Montreal in 1935 and grew up in a broken home, leading him to boast in a 2008 interview: "I was a thief by the age of seven".[15] Being placed "in care" in various foster homes, Morgan joined the West End Gang as a teenager and boasted: "Back then, I could open any lock or crack any safe and I did a lot of that. I had a knack for it".[15]
In the 1960s, West End Gang hitman Richard Blass was involved in minor fights with many Mafiosi, particularly those related to Frank Cotroni and brothers Joe and Vincenzo Di Maulo, all of whom received death threats from Blass.[16]
Several of the West End Gang robberies led to deaths. In an attempted robbery of a branch of the Bank of Montreal on the Beaver Hall Hill on 3 May 1971 led to a shoot-out with Raymond Lynch of the West End Gang being shot dead by the bank security guards together with an innocent by-stander Corrado Festa who was killed when he was caught in the cross-fire.[17] On 12 September 1973, a group of West End Gang thieves led by William "Billy" MacAllister attempted to rob a Brinks armored car that again led to a shoot-out that led one of the Brinks guards, Claude Vienneau being shot and bleeding to death on the street as the robbers fled with some $278,000 in cash from the armored car.[18] The most successful robbery committed by the West End Gang in Montreal was the theft of some $2,275,884 in cash together with golden Olympic coins worth $5,000 from a Brinks armored car took on 30 March 1976.[19] In April 1976, the Montreal police formed a special squad known as the "Rubber Duck Squad" led by detective André Savard whose solo task was to hunt down those involved in the Brinks robbery of 30 March 1976.[20] On 14 May 1976, a West End Gang member involved in the Brinks robbery, John Slawvey, was killed in a shoot-out with Savard who was attempting to arrest him on charges of robbery.[21] On the night after Slawvey's killing, Savard was phoned by the lawyer Sidney Leithman who told him: "There's a lot of talk going and I think you should be careful, André. There's a lot of people not happy and you can push only so much...call this a warning if you want, but be careful and take care".[22] Savard heard rumors that the West End Gang leader Frank Ryan had placed a $50,000 contract on his life, which caused to live under armed guard for some time afterwards.[23]
Move into drug trafficking
editUnder Frank Ryan's leadership, the West End Gang moved from local rackets, bank heists and truck robberies into cross-border drug smuggling.[8] In the 1970s, the gang took control of the Port of Montreal, which allowed them to import narcotics.[24] The West End Gang initially began to import significant quantities of marijuana and hashish[6][25] before Ryan and Allan Ross started smuggling large shipments of cocaine[6][25][26] into Canada from Florida as the drug's popularity increased in the early 1980s.[27] The West End gang developed important contacts in the United States,[6] South America[26] and Europe, with some members working out of Florida.[28]
In 1980, Allan Ross was convicted of possession of a narcotic for the purposes of trafficking and sentenced to a 23-month prison term.[27]
Since that time, the gang has formulated ties to the Montreal Mafia,[6] the Cosa Nostra, the Hells Angels,[6][26] and Colombian cartels.[29][30][31] The three Montreal organizations (West End Gang, Montreal Mafia, Hells Angels) make up the "Consortium"[32] (similar to New York City's "Commission") and, together, the three groups' leaders fix the price of drugs for the wholesale and retail markets. The majority of the drugs smuggled through Montreal are ultimately retailed in the United States, with the small remainder being distributed across Canada. Police estimate that over a 15-year span from the late 1970s to the early 1990s, the gang trafficked more than 40 tons of cocaine and 300 tons of hashish, with an estimated street value of $150 billion. In 1997, the federal government disbanded the National Ports Police as a cost-saving measure, which has greatly aided the work of the West End Gang.[33]
Murders
editPatrick "Hughie" McGurnaghan, a cocaine dealer who sourced the drug from Frank Ryan, accrued a $100,000 debt to Ryan, partly because he used much of the cocaine he was supposed to be selling. When McGurnaghan cheated Ryan on a drug deal, Ryan contracted the Hells Angels hitman Yves "Apache" Trudeau to kill him.[34] On 27 October 1981, McGurnaghan was driving his Mercedes-Benz along Melville Avenue in Westmount with two male passengers when Trudeau detonated a car bomb planted underneath the hood, killing McGurnaghan and seriously injuring a passenger.[35][36][37]
