Crime
St. Albert RCMP Charge Two Males with Aggravated Assault

St. Albert, Alberta – On Friday, May 18, 2018 at approximately 8:30 p.m., St. Albert RCMP responded to a 911 call at Lions Park for an assault. As RCMP and EMS arrived on scene, they located an injured 50 year old male from Stony Plain, who was transported via ambulance to an Edmonton hospital with serious facial injuries that are believed to be non-life threatening.
In the initial stages of the investigation, St. Albert RCMP learned that the male victim had been playing soccer with numerous other people in the park when a verbal disagreement occurred between the victim and three males which progressed to the assault of the 50 year old man where undisclosed weapons were present.
Alexander PRZYBYSZ, age 20 of St. Albert, and Brendan CRAIG, age 18 of St. Albert, were arrested and charged with:
Aggravated Assault, Assault with a Weapon, Possession of a Weapon for a Dangerous Purpose and Causing a Disturbance.
Both adults were released by a Justice of the Peace with several conditions and to appear in St. Albert Provincial Court on June 4, 2018. A 17 year old male youth from Edmonton was also arrested for Breaching his previous release conditions for matters already before the courts.
This is not believed to be a random event and the investigation is on going as numerous witnesses are being interviewed. Further details are not available at this time and anyone who has been impacted by this incident is encouraged to call St. Albert Victim Services @ 780-458-4353, who provide free emotional support and referrals to victims of crime or tragedy.
If you have any information about this assault or any other crimes, you are asked to call the St. Albert R.C.M.P. at 780-458-7700 or call your local police. If you want to remain anonymous you can contact Crime Stoppers by phone at 1-800-222-8477 (TIPS), by Internet at www.tipsubmit.com or by SMS (check your local Crime Stoppers www.crimestoppers.ab.ca for instructions).
Crime
From Vancouver to Oklahoma: Canadian Murder Case and CCP ‘Police Station’ Links Align U.S. Testimony and The Bureau’s PRC Pot Investigations

At a hearing Thursday in Washington, Oklahoma Bureau of Narcotics Director Donnie Anderson told lawmakers the death highlights the violence spreading through an industry hijacked by transnational Chinese gangs believed to be guided by the Chinese Communist Party. Anderson testified that Chinese networks have set up thousands of illegal grow operations in Oklahoma, exploiting the state’s loose licensing regime and funneling proceeds through global laundering systems, while pointing to a vast national security risk. Shielded Chinese government interests are believed to be behind marijuana grows strategically purchased beside sensitive infrastructure, including a munitions base in Oklahoma that produces much of the Pentagon’s heavy weapons.
“This isn’t just about marijuana,” Anderson said. “It is my belief that the CCP maintains access to the criminal marijuana site operations, particularly through its known practice of controlling expatriates via so-called ‘police stations.’”
Anderson tied the farms to human trafficking, fentanyl, money laundering, and the risk of broad access to U.S. critical infrastructure, noting that commanding directors from New York and California — seldom seen locally — were behind the exploitation of Oklahoma farmland.
Anderson’s testimony aligns precisely with The Bureau’s investigations into Chinese cannabis and money laundering networks in Vancouver, which found that Beijing’s United Front Work Department was orchestrating a parallel cannabis trafficking and laundering system. That system leveraged Canada’s legalization to export product abroad and recycle proceeds through Canadian banks. The key figures identified in Vancouver included associates of the notorious Sam Gor global fentanyl and methamphetamine trafficking triad networks, as well as targets of the RCMP’s investigations into CCP “police stations” in Canada.
The Bureau’s reporting found that United Front command-and-control cells in Vancouver were routing Canadian “B.C. Bud” across the country in trucks and into New York, where U.S. law enforcement has identified significant Chinese organized crime leadership.
The human toll of brutal Chinese crime operations on U.S. soil was another focus of the hearing, pointing to a Canadian link. Without naming the victim, Anderson referred to the drug house execution of a Canadian national in July near Lake Thunderbird, Oklahoma.
Local reports say the Pottawatomie County Sheriff’s Office confirmed the victim as 42-year-old Canadian citizen Vongphachanh Philavanh. Deputies responded around 10:30 p.m. on July 18 to a licensed marijuana grow on East Hill Drive, just east of Lake Thunderbird. Capt. J.T. Palmer said two masked men forced their way through the front door of a residence on the property. Shots were fired, Philavanh was killed, and two surviving workers were bound with duct tape as the intruders ransacked the home before escaping.
