The Province

Police paid ex-UN gang member $300,000 for help, court hears

- KIM BOLAN kbolan@postmedia.com blog: vancouvers­un.com/tag/real-scoop Twitter.com/kbolan

A former United Nations gangster-turned-Crown witness at the murder trial of Cory Vallee was paid more than $300,000 by police to co-operate, B.C. Supreme Court heard Tuesday.

The man, whose identity is shielded by a sweeping publicatio­n ban, told Justice Janice Dillon that when he started as a police informant, he didn’t care if he was paid.

But the more he co-operated with police, the more he realized his entire life would be turned upside-down.

“It became evident that what they were asking me to do was going to have a massive effect on my life. That I was going to potentiall­y lose my entire network — both legitimate and illegitima­te — in the Lower Mainland and Canada, which is exactly what happened. I was putting myself in danger,” said the man, who can only be called D.

So he asked the police for compensati­on “to be able to set up a new life.”

Money wasn’t the only reason he wanted out of the UN gang, D told Crown prosecutor Alex Burton.

“I had become disillusio­ned with the criminal organizati­on I was in, with the individual­s in the criminal organizati­on, the lifestyle, what I was doing at the time, things that had occurred in my life and I wanted to get out of that lifestyle and do it in a way — that knowing myself — would ensure that it would be virtually impossible for me to go back,” D said.

“So co-operating with the police was a one-way ticket if you will?” Burton asked. Yes, D replied. He said he was also worried that some in the UN were under police investigat­ion and didn’t want to end up in jail.

“I was quite certain at the time that police were interested in our group and, although I wasn’t certain I was personally being investigat­ed, that was a concern,” he said.

Vallee is charged with conspiracy to kill the Bacon brothers and their Red Scorpion associates over several months in 2008 and 2009. He is also charged with first-degree murder for the fatal shooting of Bacon associate Kevin LeClair in a Langley parking lot in February 2009.

D said another reason he turned to police is because he was upset about the murder of a young man he knew only as “Whitey.”

(Ryan (White) Richards, 19, was found slain in Abbotsford on March 30 2009. No one has been charged in his murder.)

“He was a young kid in the Abbotsford area,” D testified. “I blamed certain individual­s within our group for his death. “I felt that I had some responsibi­lity, although I was no way involved in his murder. I felt that steps I had taken could have put him on the path to what happened. That didn’t sit well with me.”

D testified that he got to know some members of the UN gang in the early 2000s when he was running a dial-adope line in Abbotsford.

“Clay Roueche is someone I was starting to see more and more frequently,” he testified, describing Roueche as the leader of the UN gang.

D said the boss of his drug line was “getting his supply from Clay.”

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