On 13 November 1984, Frank Ryan was in his office at the Nittolo's Jardin Motel in Notre-Dame-de-Grâce, a motel and restaurant he owned which was a regular meeting place for West End Gang members.[38][39] He was lured into an adjoining motel room by Paul April, a French-Canadian associate who told Ryan that an attractive young woman waiting to have sex with him there.[40] April and an associate of his, Robert Lelièvre, who was armed with a shotgun, planned to tie Ryan to a chair and force him to reveal where he had hidden his fortune before killing him.[40] Ryan resisted and threw a chair at Lelièvre, who then shot him in the chest.[40] As Ryan lay dying on the floor, he was shot again in the head with a .45 handgun.[41] By killing Ryan, April and Lelièvre erased a $200,000 drug debt they owed him.[38]
Allan Ross took control of the West End Gang after Ryan's death.[42] Ross' first action as leader was to hire Yves Trudeau to track down and kill those responsible for Ryan's murder.[8] Paul April was boasting that, with Ryan dead, he was now roi de Montréal ("king of Montreal"). On 19 November 1984, Trudeau visited April's highrise apartment on De Maisonneuve Boulevard under the pretence of paying his respects to the self-proclaimed roi de Montréal on behalf of the Hells Angels.[43] During the visit, Trudeau noticed that April did not have a functioning television, and he promised him that he would bring him one along with a videocassette recorder.[43] On 25 November 1984, Trudeau and his occasional accomplice Michel Blass dropped off a TV set with fifteen kilograms of C-4 plastic explosive hidden inside, along with a VCR and a video tape of Hells Angels Forever to the apartment where April and Robert Lelièvre were hiding.[8] Also in the apartment that day were Gilles Paquette, a petty criminal, and Louis Charles, a professional bank robber who had met April while they were imprisoned together at Saint-Vincent-de-Paul penitentiary.[43] After leaving the apartment, Trudeau used a remote control to detonate the bomb.[36] The explosion killed both April and Lelièvre along with Paquette and Charles.[35] Eight bystanders were also injured.[8] Ross paid for the murders by erasing a large drug debt owed to the West End Gang by the Laval chapter of the Hells Angels.[27]
The third conspirator in the murder of Frank Ryan was Eddie Phillips, who was suspected by Allan Ross of renting the motel room where Ryan was killed.[41] Phillips was invited to drink with West End Gang member Billy McAllister at the Victoria Station bar on rue de Jean Talon in Mount Royal on 25 March 1985.[44] As Phillips was walking towards the bar in the parking lot, a motorcycle rode up to him while another member of the West End Gang, David Singer, who was in the passenger seat, stepped off and shot Phillips five times in the back.[45] The driver of the motorcycle has never been conclusively identified.[46] Singer subsequently went into hiding in Florida, but Ross had doubts whether he could handle a police interrogation, leading him to order Singer's murder.[47]
"Kings of Coke"
editUnder the leadership of Allan Ross, the West End Gang became involved in even more ambitious international drug schemes.[8] While the West End Gang trafficked primarily in hashish and marijuana under Frank Ryan's regime, the gang moved more heavily into cocaine after Ross took control.[27] The gang forged a partnership with a Florida-based cell of the Cali Cartel, transporting kilograms of cocaine into Canada via Nashville, Tennessee.[2] Ross also formed contacts in the "Golden Triangle" in Southeast Asian and in the "Golden Crescent" nations of Afghanistan, Turkey and Pakistan.[8] According to informants, by 1986, cocaine shipments of between 20 and 40 kilograms were being delivered to Montreal every two weeks.[27] By 1987, Ross' deals with the Cali Cartel included shipments of up to 200 kilograms being sent to the Netherlands and the United Kingdom.[27]
On 15 May 1992, Allan Ross was convicted in Gainesville, Florida of conspiring to import and traffic in at least 10,000 kilograms of cocaine and more than 300 tonnes of marijuana between 1975 and 1989, for which he was sentenced to life in prison. The following year, he was sentenced to an additional 30 years' imprisonment when he was found guilty in Fort Lauderdale, Florida of conspiring to traffic in cocaine and conspiracy to commit murder.[27] After Ross was imprisoned, leadership of the West End Gang was assumed by Gerald "Big Gerry" Matticks.[48]