Investigators believe Philavanh was the target of a robbery.
The method bore the classic hallmarks of a “grow rip” — a home-invasion style raid long practiced by the Big Circle Boys, a cellular and ultra-violent network with roots in China’s military, in which masked assailants bind occupants, execute rivals or debtors, and strip properties of cash and product.
U.S. lawmakers heard yesterday that Philavanh’s death was not an isolated tragedy but evidence of a much larger command structure. All three witnesses in Thursday’s hearing — Anderson, Heritage Foundation fellow Paul Larkin, and former DEA executive Chris Urben — pointed to the same conclusion: the Chinese Communist Party stands behind the crime syndicates now dominating America’s marijuana industry.
Urben described a DEA investigation codenamed Operation Sleeping Giant, which found that beginning around 2016, Chinese criminal networks completely took over global money laundering for cartels and organized crime active in the United States. The key enabler, he told lawmakers, is WeChat, the encrypted platform controlled by Beijing. “No other global crime network has a (state-protected) trusted communications system like that,” Urben said. “WeChat needs to be disrupted. It cannot continue to function as a secure platform for criminal money laundering. There must be a state-level, legislated solution with the Chinese government — one that ends WeChat’s use in these trusted networks.”
This testimony aligns directly with The Bureau’s long investigation into Chinese state-linked laundering in Vancouver. Around the same period U.S. agents were running Operation Sleeping Giant, Canadian police in Richmond uncovered the Silver International case — a vast Chinese drug-cash bank that exposed the so-called Vancouver Model. According to a Canadian police expert with direct knowledge, United Front operatives and Sam Gor-affiliated figures turned short-term rental properties across Vancouver into covert cannabis brokerage houses. These homes aggregated marijuana from acreages in B.C.’s interior and readied shipments for destinations including New York and Tokyo. Investigators observed a steady stream of people arriving with garbage bags and leaving with duffels, a pattern that mirrored the cash couriering at the center of the Silver International casino case.
“It was just phenomenal,” a Canadian intelligence source told The Bureau. “And all of it links back, ultimately, to the exact family and community of people that we’ve talked about for years.”
The source pointed to senior Vancouver Chinese consulate associates and known leaders of Beijing’s United Front Work Department community groups in Canada. These networks have been linked to Chinese military and government veterans operating in Canada. In The Bureau’s reporting, police sources said marijuana legalization under Prime Minister Justin Trudeau inadvertently handed Chinese organized crime the perfect cover. Product from farms in Oliver, Prince George, and the Okanagan was consolidated in the Lower Mainland, packaged and branded in transient brokerage houses, and then shipped east across Canada in gutted appliances and commercial loads. Once across the border, it flowed into New York, where cash proceeds were collected in United Front-linked brokerages and cycled back into Canadian financial institutions.
“They transport it down, and then we started seeing the rise of these brokerage houses again, with United Front control and Asian organized crime links,” a source said. “New York is a favourite destination. The weed goes out in a variety of routes, the money comes back to be laundered. The process is repeated.”
The system was sophisticated, distributed, and shielded by state direction. “Since legalization, Asian organized crime has emerged as the dominant force behind cannabis in Canada,” one source texted to The Bureau. “Product from grow ops in the interior of B.C. gets consolidated at short-term rental houses in the Lower Mainland. Brokers bid on product and provide packaging services for online sales.”
The fact that United Front suspects identified in these Canadian investigations — including community figures tied to Beijing’s Vancouver consulate — were the same actors later scrutinized by RCMP in foreign police station probes aligns exactly with Anderson’s testimony that he believes the People’s Republic of China has direct access to U.S. marijuana operations through CCP diaspora-control networks. The Bureau’s reporting found corroborating evidence of those commanding networks in Vancouver, and the same patterns of control exist in Ontario as well.
Crime
U.S. Lawmakers Confront Chinese Government Conspiracy Behind Marijuana Boom

Officials testified that Chinese state-backed grow networks have created a $153 billion black market in Oklahoma alone, with suspicious activity reported near the nation’s largest munitions plant.
