According to the police 18 people have been arrested and
six more have been declared wanted. They face 640 criminal charges.
Police allege that the group’s two ringleaders were
Joseph Mensah, 63 — whose charges include 73 counts of conspiracy — and Ehimen
Ojemolon, 28, both of whom have previous convictions for similar thefts
A total of 200 vehicles were seized in containers headed
for Nigeria and Ghana. The estimated value of those vehicles is $11 million, www.630ched.com reported.
Some of the vehicles were being sold new in Canada for
between $60,000 and $80,000.
The vehicles were recovered from shipping containers with
assistance from authorities in Spain and Belgium, said CBC News.
According to CBC, Toronto police told a press conference
Friday morning that thieves stole the cars according to a “shopping list”
handed down to them from higher ranking members in the ring, acquired vehicle
identification numbers (VINs) and key codes from the Service Ontario employee
and had keys cut by a locksmith, who was also arrested.
The cars were then taken to shipping yards in Montreal
and Halifax and arrived in Nigeria and Ghana within days, where they sold for
roughly half their market value, police said.
Police said the investigation, nicknamed Project CBG,
began in the spring of 2015 after they noticed a string of
luxury vehicle thefts in and around Toronto. When they began
investigating, they noticed that the thefts weren’t one-offs, but rather part
of an intricate web, they said.
“We had to decide as a police service and with our
partner agencies whether we deal with the thefts at hand or we take the head of
the snake off — so we went for the head of the snake,” Staff
Insp. Mike Earl said
Police say the thefts accounted for about 10 per
cent of all vehicles stolen in Toronto in 2015, totalling
approximately $30 million dollars. Some vehicles were stolen from as far
as Hamilton, Waterloo and Guelph, Ont.
Not all the vehicles were destined for West Africa.
Police say some remained in Ontario, where they may have been sold to
unsuspecting customers with new VINs.
Police say they are working with counterparts in the
United States who have experience investigating crimes linked to Black
Axe. The crime ring operates internationally and has been linked to money
laundering scams of up to $5 billion dollars, police said.
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