Yves Buteau

Yves "Le Boss" Buteau (1951– 8 September 1983) was a Canadian criminal and outlaw biker, known for being the first president of the Hells Angels in Canada, and was murdered by a drug dealer with ties to a rival gang, the Outlaws. He began his life of organized crime as a member of the Montreal-based motorcycle gang called the Popeyes Motorcycle Club. By the mid-1970s, he became president. Buteau would soon play a significant role in establishing the Angels as a major criminal force in Quebec.

Life

The Popeyes Motorcycle Club began working as "muscle" for the Dubois Brothers in the early 1970s, initially as assassins and later on as drug dealers.[1] Buteau, a charismatic tall man with blonde hair and blue eyes, inspired much affection and loyalty from his fellow Popeyes, who were seen as the most violent of Quebec's 350 outlaw biker clubs.[1] In 1974, Buteau and the Popeyes started to fight an especially-brutal biker war with the Devil's Disciples biker gang, which was considered as the most powerful outlaw biker club in Montreal.[1] By January 1976, 15 of the Devil's Disciples had been killed by the Popeyes, led them to disband.[2] On August 14, 1976, at the age of 25, Buteau was among the many arrested at a hotel in Saint-André-Avellin after almost 50 Popeyes had entered and trashed the place.[3]

While president of the Popeyes, Buteau was personally courted by Sonny Barger, the leader of the Hells Angels and the most famous member, to persuade his fellow Popeye members to join the Angels. Initially, the Hells Angels had planned to "patch over" the Devil's Disciples, but as the Popeyes had eliminated them, Barger switched over to courting Buteau.[4] The Popeyes, Montreal's strongest outlaw biker club, become Canada's first Hells Angels chapter on December 5, 1977.[3] At the time, the Popeyes were quarreling with the Satan's Choice club, which had expanded into Quebec from Ontario after it had moved into Canada from the United States earlier.[5] Barger, a legend with the Hells Angels, awarded Buteau his colours and respected him so much that he was the only Canadian authorized to use the title of "Hells Angels International."[4] Barger praised Buteau and the Popeyes as the most "hardcore" outlaw bikers in Canada, thereby making them the ones most worthy of becoming Hells Angels.[4] Shortly afterwards, in January 1978, the Montreal chapter of the Satan's Choice biker gang "patched over" to become Outlaws, thereby importing the traditional rivalry between the Outlaws and Hells Angels into Canada.[4]

Buteau changed the chapter from a group of beer drinking brawlers to an organized criminal empire.[3] Throughout his time as president of the Hells Angels, Buteau was in contact with other outlaw biker gangs and aimied to persuade them to join the Hells Angels.[3] He aspired to have his members to appear clean-shaven, keep lower profiles, and avoid hassles.[1] In 1978, a biker war broke out between the Montreal chapters of the Hells Angels and the Outlaws.[6] The immediate cause of the biker war was the shooting of two Outlaws outside a Montreal bar popular with the Angels by Angels' ace assassin Yves "Apache" Trudeau on 17 February 1978, causing one death, but the more proximate cause was the desire of the Angels to expand into Ontario.[6] By 1980, it was estimated that Angels-Outlaw biker war had caused about 20 murders in Quebec and Ontario, while between 1981 and 1984 another 42 were killed.[6]