21st century
editIn 2003 onetime gang associate Peter MacAllister wrote a novel called Dexter based on real stories from the gang.[49]
In 2005, a 300 kilogram shipment of a total 1,300 kilograms of cocaine, co-organized by Rizzuto crime family confidante, Francesco Del Balso and West End Gang member, Richard Griffin, was intercepted in Boucherville, Quebec by police. After Griffin invested $1.5 million in the purchase and transportation of the cocaine, he demanded $350,000 from the Rizzutos for not taking preventive measures in transporting the drugs. After arguments about the debts, Griffin was killed by gunfire outside his home in Notre-Dame-de-Grâce on July 12, 2006.[50]
A key member of the gang in recent years was Shane Kenneth Maloney, known as "Wheels" as he is confined to a wheelchair.[51] On 27 October 2011, an officer with the Service de police de la Ville de Montréal on vacation in Playa del Carmen in Mexico saw two other officers of Service de police de la Ville de Montréal socializing with members of the West End Gang and the Montreal Hells Angels at the Blue Parrot nightclub.[52] Upset with the apparent corruption, the officer used his cellphone to take pictures of the officers socializing with the gangsters at the Blue Parrot.[53] Led by Maloney who noticed the policeman taking the photographs, the Hells Angels and the West End Gang members proceed to beat the policeman bloody, who required five hours of surgery in order to make his face resemble what it had been before the beating.[54] The policeman noted that no-one in the management of the Blue Parrot made any attempt to call the police or stop the beating.[55]
Maloney became a key member in the Wolfpack Alliance.[55] On 1 November 2012, Maloney was charged with trafficking in cocaine; gangsterism; and arms smuggling.[56] The police searched Maloney's house and found evidence linking to the theft of dynamite in Sainte-Sophie in August 2011.[57] Found inside of his house were hundreds of guns; 1, 475 sticks of dynamite; two pounds of C-4 explosive and remote controls that could be used for bombs.[58] In December 2013, Maloney was convicted of assault for his role in the Blue Parrot incident of 2011.[57] In April 2017, Maloney was found guilty of the charges relating to his weapons and explosive cache and sentenced to 10 years in prison.[58] Maloney worked as a member of the Wolfpack, but transferred his loyalty towards helping the Sinaloa Cartel in smuggling cocaine direct into Ontario.[56]
Kings of Coke, a documentary film chronicling the history of the West End Gang directed by Julian Sher, was released in November 2022.[5]
Montreal police estimate that the West End Gang currently consists of approximately 125 to 150 members and associates. The group often collaborates with the Montreal Mafia and the Hells Angels in enormous drug shipments and remains one of the most powerful and profitable criminal organizations in the country.[59]
References
edit- ^ West End Gang oocities.org Archived 8 December 2022 at archive.today
- ^ a b c Irish Mafia Don “The Weasel” Dead At 74, Montreal Drug Lord Dies In U.S. Prison System Scott Burnstein, GangsterReport.com (September 2, 2018) Archived April 13, 2022, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ a b Gangs of Montreal Episode 2: Kings of coke Monique Beaudin, Montreal Gazette (11 November 2019) Archived 12 December 2022 at archive.today
- ^ Gerald Gallant: Confessions of Canada's most prolific hit man Felix Seguin and Eric Thibault, Toronto Sun (7 November 2014) Archived 11 December 2022 at archive.today
- ^ a b c d e Kings of Coke tells the tale of Montreal's infamous West End Gang Brendan Kelly, Montreal Gazette (8 November 2022) Archived 8 November 2022 at archive.today
- ^ a b c d e f g Irish Mob Boss Matticks Loses Battle With Cancer In Canada Scott Burnstein, GangsterReport.com (20 January 2015) Archived 9 December 2022 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Edwards, Peter; Auger, Michel (2012). The Encyclopedia of Canadian Organized Crime: From Captain Kidd to Mom Boucher. Toronto: McClelland & Stewart. p. 137. ISBN 9780771030499.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Montreal mobster Alan Ross called for a bloody reckoning Tu Thanh Ha, The Globe and Mail (30 August 2018) Archived 3 November 2022 at archive.today
- ^ Edwards, Peter; Auger, Michel (2012). The Encyclopedia of Canadian Organized Crime: From Captain Kidd to Mom Boucher. Toronto: McClelland & Stewart. pp. 137 & 210. ISBN 9780771030499.
