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GANGLAND NEWS

GANGLAND SLAYINGS

October 30, 2010

new wave of bikie 'super clubs' as membership soars and major gangs move to take over smaller clubs.

SENIOR Gold Coast police are bracing for a new wave of bikie 'super clubs' as membership soars and major gangs move to take over smaller clubs.

An internal police email from a high-ranking officer leaked to the Gold Coast Bulletin reveals police have pinpointed these 'super clubs' as a serious threat.

Major clubs like the Hell's Angels, Bandidos, Finks and Black Uhlans are expected to swallow smaller clubs.

Some members of the Nomads have already swapped colours to the much larger Hell's Angels in anticipation of a potential takeover.

The email also said some members of the Commancheros and Lone Wolf gangs in Sydney had joined forces in drug manufacture and identity theft schemes

You don’t get much sleep with a lumpy, loaded sawed-off shotgun under your pillow.

You don’t get much sleep with a lumpy, loaded sawed-off shotgun under your pillow.

Nevertheless, that’s where Niagara police found the double-barreled weapon when they raided a crack house in a Queenston Street apartment in St. Catharines Thursday.

Police had heard there might be a weapon inside the house before they executed a search warrant and also found ammunition for it as well as some crack cocaine and marijuana.

“The firearm was located in the bedroom stuffed under a pillow and appeared to be in working condition,” a police spokesman said, adding members of the St. Catharines Street Crime Unit had begun receiving information a week ago about a man living on Queenston Street selling crack cocaine. Further information suggested that this male was in possession of a firearm.

A 23-year-old St. Catharines man faces drug possession and trafficking charges as well as charges of possession of a prohibited firearm, careless storage of a firearm and proceeds of crime.

bikies were involved in a Melbourne nightclub bashing that left five staff members needing treatment at a hospital.

Police are investigating whether bikies were involved in a Melbourne nightclub bashing that left five staff members needing treatment at a hospital.

Police say five men entered the premises of the Centrefold club in King Street in Melbourne's CBD sometime after 6am (AEDT) but the group was asked to leave as the bar was closing.

A fight broke out and several of the employees were assaulted.

"We're talking with witnesses and trying to see if a bikie gang was involved," a police spokeswoman said.

Five people were treated in hospital with minor injuries varying from cuts and bruises to a broken jaw.

In a separate incident, a man was found beaten unconscious outside the Men's Gallery club in Lonsdale Street on Sunday morning.

Ryle, a known bank robber and drug dealer, was shot five times in the head, neck and upper body

DEATH of a man from injuries he sustained in a gangland shooting at the weekend is being linked by gardaĆ­ to a feud between two rival factions that has cost three lives in recent months.

Robert Ryle, a 30-year-old from Blackditch Rd, Ballyfermot, west Dublin, died in hospital yesterday morning after being ambushed in a gun attack on Sunday night.

It was the 20th gun murder of the year.

Ryle, a known bank robber and drug dealer, was shot five times in the head, neck and upper body on Foxdene Ave, Clondalkin, shortly before 8.40pm on Sunday.

He had been driven to the area by a female friend but when he stepped from his car to walk up the driveway into a house he was confronted by a masked gunman, who opened fire.

Ryle was taken to Tallaght hospital where he underwent surgery. He died in hospital early yesterday.

GardaĆ­ believe the gunman may have been targeting an associate of Ryle’s but when Ryle, rather than the target, appeared outside the house, they shot him instead.

A Garda search on Monday morning yielded a handgun that gardaĆ­ believe was used by the killer. The gunman is believed to have dropped the weapon when the woman who was with Ryle drove her car into the attacker when she realised what was happening. However, the killer managed to escape and gardaĆ­ believe he was driven from the area by an accomplice.

The dead man was a member of a major organised crime gang based in the Clondalkin and Ballyfermot areas.

The gang split into two rival groups last year following rows over the proceeds of drug dealing and a number of robberies where ATMs were pulled from walls using stolen heavy plant machinery.

Two of the leaders of one of the factions were murdered by the rival group on June 28th last.

