The Notorious Bacon Brothers (10 page)

Chapter 4

Bumps in the Road: 2001–2004

As rough as the UN's James Coulter's youth had been, that of Red Scorpions associate Anton Brad Kornelius Hooites-Meursing may have been worse. Born to a Canadian father and Australian mother in Calgary in 1971, Hooites-Meursing was the second of three boys. As he later testified on a number of occasions, their home life was anything but idyllic. His mother, he said, was schizophrenic, prone to violent outbursts that his father would often respond to with brutality. Anton said the police visited frequently, but did little other than to tell the family to settle down.

The Hooites-Meursing family moved to Australia when Anton was still very young, then relocated to Los Angeles when he was 8. His dad set up a very successful construction business there, and the family lived on the edges of Beverly Hills. But his parents split up, and Anton lived with his mother until he was 11, when she left him a note saying that she was no longer able to take care of him and his brothers. He and his younger brother went to live in a foster home, then with some friends of the family, before moving in with his father and his new wife.

But it wasn't a happy home there, either. The father forbade the boys from talking about or communicating with their mother and made it clear he resented their presence in his new life. According to Anton, the family's fortunes took a nosedive when the IRS found that Anton's dad had not been honest on his tax returns. The ensuing garnishments and penalties drove the family into relative poverty, moving them from their enviable address to a small house on the border between Long Beach and the notorious Compton.

It was a poor, violent neighborhood, and Hooites-Meursing claims, as one of a very few white kids in the area, he was a frequent target for abuse. He quit school in the ninth grade and, with some friends, started stealing from cars before stealing the cars themselves. Like many other youth in the area, he sought the protection and camaraderie of a gang. But the dearth of white gangs in the area—they do exist in Los Angeles, but not in South-Central—led him to a Hispanic one. “I had no love or anything close at home, but rather was hated by my family and dad especially,” he said. “So it was, as I look back, a natural seeking out acceptance and love which was mine to be had joining ... a Mexican gang.”

The following decade did not go well. At 17, he moved in with his best friend only to return from work one day to find a shot-up apartment and his friend murdered. He moved back in with his father, who by then had managed to restore his finances enough to buy a small house in Compton. But that modicum of stability did little to help young Hooites-Meursing, who spent the next few years in and out of trouble. Looking back, he called it a “decade of gladiator school in the Los Angeles County jail system, which for anybody that is white is a total nightmare.”

By the time he was 29, the United States had had enough of his law-breaking ways and on December 7, 2001, deported him to Canada—a country he barely remembered. He ended up in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside.

But he was determined to start a better life in his new country. Within weeks, he managed to get two jobs—one as a data entry clerk for the British Columbia Automobile Association and another as a floor attendant for Home Depot. He used the proceeds from them to rent a small apartment in New Westminster and to enroll in a night school course that taught him to sell cars. He eventually landed a salesman job at Jim Pattison Auto Group, the largest car dealer in B.C., and claimed to be very successful at it.

Despite his deportation order, Hooites-Meursing would occasionally drive back to Los Angeles to visit his girlfriend. She was the reason, he said, that he went straight. But when she broke up with him, he was shocked, which led to depression and suicidal thoughts. In an effort to quell those feelings, Hooites-Meursing started taking ecstasy and going clubbing every opportunity he could. To afford that lifestyle—and also put his feelings for his now-ex-girlfriend behind him—he dove back into the gangster lifestyle.

It was a pretty easy transition. He knew people in Los Angeles who had money and wanted drugs, and he knew people in the Lower Mainland who had drugs and wanted more money than they could get for them in Canada. The product was high-quality BC Bud, which was like gold in the United States. At first, he did not actually export or even handle the drugs, but served as a broker, introducing interested parties to one another. He also helped friends build hydroponic marijuana grow ops.

But as is commonplace, Hooites-Meursing was attracted to the definitive life of a drug dealer—the cars, the flashy clothes, the tattoos and the guns—and he started trafficking large amounts. On regular driving trips, he would bring marijuana from Vancouver to Los Angeles in modified propane tanks and cocaine from Mexico through a Los Angeles supplier he had met in jail back the same way. When he had an excess of cocaine, he would send it to connections in Australia—who paid a much higher price—in custom-made compartments in briefcases.

He also started taking his own products. In exchange for the BC Bud he could get, his friends in Los Angeles would supply him not just with cocaine and guns, but also with steroids and more exotic drugs like Percocet and Oxycontin. It did not take long for Hooites-Meursing to become huge with muscle, and as so often is the case with steroid users, he became unpredictable and violent, earning a reputation for assaulting rivals in public and bright daylight. He specialized, he said, in disarming opponents with his bare hands, keeping their guns—three or four a month, he recalled—and, if he liked them, their watches.

Though not actually a gang member early in his career, Hooites-Meursing worked with a number of organizations and was particularly close to the then-fledgling Red Scorpions. Early in 2001, a Red Scorpions member whom Hooites-Meursing will not name asked him to kill street-level dealer Randy McLeod. Still depressed, profoundly affected by steroids and now addicted to Oxycontin, Hooites-Meursing agreed, noting to himself that it might be a good opportunity to grab some of McLeod's drugs and cash.

The conspirators agreed to meet McLeod in the parking lot of a Surrey Canadian Tire. As soon as they saw him, Hooites-Meursing grabbed the 22-year-old McLeod in a headlock and threw him into the back of a cargo van. Hooites-Meursing then held McLeod down by driving his knee into McLeod's spine and bound his hands and feet with nylon straps. They then drove to McLeod's townhouse on 66th Avenue, broke in and ransacked the place. Inside, Hooites-Meursing discovered some cocaine and heroin, and about $10,000 in cash. But it wasn't enough. Enraged, Hooites-Meursing went back to the van and began punching the helpless McLeod in the face repeatedly.