- ^ Edwards, Peter; Auger, Michel (2012). The Encyclopedia of Canadian Organized Crime: From Captain Kidd to Mom Boucher. Toronto: McClelland & Stewart. p. 137. ISBN 9780771030499.
- ^ O'Connor & O'Connor 2011, pp. 65–66.
- ^ O'Connor & O'Connor 2011, p. 66.
- ^ a b O'Connor & O'Connor 2011, p. 67.
- ^ O'Connor & O'Connor 2011, pp. 82–83.
- ^ a b c O'Connor & O'Connor 2011, p. 84.
- ^ Schneider, Iced: The Story of Organized Crime in Canada, pp. 270
- ^ "The Montreal Gazette - Google News Archive Search".
- ^ O'Connor & O'Connor 2011, p. 86.
- ^ O'Connor & O'Connor 2011, pp. 94–97.
- ^ O'Connor & O'Connor 2011, p. 100.
- ^ O'Connor & O'Connor 2011, pp. 108–109.
- ^ O'Connor & O'Connor 2011, p. 111.
- ^ O'Connor & O'Connor 2011, pp. 111–112.
- ^ Edwards, Peter; Auger, Michel (2012). The Encyclopedia of Canadian Organized Crime: From Captain Kidd to Mom Boucher. Toronto: McClelland & Stewart. p. 137. ISBN 9780771030499.
- ^ a b "Reputed gang leader Gerald Matticks denied parole". CTV News Montreal. Bell Media. 15 Oct 2009. Retrieved 4 Jun 2017.
- ^ a b c Bolan, Kim (16 Feb 2017). "Irish mobster pleads guilty to controlling massive Montreal weapons cache containing 1,475 dynamite sticks". National Post. Postmedia Network Inc. Retrieved 4 June 2017.
- ^ a b c d e f g Notorious West End Gang leader Allan (The Weasel) Ross has died Paul Cherry, Montreal Gazette (24 August 2018) Archived 11 December 2022 at archive.today
- ^ Thanh Ha, Tu (16 Jan 2015). "Storied Montreal mobster Richard Matticks, dead at 80, was a character in one of the biggest Quebec police scandals". The Globe and Mail. The Globe and Mail Inc. Retrieved 4 Jun 2017.
- ^ Cherry, Paul (19 Sep 2008). "Mob Linked to N.D.G. killing; Richard Griffin. Cops Sniffed Out Cocaine Shipment". The Gazette. Montreal.
- ^ Cherry, Paul (8 Dec 2006). "Smugglers Carried Coke on Ship Hulls: RCMP arrest 19; Network Distributed Drugs throughout Eastern Canada, Investigators Say". The Gazette. Montreal.
- ^ Cherry, Paul (25 Sep 2009). "Dealer Bragged of Military Aid, Trial is Told". The Gazette. Montreal.
- ^ Edwards, Peter; Auger, Michel (2012). The Encyclopedia of Canadian Organized Crime: From Captain Kidd to Mom Boucher. Toronto: McClelland & Stewart. p. 217. ISBN 9780771030499.
- ^ Edwards, Peter; Auger, Michel (2012). The Encyclopedia of Canadian Organized Crime: From Captain Kidd to Mom Boucher. Toronto: McClelland & Stewart. p. 137. ISBN 9780771030499.
- ^ O'Connor & O'Connor 2011, pp. 138–140.