In chilling testimony to Congress, law enforcement officials warned that Chinese organized crime groups, operating with Beijing’s support, have transformed America’s marijuana boom into a $153 billion black-market industry in Oklahoma alone — an enterprise marked by execution-style killings and grow sites planted near sensitive U.S. military infrastructure.
Suggesting that this Chinese crime wave — largely unrecognized by the American public — is part of a trillion-dollar enterprise embedded in multiple states, legislators heard that the epicenters include Oklahoma, Maine, California, and Michigan. Thousands of Chinese-run farms have proliferated under lax state laws, with workers smuggled across the Mexican border and forced into slave-like conditions. Properties are acquired through real estate and legal fraud, while the operations feed a nationwide criminal network tied to the Chinese Communist Party, fentanyl trafficking, weapons smuggling, prostitution, and global money laundering.
The Subcommittee on Oversight, Investigations, and Accountability hearing — entitled “Invasion of the Homeland: How China is Using Illegal Marijuana to Build a Criminal Network Across America” — heard first from Donnie Anderson, Director of the Oklahoma Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs Control.
Anderson testified that Oklahoma’s loose medical marijuana framework inadvertently opened the door to transnational syndicates, fueling what he described as a $153 billion black-market industry. After more than three decades in public safety, he said, “the impact of black-market marijuana in Oklahoma is unlike anything I have encountered in my career. What is even more alarming is the growing influence and involvement of the Chinese Communist Party in this illicit industry.”
Anderson explained that Chinese nationals dominate the operations, concealing control through straw buyers, fraudulent licenses, and shell companies, often backed by attorneys, real estate agents, and consultants. He warned that the CCP also maintains control by leveraging encrypted apps. “Because WeChat is based in mainland China and encrypted, U.S. law enforcement cannot serve legal process or conduct electronic surveillance as we would with domestic platforms,” he said, “making them a major obstacle in our investigations.”
—
The human toll has been severe. In 2022, four Chinese nationals were executed and a fifth critically wounded at an illegal grow near Hennessey, Oklahoma. In July 2025, a Canadian national was murdered execution-style at a grow near Lake Thunderbird, in what investigators believe was a targeted robbery.
—
Anderson testified there is “no doubt” the Chinese government has shown interest in Oklahoma’s marijuana industry, citing documented financial transfers to the Bank of China and connections to Chinese state-owned businesses. He further warned that the CCP is leveraging its global influence apparatus to maintain control of these sites. “It is my belief that the CCP maintains access to the criminal marijuana site operations, particularly through its known practice of controlling expatriates via so-called ‘police stations,’” he told lawmakers.
He also highlighted national security risks from the physical location of these grows. In one ongoing investigation, the Department of Defense flagged suspicious activity at a marijuana grow run by an ethnic Chinese group next to the McAlester ammunition plant — the nation’s largest munitions facility, home to nearly one-third of the Pentagon’s stockpile and responsible for producing the MOAB bomb.
“Alarmingly, many of these grows are located near critical infrastructure, including military bases and pipelines,” Anderson added, warning that the proximity of foreign-run criminal operations to sensitive U.S. defense assets raised extraordinary risks.
Pressed by a Georgia legislator on why Americans remain unaware of this foreign crime wave, Anderson stressed the scale and sophistication of the operations. “When I say sophisticated, I mean at a level that law enforcement across the nation has never seen before — that complex, that layered. They hide themselves under many layers of LLCs and ownership structures,” he said.
As an example, Anderson described how Oklahoma registries might show a “John Smith” listed as the 75 percent owner of a marijuana business. “But when you dig in, you find John has never put up the $3,500 required to put his name on that license. The money comes from elsewhere, because Chinese nationals cannot directly do that in the state of Oklahoma. Meanwhile, the real organizers are often people in places like Flushing, New York, or California. They control operations across the United States but may never step foot in Oklahoma, except to occasionally visit.”
He added: “And this isn’t just an Oklahoma problem — it’s global. Chinese nationals are doing similar things in Latin America and the Caribbean, where they are building infrastructure, even roads, as part of larger investments. There’s always a reason behind it, and it connects back here to the United States. At its core, this is about national security, not just Oklahoma. And you’re right — most Americans have no idea this is happening.”
The panel’s second witness, legal scholar Paul Larkin, argued that Chinese organized crime groups cannot be separated from the state whose nationals dominate them. “The Chinese organized crime elements are working with the tacit agreement of the PRC and CCP,” he testified, stressing that U.S. conspiracy law provides the tools to prosecute these networks as such. He pointed to the long-established legal principle of willful blindness: juries are entitled to infer intent from patterns of conduct, even without express agreements.