They then drove their captive to 0 Avenue—which serves as the ridiculously porous border between Canada and the United States—where Hooites-Meursing argued with the driver over the need to kill McLeod. Hooites-Meursing lost the argument and strangled the bound man, removing some of the victim's clothes that he decided could potentially be used as evidence. Once he was sure McLeod was dead, Hooites-Meursing instructed the driver to take him a few blocks north, to a wooded area away from the busier border, and disposed of the body there. It was found 11 days later, a black inch-wide nylon strap still around its neck.

Some months later, Hooites-Meursing was asked by his friend, Edward “Skeeter” Russell, a Red Scorpions member, to keep a mutual friend safe. On the night of December 22, 2002, Hooites-Meursing took the man and another friend to the Luxor nightclub. Once inside, the man Hooites-Meursing was expected to protect got into a fight with James Thiphavong, a United Nations associate. The fight expanded to include a couple of Thiphavong's brothers and their friends. The Red Scorpion whom Hooites-Meursing was protecting was hit in the forehead with a bottle and began to bleed. As the fight spilled into the parking lot, Hooites-Meursing pulled out a knife and stabbed BonLeuth Thiphavong and his brother Souskavath Thiphavong repeatedly. BonLeuth later died from his injuries.

A month after that, Anton's friend Russell was killed. The Red Scorpions believed his murder was in retaliation for the death of Thiphavong. When an audiotape of a United Nations associate named Gupreet “Bobby” Rehal talking and laughing about the planning of Russell's murder emerged, the Red Scorpions decided he must have been involved and decided to kill him. Hooites-Meursing was at the meeting and was chosen to be part of the mission.

On March 13, 2002, the conspirators stole a nondescript Honda Civic, drove to Rehal's house on Saturnia Crescent in Abbotsford and knocked on the door. Hooites-Meursing was waiting in another stolen car two blocks away. When 19-year-old Rehal answered the door, the Red Scorpions shot him in the face, then ran away to where Hooites-Meursing was parked. Rehal lingered in Royal Columbian Hospital for a few hours and died the following morning.

A close associate of Hooites-Meursing—one might even say a friend—was 24-year-old John Lahn (which was an alias for Laurent Jean-Guy Rahal). Lahn was a drug dealer operating out of the notorious Bonanza Motel, but his specialty was as the head of a home invasion squad frequently employed by the Red Scorpions. Hooites-Meursing worked for him as supplier, dealer and hired muscle.

But things were going bad for Hooites-Meursing at this point. According to Marlin “Marlo” Aburto, one of Lahn's alleged lieutenants, Lahn had intended to fire him because of his unpredictable, often violent, behavior. The last straw came at a 2003 birthday party in Victoria for another alleged Lahn lieutenant, Robert “PDog” Padley. One of the guests made a joke at Hooites-Meursing's expense. While the rest of the party was laughing, Hooites-Meursing punched the man, knocking him to the floor, then pulled out a gun, cocked it and stuck it in the man's mouth. The rest of the party convinced him to put the gun away, and Hooites-Meursing, now twice admonished, left.

Later, Lahn told Aburto and others that he was upset over the incident and that he planned to fire Hooites-Meursing. Aburto later testified that Lahn had no intention of beating up, let alone killing, Hooites-Meursing and that it was commonplace for employees and contractors of Lahn's organization to be fired without violence or further incident. Lahn set up a meeting with Hooites-Meursing in front of the Orkideh Beauty Salon, in a strip mall at the corner of 10th Avenue and 6th Street in Burnaby, where they both got their hair cut.

In the parking lot in front of the Starbucks, the two had words, which quickly escalated into a scuffle. In the struggle, Lahn was shot and died. Hooites-Meursing was arrested and charged with murder, though he claimed self-defense.

Just as the loss of the crude effectiveness of Hooites-Meursing affected the Red Scorpions' ability to do business, the United Nations had their own problems. One of their most prominent members, Jing Bon Chan, heard that his girlfriend of the last two years, Christina Hyun Oh Yoon, was stepping out on him. On August 2, 2003, he received a call informing him that a guy had just been seen entering Yoon's downtown Richmond apartment. Enraged, Chan sped to 6331 Buswell Street and ran up the stairs to Yoon's third-floor place. Inside, he found her in bed with a guy named Winston Thieu Anh Bui. Chan pulled a knife and stabbed Bui several times. Nude and bleeding, Bui ran to the balcony. In an attempt to jump his way to freedom, he lost his footing, fell and hit the pavement with his head. He was taken to a nearby hospital and placed in a medically induced coma. Chan was charged with attempted murder, possessing a prohibited firearm with ammunition and carrying a concealed weapon.

And the Hells Angels were feeling their own bumps in the road. Robert Molsberry was a big man, big enough to hold down a bouncer's job at Number 5 Orange, a notorious Downtown Eastside strip joint that has seen Italian porn star–turned–politician Ilona Staller (La Cicciolina), Hugh Hefner's wife Kimberly Conrad and singer Courtney Love perform on stage and played host to luminaries like Sylvester Stallone, Bill Murray, Charles Barkley and Wayne Gretzky. And it was popular with bikers.

Other books

Killing the Beasts by Chris Simms
Star Trek: The Original Series - 082 - Federation by Judith Reeves-Stevens, Garfield Reeves-Stevens
Alien 3 by Alan Dean Foster
Set Me Free by Jennifer Collin
Breathing Water by T. Greenwood
Seed of South Sudan by Majok Marier
Virtues of War by Steven Pressfield
Kingdom Lost by Patricia Wentworth


readsbookonline.com Copyright 2016 - 2024