The UN Gang, and the Canada-Mexico Connection
The story behind the murder of a Canadian citizen in Sinaloa,
Mexico, reveals how far
links between organized crime networks in Canada
and Mexico
have been broken up by aggressive police work.
Police sources in British Columbia, Canada, confirmed that Salih Abdulaziz Sahbaz,
in his mid-thirties, was the key cartel contact for the notorious United
Nations Gang, also known as Global United Nations Syndicate (GUNS), which
operates out of the city of Vancouver
and the surrounding area.
Sahbaz, a naturalized Canadian citizen of Iraqi origin who had spent
much of the past three years in Mexico,
was found dead on the street in the Country Alamo area of Culiacan, Sinaloa, around midnight on January
15. He had been shot execution-style by what appeared to be a .45 caliber
firearm -- police recovered at least 8 empty .45 caliber shells at the scene.
Given that Canadian identification and money were found on the body, robbery
was not thought to be the motive. Gerardo Vargas Landeros, a Sinaloa state
government official, said Sahbaz had both a current and an expired Canadian
passport on his body when it was found early Monday.
Vargas Landeros also said that there was evidence of Sahbaz’s
participation in illegal activities, but did not specify what it was. This does
however seem credible given the victim’s background, the style of killing, the
lack of robbery as a motive, and the location of the crime -- in a dangerous city
far from any tourist areas.
Police in British Columbia
have referred to Sahbaz as a “high-ranking member” of the United Nations Gang
who was in direct contact with Mexican cartels. It is believed that he was
working off debt after the loss of a cocaine shipment.
However, he may have also been cut loose by the UN Gang, and attempted
to re-establish himself in Mexico.
Sahbaz had been a UN Gang member since at least 2004, when he was brought into
the organization by the then-leader, Clayton Roueche.
Sahbaz was also known to head the Kurdish Crew, a semi-autonomous gang
that controlled the drug trade in Vancouver’s
Downtown Eastside. His time with the UN Gang was not always smooth -- he had
been kicked out at least once, and may have lost the protection of his
benefactor, Mr. Roueche, who is now in jail.
The UN Gang is in a tough position. Aggressive and well-coordinated
police work in Canada and
the United States
has fragmented the organization; internal conflicts have decimated the ranks;
and attempts to expand abroad have met with repeated failure.
Some examples: in late 2009 UN Gang member Adam Kataoka was killed in Argentina (he, too, apparently “lost” a shipment
of cocaine); and last November UN Gang soldier Axel Curtis was shot to death in
Vancouver. US authorities
have also put at least a dozen UN Gang drug mules and associates behind bars. The
pressure continues: UN Gang members Conor D’Monte and Cory Vallee face murder
charges, but have fled justice, and are now on Interpol’s most wanted list.
The UN Gang, known for the multi-ethnic backgrounds of its members,
recruited a number of Iraqis other than Sahbaz when Clayton Roueche was in charge.
The former operational head of the UN gang, for example, was Barzan
Tilli-Choli, an Iraqi immigrant accused of conspiracy to commit murder. Tilli-Choli
is now awaiting trial in Canada
along with five other UN members.
The gang has recently forged links with the Hells Angels, as was
indicated by sentencing in absentia of Omid Bayani on December 28, 2011, as the
result of an investigation into the notorious biker gang. When Duane Harvey
Meyer -- a former Hells Angels prospect and UN member -- was shot to death on
May 8, 2009, members of both gangs attended the funeral.
Canadian
Organized Crime Activity in Mexico
The UN Gang has been active in Mexico, in one form or another, for
the past four years -- if not longer. The alleged leader of the gang, Clayton
Roueche, was arrested on May 19, 2008, during a stop-over in Texas
from a flight originating in Mexico
City. He was charged with conspiring to possess
cocaine, conspiring to export cocaine, conspiring to import marijuana, and
conspiring to launder money, and wassentenced to 30 years in prison.
Two months after the arrest of Roueche, two UN gang members were shot to
death as they ate lunch in the Santa Teresita neighbourhood of Gaudalajara, Mexico. The dead were Elliott Abben
Castaneda, age 29, of Abbotsford,
British Columbia, and Ahmet
"Lou" Kaawach.
Kaawach had immigrated to Canada
from Lebanon,
but had been extradited back to his home country after Canadian authorities
determined his links to organized crime. Abben Castaneda, nicknamed
"Taco", was an immigrant to Canada
from Guatemala who grew up
in Abbotsford, British Columbia, where the UN Gang
originated.
After the deaths of Abben Castaneda and Kaawach, it is thought that
Sahbaz took over the Mexican end of the business, which was a crucial component
of the gang’s business model. Law enforcement officials believe that the gang
exports Canadian marijuana from British Columbia
to the US northwest, and
uses these profits to purchase Mexican cocaine and import it back to the United States and Canada. The cash is then laundered
into real-estate in British Columbia’s
lower mainland, with land titles often held in the names of family members.
However, it is clear from the deaths of Sahbaz, Abben Castaneda, and
Kaawach -- all in Mexico --
that Canadian criminal organizations simply don’t have the reach to protect
their people south of the Rio Grande.
This is true even for the organization that some allege is Canada’s
biggest player in the drug trade -- the Hells Angels.
The Hells
Angels Connection
After the UN Gang’s earlier failure in Mexico, it looks like some
small-time Hells Angels operatives also met with foul play. Gordon Douglas
Kendall and Jeffrey Ronald Ivans were found shot to death in Puerto Vallarta, on Sept. 27, 2009. According
to the Toronto Star, British Columbia RCMP confirmed that the two Canadians had
been known to police for "quite some time" as being active in the
drug trade.
"Both the organized crime team and the gang task force have been
aware of these two males for a while," said Sgt. Bill Whalen with the
Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit, said at the time. "We've been
aware that these two males have been involved with the drug trade for a while. We've
been aware of ... some of their activities recently in Mexico."
According to a friend, Ivans moved to Mexico to do excavation and
construction work for the Hells Angels. Most likely, both men were acting as
lower level contacts with the cartels.
Having small-time soldiers act as contacts in Mexico reduces the risk for senior
Hells Angels -- either from the police, who watch them like a hawk, or from
being bumped off by a Mexican gang. Better to stay in Canada and run
the business, and let the journeymen take the risk.
At the time, the Hells Angels in Canada claimed that Kendall and
Ivans were not members. Friends, however, said that they were extremely
agitated and nervous before making the move. Members or not, the two Canadians
were certainly in over their heads.
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