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Ontario Court Tosses Charges Against Hells Angels Linked to Multimillion-Dollar Sports Betting Ring

  • The SCJO has tossed all charges against bikers linked with a CA$131m (US$101m) betting op
  • The decision is a blow to the operation that led to over 30 arrests all the way back in 2019
  • Crown prosecutors flagged up an unreasonable delay as the reason for tossing the charges
  • The Hells Angels attorney said: “We of course are very happy […] The prosecution is dead”
Motorbikes in a line
Due to delays getting the case to trial, a court has dropped all charges against Ontario Hells Angels regarding links to a multimillion-dollar illegal sports betting ring. [Image: Shutterstock.com]

Trial delay triggers decision

Something investigators widely feared has come to pass in Ontario. Due to trial delays, the Superior Court of Justice (SCJO) has dismissed all charges made against members of the province’s chapter of Hells Angels in regards to an illegal betting operation.

the charges on both indictments are withdrawn.”

The SCJO’s Justice Bruce Durno declared in court Wednesday: “All of the charges on both indictments are withdrawn.” Criminal lawyer Craig Bottomley, who represented one of the full-patch Hells Angels charged, took to Twitter to reflect on his successful day in court:

Bottomley’s client, Craig (Truck) McIlquham of Oakville, faced charges including “possession of a restricted weapon, bookmaking and the commission of an offence for a criminal organization.”

The court dismissal is a major blow to the multi-jurisdictional police case called Project Hobart. In 2019, the collaborating Canadian law enforcement operation made over 30 arrests and threw a spanner in the works of a Hells Angels gangsters-linked illegal sports betting ring believed to have raked in CA$131m (US$101m) in over five years.

Other full-patch Hells Angels involved in the case include Ontario strip club owner Robert Barletta and Eugenio (Gino) Reda.

Time runs out

According to CTV News Toronto, a criminal case normally has 18 months to go to trial in the Ontario Court of Justice and 30 months to go to trial in the SCJO. Exceed these timeframes, and the defense can ask a judge to drop the charges.

At its current rate, estimates suggested the case would progress through the courts in 41 months, a full 11 months over the constitutional ceiling. Only Ontario’s Crown Attorney’s Office could have stopped the case from getting dismissed had it proved exceptional circumstances, such as the case’s complexity.

Crown prosecutors on Wednesday, however, cited unreasonable delay as the reason for tossing the charges. Anil Kapoor told the court on behalf of the Crown that: “These decisions are not arrived at lightly.” According to The Star, the Crown noted the COVID-19 pandemic as a delaying factor in a “complex case involving multiple accused and voluminous amounts of disclosure documents.”

thorough and effective investigation.”

Despite the ultimate decision, the prosecutors praised the Ontario Provincial Police (OPP) for conducting a “thorough and effective investigation.”

Charges dropped, property returned

When the OPP made the arrests in 2019, it announced the seizure of over CA$12m (US$9.29) in assets, including CA$1.7m (US$1.3m) in cash, seven residences, supercars, illegal weapons, jewelry and precious metals priced at around CA$630,000 (US$487,588), as well as CA$1.2m (US$93,000) in financial accounts.

According to The Star, those charged will now receive their seized property once more.

Hells Angels attorney Bottomley summed up the mood in his client’s camp Wednesday. “We of course are very happy […] The prosecution is dead.”

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