Brothers Kenneth (32) and Paul Corbally (35) from Ballyfermot were shot dead when a car they were sitting in on Neilstown Rd, Clondalkin, was riddled with bullets. Ryle was an associate of the Corbally brothers and gardaĆ­ believe he was killed by the same gangland faction behind the Corballys’ double murder. The man believed to have ordered all three killings has been known to gardaĆ­ in Dublin for well over a decade.

Based in Ballyfermot, he is one of the biggest drug dealers in west Dublin. GardaĆ­ believe they know the identity of the gunman who attacked Ryle on Sunday night but fear he may have already left the country.

Ryle was known to travel around the country with associates to locations where they believed they could rob banks with lax security or take whole ATMs from walls.

He was caught robbing banks in Limerick and Cork when he was still in his early 20s.

GardaĆ­ have renewed their appeal for the public’s assistance in their efforts to solve his murder. The investigating team at Ronanstown Garda station want to speak to anyone who may have been in the Foxdene and Balgaddy areas between 7pm and 9pm on Sunday.

John Masters is living in fear after turning supergrass against an underworld figure.

John Masters is living in fear after turning supergrass against an underworld figure.

He struck an agreement with Northumbria Police to help a gangland investigation. But while being held in a safe house, Masters let slip he had also pistol-whipped a man in Heaton, Newcastle, in 2003.

Kingsley Hyland, prosecuting at Newcastle Crown Court, said: “On September 14 this year during a conversation with his protection officer, Masters – who is a protected witness – disclosed he was previously involved in an assault in Heaton.

“He said he pistol whipped a man asleep on a settee . . . and said he failed to disclose this earlier.”

Christopher Knox, defending, said: “This case would not have come to light were it not for the fact he was trying to comply with his co-operation agreement.

“He is in mortal fear over his situation.


“He regards himself as being monumentally at risk, it fills him with absolute terror.

“None of these risks are fanciful at all, he is very much at risk.”

A judge said he would usually have been looking at a nine-year term for the attack.

But the agreement he has with the Serious Organised Crime Agency entitled him to a two thirds discount, allowing the judge to suspend the prison sentence for one year for inflicting grievous bodily harm with intent.

Judge David Hodson told Masters: “These are exceptional circumstances.

“You have entered an agreement with the Serious Organised Crime Agency and for the assistance you are giving and will give there will be a discount of two thirds.”

Masters, 49, of no fixed address, had attacked John Scott, 26, while he slept on a settee at a house on Weldon Crescent, Heaton in May 2003.

He said he had been asked to frighten Mr Scott over claims he had bullied a teenager.

Masters took an imitation firearm to intimidate the victim and said he intended to have a fight with him to ‘straighten things out’.

However when he saw Mr Scott he realised he might not fare too well in a fight and so decided to hit him with the gun.

Using the imitation firearm he struck Mr Scott across the head as he slept.

The victim suffered fractures to his skull and cuts to his face and scalp.

The injuries were classed as life threatening.

The court heard the alarm engineer suffered memory loss and sleeping problems after the attack and has never returned to work.

After the attack Masters threw the gun in the Tyne and paid the householder for the damage caused by blood from Mr Scott’s wounds.

Police had closed the case in 2004 after drawing a blank but it was re-opened after Masters’ confession.



Read More http://www.chroniclelive.co.uk/north-east-news/evening-chronicle-news/2010/10/29/gangland-supergrass-walks-free-after-attack-72703-27566019/#ixzz13pTNB4fQ

Former top Bonanno gangster Salvatore (Good Looking Sal) Vitale, who admitted to 11 gangland murders, was sprung from prison

Former top Bonanno gangster Salvatore (Good Looking Sal) Vitale, who admitted to 11 gangland murders, was sprung from prison Friday as a reward for helping the feds jail 51 mobsters.

Vitale expressed deep remorse for his life of crime and wept as Judge Nicholas Garaufis pronounced him a free man - to the extent someone in witness protection can truly be free.

"He will live the balance of his life as a notorious and endangered prisoner in a cell of his own creation, targeted by the very criminal organization of which he was once a leader," Garaufis said.

