A profile of Montreal's number 1 thug:
Ducarme Joseph is Montreal's No. 1 gangster: cops
Survivor of FlawNego shooting is 'a big  hero among the Haitian criminal element'
By SUE MONTGOMERY, Gazette Justice  Reporter
March 27, 2010
MONTREAL – He goes by Kenny, Ducarmel, K, Kentucky, King Kenny and  various other handles, and according to police, who've known him for  more than two decades, he's the most influential street gang member in  Montreal.
But he's also an involved father of at least five  children, and is a familiar face in the neighbourhood where they attend  school.
Ducarme Joseph, which is his real name, has been  officially advised three times by police that there are contracts out on  his life, but the 41-year-old has laughed them off, saying he has no  fear.
"Oh yeah, Kenny is the real deal," said one lawyer who  represents organized crime members. "And now he's a big hero among the  Haitian criminal element in Montreal."
Joseph has boasted that he  never pays for anything, once pouring the remains of two champagne  bottles on the ground, and he punched out a tow-truck driver who tried  to tow his Porsche when it was illegally parked downtown.
He has  also bragged to police that he knows people in politics who are more  powerful than the Montreal police chief and boasted that no one would  ever put him in jail.
But he's there now, after being picked up  following a dramatic daytime shooting in which he was apparently the  target last week at his clothing boutique on St. Jacques St. in Old  Montreal.
He is being detained for breaking his bail conditions  and will stay behind bars until his trial June 4 for assaulting the  doorman at the flashy Buonanotte restaurant on St. Laurent Blvd. Another  trial for possession of a silencer is set for June 9.
But very  little personal information is known about the man who started the gang  known as the 67s, named for the bus line that runs through the St.  Michel district.
It appears he has ruled with an iron fist,  establishing himself as a major player in the lucrative drug and  prostitution business in Montreal, filling the shoes left empty after  the dismantling of the Hells Angels and the imprisonment of reputed  Mafia boss Vito Rizzuto.
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At a small triplex on  Shelly St. in St. Michel, the woman renting the downstairs apartment  opened her door just a crack for reporters and nervously denied knowing  anything about her landlady, Joseph's mother.
Soon after she  closed her door on a journalist, a man, sharply dressed in a pink shirt,  well-pressed trousers, a long coat and wearing sunglasses, entered the  apartment upstairs, where all the blinds were closed. He opened the door  a crack when the doorbell rang, but quickly closed it, saying,
"I  don't want to talk to you!"
Shortly after Joseph's arrest last  week, a support group for him sprang up on Facebook, albeit with only  two members.
The founder, Marie-Claude Dupuis-Lacourse, said she  knew Joseph's eldest child, a 16-year-old son. She agreed to chat online  about the mysterious gang leader later in the evening, but never  appeared online again.
The other member of the group didn't  respond to messages.
What little is known is gleaned from police  reports based on informants and undercover cops.
The portrait that  emerges is one of a man who rules through intimidation and fear,  threatening those who get in his way with retaliation.
And it  seems to work.
Several times, witnesses have failed to show up in  court to testify against Joseph, according to a report prepared by  Sgt.-Det. Jean-Claude Gauthier, a member of the Montreal police criminal  intelligence unit and a street-gang expert.
Gauthier prepared the  report after last week's shooting in preparation for Joseph's bail  hearing, and it charts his criminal path, which started in 1987.
In  2008, a charge against him of assault causing bodily harm was dropped  after the victim and witnesses didn't show up in court.
Once,  outside a bar on Park Ave., Joseph stabbed two people, according to the  police report, one in the neck and one in the shoulder.
One victim  identified Joseph in a series of police mugshots but said he didn't  want to file a complaint against him because he was afraid. Although  police still filed charges, the victim never showed up in court, the  report says.
At an event at the posh W Hotel on Square Victoria,  Joseph and about 15 members of his entourage showed up and tried to  muscle their way into the popular club in the hotel lobby, but the  employee who reported the incident to police didn't want to file an  official complaint for fear of reprisals.
The report says Joseph  buys loyalty from his entourage by offering fellow gang members a choice  between a Hummer and a Jaguar, making membership attractive.
The  day following the shooting in his clothing store, Montreal police  arrested Joseph after he left the Notre Dame de Grâce office of  construction magnate Tony Magi - not far from the site on Upper  Lachine Rd. where Nick Rizzuto Jr., the son of Vito Rizzuto, was slain  in December.
Joseph has been mentioned in police requests for  search warrants associated with Magi, including one in November that  said Magi hired Joseph in July to collect outstanding loans.
In  exchange for his services, Magi, who has no criminal record, set Joseph  up in a downtown condominium, according to a search warrant.
Joseph's  violent streak has been known to police since Jan. 8, 1989, when he  lured a 12-year-old into prostitution and sexually assaulted her. He  pleaded guilty to the assault and was sentenced to eight months in jail  plus two years probation.
In the early hours of May 29, 2000,  Ducarme kicked, punched and choked a tow-truck operator at Drummond St.  and de Maisonneuve Blvd. after he tried to tow a Porsche that was  illegally parked in a private lot, Gauthier's report says. Joseph was  acquitted of assault in that case in 2004.
Between April and June  1998, there were several incidents between Joseph and his  then-girlfriend. In early April, Joseph tried to strangle her and  threatened her with a revolver.
On May 21 of that year, he tried  to push her out of a car that was travelling at 180 kilometres an hour.  He hit her, threatened to kill her and broke into her house several  times, the report says. Joseph was found guilty of uttering death  threats against the woman and was sentenced to 15 days in jail and one  year probation or a $100 fine. Ten other counts against him in that case  were withdrawn.
(His current girlfriend, Cheryl Bailey, a  designer associated with his boutique, was released on bail Thursday  after agreeing not to contact Joseph, except to discuss emergencies with  their children.)
Those who get on his wrong side appear to be  dealt with quickly.
Near closing time on March 3, 2003, at Club  Vatican on Crescent St., 67-member Richmond Wilkens, alias Scoobidoo,  was shot twice. Many sources said it was Joseph - whose fingerprints  were found on a drink next to the victim - who shot him, the police  report says.
In July 2003, gang member Patrick Annibal Thomas,  alias Polo, was killed by a fellow gang member in what police say was an  internal hit.
What's clear, police say, is that Joseph went  head-to-head with the Hells Angels, in a bid to gain control of the drug  trade. On March 24, 1999, Joseph's car was found riddled with bullets  in a St. Léonard garage.
Joseph and fellow gang members  Jean-Raymond Claude and Jean-Louis Agabus were involved in stealing the  drug stash of the Hells Angel who shot up Joseph's car as it drove  through Montreal.
Soon afterward, Agabus was killed in Haiti on  orders of the Hells, according to Gauthier's report.
After the  most recent assassination attempt on Joseph, in which 50 bullets were  fired inside his clothing boutique, killing his bodyguard, Peter  Christopoulos, 27, and store manager Jean Gaston, 60, the gang leader  allegedly sought out the skills of a hitman.
Police officers began  tailing him after a source spotted Joseph in his old neighbourhood of  St. Michel, talking to someone nicknamed "Gunman," Gauthier testified in  Quebec Court during Joseph's bail hearing.
When police arrested  Joseph the day after the shooting, they found a sketch of a man on a  paper with the words: "Are there photos of the guys to be eliminated."
"He  survived the attack and will come out of this stronger than ever,"  Gauthier testified.