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Toronto

Police announce arrests after probe into organized crime and violence in tow truck industry

Police say the Greater Toronto Area has been a staging ground for violence in recent months, withrival tow truck companiesallegedly fighting over profits from the towing of vehicles andfrauds committed afterthe initial tow.

4 homicides, at least 30 arsons in last 3 years connected to towing turf war, police believe

This North York tow truck was one of five that were burned in the GTA on Dec. 23, 2019. (Jeremy Cohn/CBC)

Several organized crime groups working in the towing industry have been using violence and property damage as a way to grab control and territory within southern Ontario, York Regional Police said Tuesday, while announcing multiplearrests.

In a news release, police said that investigators from York police, Ontario Provincial Police, Toronto police and the Canada Revenue Agency had launched a joint forces investigation dubbed Project Platinumin response to killings, attempted murders, assaults, arsons, threats and property damage in the region.

Police said the Greater Toronto Area has been a staging ground for violence in recent months, withrival tow truck companiesfighting over profits from the towing of vehicles and alleged frauds afterthe initial tow.

York Regional Police Supt. Mike Slack said Tuesday that organized crime like this begins with an opportunity to make money, and a level of greed that leads to criminal behaviour and violence.

"The towing industry and its lack of regulations have bred exactly that environment," he said in a video posted by police.

"Over time, unscrupulous companies and the people working for them have found ways to inflate costs, and victimize consumers."

Investigatorsallege thatParamount Towing, which is owned and operated by Alexander Vinogradsky, along with other rival towing companies, have been defrauding insurance companies with vehicles involved in collisions and staged collisions.

Police announced 19arrests in total, with Vinogradsky facingcharges of participating in a criminal organization, alongside a host of other charges. Also mentioned in documents released Tuesday isMohamad El-Zahawi, 38, who was previously charged with first-degree murder in connection with the death of33-year-oldSoheilRafipour, who wasshot and killed in Richmond Hill, Ont., in December 2018. Police say bothEl-ZahawiandRafipourhad ties to the tow truck industry.

Police say the probe uncovered links to arsons, assaults, and a host of other offences. (York Regional Police)

Police also allege in the release that towing companies partnered with auto repair shops and car and truck rental companies to carry out their frauds.

Slack alleged thata combination of fraudulent billing, repairs and physiotherapy claimsearned people connected to the probemillions in "illicit income."

"When these profits were not enough, they staged collisions, using drivers they recruited," he said. One personwould play the role of an "at-fault driver," while the other would play the role of a victim, he said.

"They'll actually have cars run into one another sometimes in the impound yard itself, sometimes on streets or in parking lots throughout the GTA."

'A true wild west'

According to investigators, the arrests and charges come after severalsearch warrants were carried out in areas around the Greater Toronto and Hamilton areas in April and May.

"It's a true wild west show out there," John Hendersonof the Provincial Towing Association of Ontario recently told CBC News.

"It's gotten to the point where there could be as much as 60 per cent of the towing industry in the GTA[that] isrun by the criminal element."

Police say several guns were seized during the execution of search warrants linked to the investigation. (York Regional Police)

According to police, evidence seized as part of the search warrants includes:

  • 11 tow trucks.
  • Dozens of guns, including handguns, shotguns, rifles, and a machine gun.
  • Thousands of rounds of ammunition.
  • Two conductive energy weapons and brass knuckles.
  • An assortment of drugs, including five kilograms of fentanyl, 1.5 kilograms of cocaine, 1.25 kilograms of crystal meth and 1.5 kilograms of pot.
  • Over $500,000 in cash.

Slack said Tuesday that these organizationsgrossly inflated bills for towing andrepairs, with body shops also getting a cut of the profits. Insurance companies were then paying out on these claims, he said.

"These actions victimize innocent drivers, insurance companiesand, ultimately, all of us, through increased insurance rates."

Police saidinsurance companies had been working to"mitigate the fraud and additional costs to the consumer," and had launched legal action against several tow companies.

Vaughan's Carr Law had been hired by the insurance companies, police said, and then in turn became the target of violence, threats and extortion.

Police say Thomas Sliwinski, 39, Qalid Abderzak, 24,and Zakariye Yousuf, 30, have all been charged in connection with an attack at the Carr law firm.

Drivers killed

For the past three years, rogue towing companies have been using intimidation and violence to carve out territory, according to police.

Four drivers have been killed in connection with the turf war, police said.

Earlier this month,a 23-year-old manwas found fatally shot in his towtruck.Two teens have been charged with first-degree murderin connection with that homicide, although police saidtheydon't believe the killing was connected to the conflict.

Police said they carried out multiple search warrants in connection with the investigation. (York Regional Police)

At least 30 tow trucks have beenburned, and there have been dozens of cases of extortionand robbery.

Two weeks ago, two more tow trucks were torched in Durham Region, east of Toronto.

Slack said it is difficult to identify all of the incidents and property damage linked to these criminal organizations, but when the police probe began in February, investigators found 150 different incidents that were somehow related. Police are confident they will identify more, he said.

Of the 19 people who were arrested in connection with the busts, eight are still in custody, Slack said. Thirtyor more additional arrests could be coming in the "coming days, weeks and months," he said.

Lack of oversight a problem, industry rep says

Henderson said unscrupulous towing companies in Ontarioeven hire "blockers" at hundreds of dollars a trip to impede rival tow trucks from reaching accidentscenes.

He said the violence has spread to the point that the office of a lawyer representing one towing company was set on firerecently.

Police say they anticipate more arrests. (York Regional Police)

Part of the problem, Henderson said, is alack of provincial oversight. At the moment, GTA towing companies are governed largely by a patchwork of municipal bylaws.

"I could actually pass you the keys to a small [tow truck]and say, 'Go pick up a vehicle on the 401,'" he said.

Slack said that provincewide regulatorychanges are needed in Ontario.

"To have a long-lasting effect, there will need to be some changes in the industry changes in regulation, changes in bylaws," he said.

But after months of violence,Ontarians should see the intensity of the turf war start to abate, investigators believe.

"With the accused facing charges and their assets seized, we expect the level of violence we have seen in our community to diminish," Slacksaid.