- ^ a b The perks of the biker Dan Burke, Maclean's (21 April 1986) Archived 8 December 2022 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ a b How Canada's Most Prolific Hit Man Turned Informant on the Hells Angels Patrick Lejtenyi, Vice (26 September 2017) Archived 10 February 2022 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Roberts, Walter (2012). Biker Gangs: Hells Angels, Bandidos, Pagans, Bosozoku and Other World Gangs. RW Press. ISBN 9781909284067.
In October 1981, well-known gangster, Hugh Patrick McGurnaghan, who owed the West Enders a substantial amount of money, was blown up in Westmount. He, a bookie called Joseph Frankel and another man named Willie Obont were driving along Melville Avenue in Montreal when a car bomb, placed by Yves Trudeau, blew up their gaudy, yellow Mercedes. The vehicle was thrown 200 ft (60 m) along the street by the force of the explosion. McGurnaghan, a leg blown off and seriously wounded in the arm, died in the ambnulance en route to hospital. Trudeau had been contracted by West End Gang chief, Frank 'Dunie' Ryan to carry out this hit.
- ^ a b Frank Peter ("Dunie") Ryan, Leader of Montreal's West End Gang AmericanMafia.com (October 1999) Archived 8 December 2022 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Gangs of Montreal, Episode 3: The West End Gang and the robbery of the century Monique Beaudin, Montreal Gazette (18 November 2019) Archived 9 December 2022 at archive.today
- ^ a b c Auger & Edwards 2012, p. 211.
- ^ a b Schneider 2009, p. 346.
- ^ Auger & Edwards 2012, p. 209.
- ^ a b c O'Connor & O'Connor 2011, p. 147.
- ^ O'Connor & O'Connor 2011, p. 149.
- ^ O'Connor & O'Connor 2011, p. 149-150.
- ^ O'Connor & O'Connor 2011, p. 150.
- ^ Auger & Edwards 2012, p. 210.
- ^ Edwards, Peter; Auger, Michel (2012). The Encyclopedia of Canadian Organized Crime: From Captain Kidd to Mom Boucher. Toronto: McClelland & Stewart. p. 137. ISBN 9780771030499.
- ^ Gravenor, Kristian (10 Jul 2003). "Smuggler's secrets". Montreal Mirror. Communications Gratte-Ciel Ltée. Archived from the original on 29 August 2003.
- ^ "Key members of Montreal Mafia plead guilty in drugs, extortion case". theglobeandmail.com. 18 September 2008.
- ^ Edwards & Nájera 2021, p. 63.
- ^ Edwards & Nájera 2021, p. 62-63.
- ^ Edwards & Nájera 2021, p. 62.
- ^ Edwards & Nájera 2021, p. 63-64.
- ^ a b Edwards & Nájera 2021, p. 64.
- ^ a b Edwards & Nájera 2021, p. 217.
- ^ a b Edwards & Nájera 2021, p. 218.
- ^ a b Edwards & Nájera 2021, p. 221.
- ^ Cherry, Paul (13 Jan 2015). "West End Gang leader Richard Matticks dies of natural causes". Montreal Gazette. Postmedia Network Inc. Retrieved 4 Jun 2017.
Bibliography
edit- Schneider, Stephen (2009). Iced: The Story of Organized Crime in Canada. Toronto: John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-0470835005.
- O'Connor, D'Arcy; O'Connor, Miranda (2011). Montreal's Irish Mafia : the true story of the infamous West End Gang. Mississauga, Ont.: J. Willey & Sons Canada. ISBN 978-0-470-15924-8. OCLC 715190289.
- Carasiti, Jeff (26 May 2011). Organization Attributes Sheet: West End Gang. Matthew B. Ridgway Center for International Security Studies at the University of Pittsburgh Graduate School of Public and International Affairs. Retrieved 4 Jun 2017.
- Auger, Michel; Edwards, Peter (2012). The Encyclopedia of Canadian Organized Crime: From Captain Kidd to Mom Boucher. Toronto: McClelland & Stewart. ISBN 978-0771030499.
- Edwards, Peter; Nájera, Luis (2021). The Wolfpack The Millennial Mobsters Who Brought Chaos and the Cartels to the Canadian Underworld. Toronto: Random House of Canada. ISBN 9780735275409.