Bacon killer 'capitalized on opportunity' in gang slaying
The Canadian Press
Posted: Aug 16, 2011 8:40 PM PT
Last Updated: Aug 17, 2011 7:32 AM PT
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The killer of Jonathan Bacon might have taken advantage of the B.C. gangster as he relaxed and dropped his guard while on vacation, says a top RCMP anti-gang investigator.
"They simply capitalized on an opportunity," RCMP Supt. Pat Fogarty said Tuesday of the masked gunman who opened rapid fire on a luxury SUV two days earlier, killing Bacon and wounding at least three of the four others in his company.
"Some people say [the gunmen] were trying to make a statement. I don't believe that for a minute," Fogarty said.
'We're not perfect. ...This one kind of slipped by us.'—RCMP Supt. Pat Fogarty
Police were aware that 30-year-old Bacon had been meeting lately with a full-patch member of the Hells Angels and an alleged Independent Soldiers gang member, said Fogarty. But they had no hint there was about to be a significant slaying in broad daylight in sunny Kelowna, 275 kilometres east of Vancouver.
"It's not like we would let something like that happen," he said, noting officers had warned Bacon and the other men several times there were threats on their lives, though he wouldn't say how recently.
"We're not perfect. ...This one kind of slipped by us."
Various RCMP detachments and officers within the combined forces' special enforcement unit, which includes the task force, are now investigating the high-profile killing and working to find out whether any gangs might be mounting a counterattack.
Police and experts say reprisals could be likely, or even spark a renewed war.
Surrey shooting not yet linked
Late Monday night, a man with apparent gang connections was shot at up to eight times as he was entering the driver's side of a vehicle in Surrey, police say.
Sgt. Peter Thiessen said the 32-year-old man suffered only minor injuries. He had been with three other men, including his 28-year-old brother, when the targeted hit outside a night club.
But investigators said Tuesday it's too early to know if the gunfire is linked to the Kelowna shooting.
Fogarty noted there are some 120 gangs in British Columbia and police have said in the past that the violence is part of several gang wars, not just one.
Deadly shoot-outs marred Vancouver-area streets for several months in 2009, in part based on the rivalry between the United Nations gang and the Red Scorpions, which police have long said was controlled by the three Bacon brothers.
Getaway vehicle found
Jonathan Bacon and his youngest brother Jamie have escaped attempted assassinations in the past.
Jonathan Bacon had been the target of a murder attempt in the past. CBCNo arrests have been made in the new violence so far, and Fogarty wouldn't say who police suspect.
Witnesses say at least one man in a balaclava emerged from a silvery-green SUV on Sunday afternoon and sprayed the Porsche in front with bullets. The assailants took off, and officers were examining a burnt-out vehicle found later that day.
One man in Bacon's vehicle fled, possibly wounded, and police haven't picked him up.
It's not yet known who was the shooter's intended target, or even if it was all three men. Shared business interests allegedly based on the illegal drug trade -- in particular, cocaine brought up from Mexico and South America -- is what most likely brought the group together, Fogarty said.
Such a business-based alliance is common in the gang world, he said, especially when members aren't raking in the kind of cash they'd like to on their own.
"They're not as tight as you think they are, there's no loyalty here," Fogarty said.
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