As part of his efforts to expand into Ontario, Buteau recruited one Wolodumir "Walter the Nurget" Stadnick, who had been the leader of a biker gang in Hamilton called the Wild Ones who arrived in Montreal seeking to "patch over" to form the first Hells Angel chapter in Ontario.[7] The Outlaws saw possibility of a Hells Angel chapter being established in Ontario as a threat.[7] Both Buteau and Stadnick were lucky to survive Le Tourbillon massacre on 12 October 1978, when at Le Tourbillion bar in Montreal, the Outlaws killed 1 Hells Angel and badly injured another 2 while killing 2 of the Wild Ones.[8] Stadnick was the only Wild One to survive the Le Tourbillion massacre.[7] Upon learning that it was the Outlaw leader Roland "Roxy" Dutemple who organized and led the Le Tourbillion massacre, Buteau dispatched his "wild man" killer Trudeau after him and said that Trudeau's number one job was to kill Dutemple.[9] After killing a man, named William Weichold, who just happened to look like Dutemple on 8 December 1978, Trudeau finally killed Dutemple with a car bomb on 29 March 1979.[9] Upon returning to Hamilton, Stadnick had been forced to disband the Wild Ones after 5 of its members had been killed by the Outlaws and had fled to Montreal as a "refugee," as Hamilton was too dangerous.[7] Stadnick joined the Hells Angels in 1982 and became their national president in 1988.

In 1981, Buteau visited British Columbia, where he contacted a gang with three chapters in the Lower Mainland called Satan's Angels, and he persuaded them to "patch over" to become the first Canadian Hells Angels chapters outside Quebec in 1983.[10] In the spring of 1982, at a meeting of Quebec Hells Angels, he demanded that group members quit the use of cocaine, but the ban was widely flouted, especially by the North chapter, based in Laval.[3] Buetau stated that gang members with cocaine problems were not reliable, as they were too prone to using the cocaine they were supposed to be selling, and he announced that the penalty for breaking his new rule was death.[3]

On September 8, 1983, Buteau was shot and killed while he was the Canadian Hells Angels Canadian president. The shooter was a 22-year-old drug dealer, Gino Goudreau. Also shot and killed was Guy "Frenchie" Gilbert, the president of the Kitchener chapter of the Satan's Choice gang, who had traveled to Montreal to discuss "patching over" to become the first Hells Angels chapter in Ontario. Goudreau was a "prospect" with the rival Outlaws outlaw biker club who believed he would be a "full patch" Outlaw if he killed the Canadian national president. Goudreau's brother was a member of the Quebec Outlaws. After the shooting, Goudreau went into hiding but was arrested a few months later. He was charged with two counts of second degree murder but was acquitted after he had claimed self-defense because of earlier events.[11] He claimed that Buteau had threatened him on many occasions and that they had both pulled guns, but Goudreau beat Buteau to the draw.[11]

A day after Buteau's funeral, a young boy discovered a bomb on the route in which the funeral procession, consisting of Hells Angels bikers had gone past.[11] Police theorized that it had been placed and camouflaged the night before the funeral.[11] Buteau was replaced by Michel "Sky" Langlois as the Hells Angels national president, who fled Canada to Morocco in 1988 to escape charges of first-degree murder relating to the 1985 Lennoxville massacre .

Notes

  1. Langton 2010, p. 55.
  2. Langton 2010, p. 54-55.
  3. Edwards & Auger 2012, p. 44.
  4. Langton 2010, p. 56.
  5. Edwards & Auger 2012, p. 102.
  6. Schneider 2009, p. 395.
  7. Langton 2010, p. 62.
  8. Langton 2010, p. 61-62.
  9. Langton 2010, p. 63.
  10. Langton 2010, p. 76.
  11. Cherry 2005, p. 7.

References

  • Auger, Michel & Edwards, Peter The Encyclopedia of Canadian Organized Crime: From Captain Kidd to Mom Boucher, McClelland & Stewart, 2012, ISBN 0771030495.
  • Stephen Schneider (9 December 2009). Iced: The Story of Organized Crime in Canada. John Wiley & Sons. pp. 395–. ISBN 978-0-470-83500-5.
  • Paul Cherry (2005). The Biker Trials: Bringing Down the Hells Angels. ECW Press. pp. 7–. ISBN 978-1-55490-250-7.
  • Langton, Jerry Showdown: How the Outlaws, Hells Angels and Cops Fought for Control of the Streets, Toronto: John Wiley & Sons, 2010, ISBN 047067878X.
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