Thank you, Mr. Chair and honourable members of the committee. First, I have decided to go into a little more depth to expand on the presentations that have been made.
Allow me to introduce myself. My name is Denis Mainville. I have over 26 years' experience in the City of Montreal Police Service, the CMPS. I have over a decade of experience dealing with organized crime, and so I am able to make the connection between the organizations and projects that have recently been carried out and have received publicity. There is the Sûreté du Québec's Operation SharQc, the CMPS's recent Operation AXE, and Operation SATELLITE, which was carried out in the summer of 2008 and affected three leading criminal organizations.
My presentation will deal with two aspects. First, I will describe the difficulties encountered in investigations of criminal organizations, which have in fact recurred for many years in all of our organized crime operations. Second, I will talk about the specific characteristics and structures of the various criminal groups and the connections that exist, for example the differences between the Hells Angels and street gangs, particularly in downtown Montreal and the northern part of the city.
Operation ABBA was carried out in 2004-2005 and targeted a street gang in the Montreal North section of the city, commonly called "rue Pelletier". The operation lasted nearly 13 months and involved costs of over $3 million, not counting the sweep, of course. That was the CMPS's first operation, and as a result, 25 people were charged, 10 of them with organized crime offences.
I am now going to talk to you about the difficulties we face, the same ones as we have had to deal with in operations carried out recently. One of those difficulties relates to the human resources needed, for example for surveillance and wiretapping. Those activities are just a few among others, but they are essential in order to gather evidence. They are very expensive and very labour-intensive. First the organization's criminal activities, such as fraud or drug trafficking, have to be identified. We can't target all crimes at the same time, and we have to choose, because proving them is too tedious and much too onerous to manage for police organizations.
The criminal activities of each target subject also have to be identified. An investigation into 30, 40 or 60 people is tedious and calls for long hours, and even months or years, of work. The role and status of each of the target subjects has to be proved, and in the case of street gangs, unlike traditional criminals like the Hells Angels and members of Italian organized crime, that is not necessarily easy. We also have to show that they are connected with each other. We have to maintain ongoing surveillance. This is something the court needs.
We have to seize exhibits—emblems, jewellery, clothing and so on—that could corroborate the evidence that is often required by the court and that is not necessarily established in the case of street gangs. That is the detail it comes down to. Today, it is characteristic of our young people that they follow fashion. Jewellery is not necessarily a sign of membership in an organization like the Hells Angels. It is dangerous for us to say that a criminal group is targeted simply because of its jewellery or its style of clothing. We have to be careful in dealing with this situation when we are talking about street gangs.
Certainly we have to establish a common connection, as organized crime requires. We have to gather all of the evidence that proves organized crime. We rely on about 40 factors in a police investigation, so it is very tedious to gather the evidence that this is a criminal organization.
The kind of evidence that has to be gathered poses a danger for the sources, witnesses and civilian undercover operators who are sometimes used. We have to give the evidence again, and these people are known to the criminal world. This becomes tedious.
The security of our police activities, including installing devices or surreptitious entry, presents another difficulty. We also have to deal with the complexity of communications, for example BlackBerrys and other devices of that nature that we are all familiar with.
Presenting the evidence to the court involves another difficulty. Every time we have to reconstruct a criminal organization, we have to prepare the profile of all of the target individuals, the leaders, all over again. This is also very tedious for police organizations. It can take several weeks for a simple profile that has to be updated regularly.
There are two types of evidence that have to be presented, and this is also very specific, for different types of criminal organizations. We can take two approaches to proving the facts: the substantive road and the money road. Often, we take the substantive road to determine the kind of crime in question, whether it is fraud or drug trafficking. The second, parallel road does not involve the same actors, but it calls for a lot more resources and is much more tedious, and so the investigations take several months.
