want the info on gino getting them in shit again...here ya go. there is also video evidence by cops of him out front of the building where the 6 guys where slain taking video and pictures. the is kinda old news up here.
in red is where the name is connected to this
Abbotsford's latest homicide victim, Tyler Dziwak, was identified in court documents this week as a drug trafficker who was an associate of convicted killer Dennis Karbovanec back in 2005.
By Vancouver SunFebruary 3, 2010
Abbotsford's latest homicide victim, Tyler Dziwak, was identified in court documents this week as a drug trafficker who was an associate of convicted killer Dennis Karbovanec back in 2005.
And another victim of a targeted hit, Alfred Walcott, was also named in the document as being a drug trade associate of Karbovanec, Dziwak and Jamie Bacon.
The document was filed by federal Crown prosecutor Paul Riley in support of his appeal of a Provincial Court ruling in June 2008 tossing out 15 gun and drug charges against Jon Bacon, Rayleene Burton and Godwin Cheng.
Lawyers for the trio told the B.C. Court of Appeal Tuesday that Abbotsford Judge Donald Gardner was right when he dismissed the case over breaches by the police of their clients' Charter rights.
But Riley argued in his 31-page brief that Gardner made several errors and that the evidence against the three should be admissible.
The brief reads like a who's who in the Abbotsford drug dealing scene five years ago.
Dziwak, who would have been just 19 in 2005, was mentioned as running "a drug trafficking organization run out of two Abbotsford premises" with Karbovanec.
"Mr. Bacon's brother Jamie Bacon had been seen attending both premises, once in the company of Alcott," the court brief says.
Karbovanec is now serving a life sentence after pleading guilty to three of the Surrey Six murders on Oct. 19, 2007. Jamie Bacon is also charged with murder in the case and remains in pre-trial custody.
Dziwak was stabbed to death Jan. 21, on Ross Road in Abbotsford. His funeral will be held Friday at 1 p.m. at Cascade Community Church.
Walcott was shot to death in Coquitlam in March 2008. The Integrated Homicide Investigation Team said the hit was linked to the drug trade.
Both homicides remain unsolved.
In the brief, Riley laid out the intelligence Abbotsford Police included in their application to get a search warrant in August 2005 for their investigation into Jon Bacon, Burton and Cheng.
Gardner ruled in June 2008 that some of the information was designed to portray Bacon in "the most unfavourable light" and shouldn't have been included.
Riley said that the trafficking investigation began after tips were received in March 2005 that Bacon and Burton were selling drugs out of the Winfield Drive townhouse they shared.
"One complainant listed the licence plates of 14 different vehicles observed at the residence," Riley said. "Much of the detail given by the complainant was corroborated by surveillance, computer database checks, police files and other source information."
Another confidential source told police that Jon Bacon "works for Gino and the Advanced Nutrient guys."
"Although this tip contained no specific allegation of involvement in drug trafficking, it did draw a link between Bacon and Eugene Yordanov," the brief says.
Vehicles associated with Yordanov or his company were seen outside the Winfield condo, Riley noted.
And he said Yordanov was associated with Dustin Haugen, a helicopter pot smuggler who used a landing pad leased by Jon Bacon.
"In 2001, Yordanov and three other men were charged in connection with a drug investigation which involved exportation of large quantities of marijuana across the Canada-U. S. border, although the charges were ultimately stayed."
Police did surveillance on the townhouse from July 27 to August 4, 2005 and "observed frequent comings and goings, brief meetings and involving Mr. Bacon, Ms. Burton and numerous other people, many with prior criminal histories," Riley wrote.
When police arrested Bacon and Cheng in a vehicle Aug. 4, 2005, they found marijuana, ecstasy, cocaine, $2,600 cash, a score sheet, cellphones and a BlackBerry. Burton was arrested in her vehicle a short time later with $88,000 inside. In the townhouse, they found four guns, two silencers, a bulletproof vest, a police uniform and a police scanner.
The trio was held for nine hours before being allowed to contact their lawyers, something Gardner also ruled violated their constitutional rights as did their warrantless arrests.
The case rests with the Appeal Court.
[email protected]
---------- Post added at 12:24 PM ---------- Previous post was at 12:22 PM ----------
More Images »
Jarrod Bacon
Photograph by: Ward Perrin, Vancouver Sun
METRO VANCOUVER - Accused trafficker Jarrod Bacon pledges on his child's head to a police agent that he would follow through with a cocaine deal worth up to $3 million, B.C. Supreme Court heard Wednesday.
But Bacon can be heard on a wiretap from Aug. 13, 2009, saying his best friend will carry out the deal since Bacon was on bail at the time.
"I'm on bail so I can't do it," Bacon told the agent, who can be identified only as GL. "But my friend is a broker. This is what he does for a living . . . . He knows every guy in the game and they all go to him to get their shit."
He said his friend would take all 100 kilos of cocaine that GL planned to bring back from Mexico, picking them up daily in 10 kilo loads.
"Basically boom, boom boom, he can do a 10 every day. He can do this all the time," Bacon said, adding that when his friend learned of the volume of cocaine available "my friend is like hugging me."
Bacon, 28, and co-accused Wayne Scott, 55, were charged in November 2009 with one count of conspiracy to traffic cocaine after an undercover investigation by the Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit. Both have pleaded not guilty.
A series of intercepted calls and meetings between GL, his old friend Scott, and Bacon, who dates Scott's daughter Carly, are at the centre of the Crown's case against the pair.
The Aug. 13, 2009 meeting took place behind Scott's Abbotsford home, Justice Austin Cullen heard.
At the meeting, Bacon described himself as the muscle behind drug operations, rather than the dealer.
"I am going to make sure that nothing f--ks up because . . . I am like I am the f--king enforcer right. I am not the brains. I am just the f--king enforcer. But I have friends like they are geniuses right and this is what they do . . . I don't sell drugs actually. I don't. I am just the goon, right?"
GL repeatedly asked Bacon for a deposit for the cocaine, which he said he was heading to Mexico to pick up within days.
But Bacon said no one is going to hand over a large chunk of cash to someone they don't know, just in case the cocaine doesn't make it into the country.
"What happens if all of a sudden you run off or you f--kin get pinched there," Bacon asked. "They are not going to pay for nothing."
At one point he seemed suspicious of the agent.
"The more you tell me, the more I get worried that maybe this is a set-up," he said.
At the time of the sting, the agent had been friends with Scott for about 20 years, something that Bacon found re-assuring.
"The fact that Wayne's the middleman makes me think that it isn't a set-up," Bacon said a little later in the conversation. " He doesn't want to go to jail and neither do I. The fact that he's the middleman makes me think this is on the up and up."
When GL, who earlier told both Scott and Bacon that he had a Mexican contact linked to cartels, he was concerned he wouldn't be paid, it was Bacon doing the reassuring.
"You would have to be the stupidiest f--king guy in the world to f--k around with a guy who knows the cartels. They'll come down and wipe out my whole family. I would never do that," he said. "I swear on my kid's head that he will get the money."
The court also heard Scott describe a meeting at the Bacon household on Aug. 26, 2009, attended by Bacon's parents Susan and David.
"They know all about this. They were sitting right at the f--king table," Scott said, as he and Bacon wrote details of the deal on a green board.
[email protected]
Read more:
http://www.vancouversun.com/news/Jar...#ixzz1cCUVgvfe