One legislator asked: “Earlier this week, we discussed how foreign adversaries see U.S. agriculture not only as an economic target but also as a homeland security vulnerability. Mr. Larkin, how significant is land acquisition to the broader strategy of Chinese criminal groups operating in America?”
“First, it gives them property to grow and process illicit drugs, which can then serve as distribution hubs,” Larkin said. “But beyond that, certain sites — especially indoor grows — could also be leveraged for espionage. They could be positioned to monitor nearby American communities, military bases, or other sensitive facilities. That makes land acquisition not just a criminal concern, but a serious national security threat.”
If Larkin pressed the legal case for direct CCP accountability, the next witness, retired DEA executive Chris Urben, supplied the operational picture. He stressed that federal task forces must deploy the RICO Act — once used against the Italian mafia — to give under-resourced state agencies the support to combat what he called the new dominant crime element from China.
Drawing on his 24-year career, Urben testified that Chinese money laundering networks have quietly transformed the economics of the global drug trade, emerging around 2016 as the predominant launderers for criminal groups worldwide. China’s value to the Mexican cartels, he explained, goes beyond supplying synthetic opioid precursors; its laundering services have supercharged cartel profits, boosting proceeds by as much as five percent.
Asked by a legislator how China had seized global dominance in money laundering, Urben was blunt: the advantage is WeChat. Controlled by the Chinese Communist Party, the encrypted platform cannot be tapped by U.S. law enforcement.
“No other global crime network has a state-protected, trusted communications system like that,” Urben said. “WeChat needs to be disrupted. It cannot continue to function as a secure platform for criminal money laundering. There must be a state-level, legislated solution with the Chinese government — one that ends WeChat’s role in these networks.”
He warned that dismissing marijuana grows as “just weed cases” is a dangerous mistake. “They are harmful in and of themselves, and they also help fuel Chinese money laundering networks and other Chinese transnational crime-linked activity such as human trafficking, fentanyl distribution, and other dangerous and harmful activities.” Such cases, he urged, must be treated as RICO-prosecutable money-laundering conspiracies tied directly into the global fentanyl and trafficking economy.
At the outset of the hearing, Chairman Josh Brecheen of Oklahoma framed the issue in broader terms. “We are here today to talk about an important issue, significant national security implications,” he said, making clear that the problem was not confined to his home state but stretched “to Maine, California, and all across our homeland.”
Brecheen laid out the scale of what lawmakers were confronting: thousands of Chinese-run marijuana grow operations, not isolated in backwoods counties but dispersed nationwide — embedded in tribal lands, national parks, and suburban communities. He stressed that these are not simple drug cases. “Many Chinese illegal operations serve as fronts for a wider criminal enterprise, including human and drug trafficking, prostitution, weapons smuggling, and money laundering,” he said. These networks, often with direct or indirect ties to the CCP, have built a sophisticated underground criminal infrastructure in the United States.
The national security implications, he warned, were profound. “We’ve enabled these foreign organizations with potential links to the CCP to build up a sophisticated network throughout the United States, which facilitates a wide range of other criminal activity and presents a national security threat.”
Some of the foreign nationals running these sites, Brecheen added, are more heavily armed than the sheriffs and deputies who might stumble onto them.
After sketching the scope of the threat, Brecheen turned to “paint the picture” of how the operations unfold on the ground. He described how groups of Chinese nationals, affiliated with transnational criminal organizations, cross the southern border and fan into rural states like Oklahoma. With them are vulnerable workers, lured under the false promise of legal employment. Once in place, the crime groups recruit a local resident, offering several hundred thousand dollars to use their name and identity to purchase farmland. It is a proposition the resident “cannot refuse.”
The arrangement moves quickly. Within days, a seemingly ordinary property is converted into a sprawling grow site. Workers are forced into 14-hour shifts, confined to cramped quarters with little water or ventilation. Toxic pesticides — banned in the United States — are burned on-site, creating fumes that poison both the laborers and the surrounding environment. Armed guards oversee the operation, ensuring obedience. The marijuana produced is high-potency and contaminated, yet within weeks it is trafficked across the country, from Oklahoma to New York, feeding an illicit market worth many billions.
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