Dozens of FBI agents and prosecutors packed the courtroom in Brooklyn Federal Court for the sentencing of the most important mob turncoat since ex-Gambino underboss Salvatore (Sammy Bull) Gravano ratted out the late John Gotti two decades ago.

Vitale helped the government convict 51 gangsters - including his brother-in-law, former Bonanno boss Joseph Massino - and provided invaluable intelligence about the Mafia.

Vitale, 63, looked fit and trim in a dark blue suit, his gray hair meticulously groomed.

Defense lawyer Brian Waller said he's taken anger management classes, worked in the prison factory and served as an altar boy for the facility's priest. He regularly attends confession, according to court papers.

Reading from a statement, Vitale said he had disgraced his family name and apologized to his victims' relatives.

"I pray daily for every soul," he said. "I have committed some really horrible crimes, which I will always be ashamed of. I am truly, truly sorry."

The daughter of slain Bonanno associate Robert Perrino urged the judge to show no mercy.

"Not until he [Vitale] was arrested and possibly facing life in prison did he show any sense of remorse," Nicki Laronga wrote in a letter.

Prosecutors Greg Andres and John Buretta said the mob has been significantly weakened because of Vitale's cooperation.



Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/news/ny_crime/the_mob/2010/10/30/2010-10-30_killer_mob_rat_sprung_from_cage.html#ixzz13pSgO8xG

October 28, 2010

Robert Ryle, a 30-year-old from Blackditch Rd, Ballyfermot, west Dublin, died in hospital yesterday morning after being ambushed in a gun attack

DEATH of a man from injuries he sustained in a gangland shooting at the weekend is being linked by gardaĆ­ to a feud between two rival factions that has cost three lives in recent months.

Robert Ryle, a 30-year-old from Blackditch Rd, Ballyfermot, west Dublin, died in hospital yesterday morning after being ambushed in a gun attack on Sunday night.

It was the 20th gun murder of the year.

Ryle, a known bank robber and drug dealer, was shot five times in the head, neck and upper body on Foxdene Ave, Clondalkin, shortly before 8.40pm on Sunday.

He had been driven to the area by a female friend but when he stepped from his car to walk up the driveway into a house he was confronted by a masked gunman, who opened fire.

Ryle was taken to Tallaght hospital where he underwent surgery. He died in hospital early yesterday.

GardaĆ­ believe the gunman may have been targeting an associate of Ryle’s but when Ryle, rather than the target, appeared outside the house, they shot him instead.

A Garda search on Monday morning yielded a handgun that gardaĆ­ believe was used by the killer. The gunman is believed to have dropped the weapon when the woman who was with Ryle drove her car into the attacker when she realised what was happening. However, the killer managed to escape and gardaĆ­ believe he was driven from the area by an accomplice.

The dead man was a member of a major organised crime gang based in the Clondalkin and Ballyfermot areas.

The gang split into two rival groups last year following rows over the proceeds of drug dealing and a number of robberies where ATMs were pulled from walls using stolen heavy plant machinery.

Two of the leaders of one of the factions were murdered by the rival group on June 28th last.

Brothers Kenneth (32) and Paul Corbally (35) from Ballyfermot were shot dead when a car they were sitting in on Neilstown Rd, Clondalkin, was riddled with bullets. Ryle was an associate of the Corbally brothers and gardaĆ­ believe he was killed by the same gangland faction behind the Corballys’ double murder. The man believed to have ordered all three killings has been known to gardaĆ­ in Dublin for well over a decade.

Based in Ballyfermot, he is one of the biggest drug dealers in west Dublin. GardaĆ­ believe they know the identity of the gunman who attacked Ryle on Sunday night but fear he may have already left the country.

Ryle was known to travel around the country with associates to locations where they believed they could rob banks with lax security or take whole ATMs from walls.

He was caught robbing banks in Limerick and Cork when he was still in his early 20s.

GardaĆ­ have renewed their appeal for the public’s assistance in their efforts to solve his murder. The investigating team at Ronanstown Garda station want to speak to anyone who may have been in the Foxdene and Balgaddy areas between 7pm and 9pm on Sunday.

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