Kelowna was a key location in a Surrey gang鈥檚 drug trafficking network, long before it brought the court heard Wednesday.
A witness in the murder and attempted murder trial of Michael Jones, Jason McBride and Jujhar Singh Khun-Khun said he was making thousands of dollars a day, selling drugs supplied by Sukh Dhak 鈥 the younger brother of Gurmit Dhak, a member of an Indo Canadian gang that rose to prominence in the Lower Mainland in the early 2000s.
whose name is protected under a publication ban, said he moved to the valley from Surrey around 10 years ago to establish 鈥渁 drug selling business.鈥
鈥淚 started a dope line. I鈥檇 drive around and hand out free dope samples and give my number,鈥 he said, explaining earlier in his testimony that 鈥渄ope鈥 was cocaine and crack.
Soon he was more making more than when he dealt in Surrey.
鈥淭hat phone 鈥 was probably pulling in on average $4,000 or $6,000 a day,鈥 he said.
Early on he even had a tow truck business set up so he could transport from one end of the valley to the other unnoticed. If, on the off chance he was pulled over, he explained, he could say he didn鈥檛 know anything about the contents of the vehicle attached to his hitch.
He鈥檇 return to Surrey every week, too, he said, sometimes three times a week to replenish his supply and bring in the cash.
鈥淪ome of my vehicles had hidden compartments so if I couldn鈥檛 find someone to bring up ($70,000), I鈥檇 jump into one of my vehicles and bring it down,鈥 he said. 鈥淥r sometimes Sukh (Dhak) would bring me down and talk about how we could sell more. Sometimes I鈥檇 stay down for a week. Sometimes an hour.鈥
Sukh Dhak, the witness explained, had been a friend since they were in their teens, selling pot.
As they got older the drugs he and a small group of friends started dealing became cocaine and crack.
鈥淢e and and Manny (Hairan) became good friends and Suhk was always around supplying weed and coke and we were all kind of just buddies,鈥 he said.
鈥淎t that time we were just a bunch of young kids selling drugs to make money and Sukh was kind of the boss, but also our buddy.鈥
In just a few more years, he said, the bonds they forged earlier in life took the shape of a criminal organization, with a hierarchy falling into place. Sukh Dhak鈥檚 leadership became more clear. If they wanted to sell dope they 鈥渉ad to go through him鈥 and he was 鈥済iving out orders.鈥
The witness said he never met with Gurmit Dhak, to secure a line of drugs. He did, however, discuss their shared business interests over dinner with friends, at hockey games, in clubs and at concerts.
He was also present for conversations where Gurmit Dhak鈥檚 role in the organization was highlighted.
鈥淲hen the Bacons and all that started happening, and those guys came into Surrey and started dope lines there 鈥 we looked at it as these guys coming into our town. They were moving things around and making guys work for them,鈥 he said.
The Bacon brothers were the heads of the Red Scorpion gang that was based out of Abbotsford.
鈥淭hat became a problem,鈥 the witness said. 鈥淎nd when that happened Gurm would step in and deal with it.鈥
The deal, he said, that had been struck was that the 鈥淏acon guys鈥 would be able to deal in Surrey, too, and they鈥檇 leave each other alone.
While Gurmit Dhak was able to broker peace between the Red Scorpions and the Dhak Group in Surrey, he was gunned down by other rivals in a Metrotown parking lot in 2010.
鈥淎fter Gurm died a lot changed,鈥 said the witness, noting the drug operation they鈥檇 been running got 鈥渂igger over time鈥 and Sukh started hanging out with 鈥渙ther guys,鈥 like Jujhar Khun-Khun.
鈥淪ukh was pissed,鈥 about his brother鈥檚 death, he said. 鈥淗e was mad. He was sad鈥 He told us to keep our ears open and see what happened.鈥
The information he was looking for was who killed his brother. What he learned indicated that that Larry Amero was responsible for his brother鈥檚 death and James Riach was also implicated, said the witness.
The witness testified he knew Riach was an Independent Soldier from the Vancouver area and Amero was a full patch Hells Angel. Sukh Dhak鈥檚 associates were to look for them.
The court has already been told how the search culminated in a shooting outside the Delta Grand hotel 鈥 something the witness has not indicated he knew would happen, though he was active in
along with Leah Hadden-Watts and Lyndsey Black. Bacon was the only one who died. Amero was shot in the face, wrist and chest, Hadden-Watts was shot in the neck and rendered a paraplegic, Black was shot through both upper legs. Riach escaped without injury.
While much of the testimony was dedicated to the inner workings of the war between rival drug gangs, there was also a more dismal element laid out.
Sukh Dahk and Manny Hairan were killed in the years that followed the Kelowna shooting and the witness started to do more and more drugs.
He testified earlier that he had a Percocet habit that required dozens of pills. He could afford it when his corner of the drug trade was booming, but after his friends were killed that network didn鈥檛 seem to sustain his income in the same way. He was depleting a supply of money he鈥檇 saved in those years quickly, and he had to come up with new streams of income.
With only a Grade 6 education, and his only job experience being drug dealing, his choices seemed limited. He started robbing other dealers at gunpoint and stealing tailgates and selling them to a chop shop.
At one point he was arrested, and things got worse.
In Kelowna cells, as he detoxed from the many drugs he was taking, his cellmate offered him something to lessen the pain 鈥 heroin from a baggie he snuck in. He pulled it out and they did lines.
From there, onward. He used heroin more frequently and, he said, his drug addiction was out of control.