The time spent on an investigation is limited. We often say that an organized crime investigation can take as long as a year, renewable, of course. That is considered to be a long time, but there again, to us, a year is relatively short when we have to collect all that evidence. We are not able to tackle the other problems that these criminal groups are causing.
Every time we have to reconstruct a criminal organization, the expert witnesses have to prove their credibility to the court again, and that can take several days, depending on the police organization, and as long as several weeks.
Mention was made earlier of the length of court proceedings, but there is also the question of the evidence. Increasingly, the electronic evidence that police organizations are looking at is very onerous to manage, and presenting that evidence in court is very tedious.
I would like to draw a parallel with the following investigations. Recently, Operation AXE targeted three criminal organizations. It had to be proved that each of those organizations was carrying on criminal activities. I am referring, for example, to the Syndicate group, the training school for the Hells Angels and a high-level street gang aspired to by the younger ones in downtown Montreal. The investigation went on for more than two years: 68 people were arrested, and 25 of them were charged with organized crime offences. It is important to note that five of those people who were again charged with organized crime offences were already part of a criminal organization, which in our opinion was the Syndicate.
I referred earlier to the length of investigations. That investigation called for the interception of 640,000 conversations and 11,000 hours of physical surveillance. As well, the sole purpose of a majority of the time spent on it by human resources was to prove that there was a criminal organization, when previous cases had been prepared, particularly for the Syndicate, in Operation CHARGE, carried out by the Montreal Joint Regional Task Force in 2004. The difficulties encountered are the same as had to be overcome in Operation ABBA. The specific aspect is the multiple branches. There are several criminal groups, and it has to be proved that they are in fact criminal organizations.
The street gang subjects, members of the Hells Angels training school known as the Syndicate, some of whom were arrested in the JTF's Operation CHARGE in 2004, had gone back to the same criminal activities in Operation AXE, and had reorganized in the same manner, in spite of the fact that the leaders were in prison. So it had changed absolutely nothing. In 2004, those people had the same structure. Once the leaders were incarcerated, they carried on the same kind of activities in prison. Nonetheless, we had to prove to the court again that this was a criminal organization, and that takes a huge amount of time. We also had to reopen the Operation CHARGE file to extract all the evidence that had been gathered, when that evidence itself had been presented, and present that evidence in court again, to establish again that the organization was criminal.
Operation SATELLITE, which culminated in 2009, targeted a violent street gang in downtown Montreal, where there had been various activities such as attempted murders, murders and intimidation: 48 people were arrested, and 12 of them were charged with organized crime offences.
The details of Operation SATELLITE were as follows. It involved a traditional street gang, younger and more aggressive and unstable and not very coordinated. As compared to traditional criminal groups like the Hells Angels, which operate according to a well-established hierarchical structure in which everyone has a specific status and role, with all of their activities being for the benefit of the organization, street gangs on the other hand are very unstable, in terms of their structure, and their level of organization varies. Their actions and activities are very unpredictable, and they have little or no vision. However, they have the same objectives as the other organizations: to generate profits for the leader. They idealize the street gangs that move in the upper spheres of activity such as the Syndicate, which represents an ideal for the younger ones. In that case, not all the subjects could be identified within the criminal organization, but the leaders and their key acolytes, who were relatively stable themselves, could.
In conclusion, the CMPS favours making it possible for certain groups to be recognized as criminal organizations. Increasingly, the criminal groups that are arrested in a sweep reoffend and use increasingly refined methods: proxies, businesses, meeting places, intermediaries and sophisticated communications. They work in cells or companies, depending on the organization.
This means that the investigation process would be expedited and would call for fewer resources than these kinds of investigations require at present. This would enable us to be more thorough in tackling the illegal activities these groups engage in, such as money laundering. The major impact is undeniably felt on the human, material and especially financial resources that this kind of investigation calls for.
The energy and time spent on proving all over again that an organization is a criminal organization would be greatly reduced and there would be no harm done to the administration of justice; the opposite would be true.
Thank you.