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Broken Tooth a living reminder of Macau's vicious past

hokkien

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20121126_124811_afp_brokentooth.jpg

Monday, Nov 26, 2012
MACAU - The release from jail next month of a triad boss known as Broken Tooth is fuelling speculation that the Chinese gambling playground of Macau could be on the verge of a return to the vicious gang violence of its colonial past.

Wan Kuok-koi will walk free from prison on December 1 having served 14 years and seven months for offences committed as the enforcer of the 14K triad, the largest organised crime outfit in the then-Portuguese colony in the mid-1990s.

Newspapers in Macau and nearby Hong Kong have run stories with headlines like "Crime Lord Returns", while the New York Times has asked whether the recent bashing of an old Wan rival meant the southern Chinese city is on the verge of a "new gang war".

Experts agree that Wan's reappearance will rekindle memories of some of Macau's darkest days, when his men fought a violent street "war" against their enemies from the Soi Fong gang in the years before the 1999 handover to China.

But few pay any heed to his reported jail-cell mutterings about reaping revenge upon his old foes, or fear a new cycle of triad violence.

"The Portuguese government was almost leaving and at that time, the public order, everything went very bad, the triads' activity was very rampant," Macau University Professor of Criminology Jianhong Liu recalled.

"After the handover, everything has changed sharply... It is hard to make statements saying there is no triad activity in Macau. But overall, I think those activities, even if they are there, are contained very well."

Macau's casino sector has been opened up to foreign competition and taken from the smoky backrooms of Broken Tooth's day, when gambling tycoon Stanley Ho ruled the roost.

The semi-autonomous territory in the Pearl River delta now earns five times the revenue of Las Vegas.

US operators such as Sheldon Adelson's Las Vegas Sands and Steve Wynn's Wynn Resorts have entered the market, helping to transform a swampy area on the outskirts of the old city into the world's premier gambling resort destination.

"Things have changed dramatically. It is not possible for Macau to go back," Liu told AFP, adding that the local police were now better equipped and more closely integrated with their counterparts in Hong Kong and the mainland.

Most importantly, there was a "much stronger political will to combat any crime, any disturbance" that threatened social order and Macau's reputation as a safe and legitimate place for Chinese gamblers to have a flutter.

"There must be some triad activity, certainly. But they are not expanding as people might imagine. I think it's not expanding at any scale," he said.

"A legal void"

Risk consultant Steve Vickers, the former head of the Hong Kong police criminal intelligence bureau, agrees that the old guard like Broken Tooth no longer pose a significant danger.

But he is far less sanguine about triad activity in general, seeing its reach extending in step with the boom in the city's legitimate casino business.

Indeed, he believes Macau - the only city in China where casino gambling is legal - is riddled to its core with organised crime.

"The problems in Macau are very deep and go well beyond just a few low-end desperados," he told AFP.

"Wan Kuok-koi was a particularly violent gangster who exploited the weak government situation at the time - that time has gone, his time has gone.

It's a completely different security situation now.

"The more difficult, pressing problem is the almost total control of junket operators by triad societies."

Independent but hugely important players in Macau's US$35 billion (S$42.80 billion) casino business, junket operators arrange gambling trips for mainland Chinese high rollers, providing everything from call girls to money transfers.

Operating in what Vickers calls a "legal void", the junkets also have the job of collecting their clients' debts in exchange for a healthy cut from the casinos.

They act, in effect, as an "informal financial system".

"The Macau gaming business is underpinned by what is essentially illegal currency movement from the mainland," he explained, referring to laws prohibiting Chinese nationals from moving more than US$5,000 a day into the territory.

"The Macau junket model appears to guarantee criminal participation in the Macau gaming sector."

Macau lawmaker Au Kam-san, of the New Macau Association party, acknowledges that "all the gangs have established their turfs in the respective casinos".

But he says this should not necessarily be a problem as long as nothing happens to rock the boat.

"I don't foresee a return of the violent past unless the gaming market shrinks dramatically and the pie is not big enough to be shared," he said.

"The triad gangs in Macau have been around for a long time. As long as they can make their living from the casinos, they will not create a public disturbance."
 

hokkien

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Wan Kuok-koi (尹國駒; Cantonese: Wan Gwok-keui; Mandarin: Yǐn Guójū), popularly known as Broken Tooth Koi (崩牙駒; Cantonese: bung nga keui; Mandarin: bēng yá jū) was, until his arrest, the leader of the Macau branch of the 14K Triad.

BackgroundWan had a tough childhood, growing up in the slums of Macau and fighting for his life on the street, before rising through the ranks of the 14K. His rise was accelerated by the arrival of another gangster, Ng Wai, whom he began to work for. As Wan's position in the 14K got higher, Wai asked him to 'eliminate' his boss, Mo-Ding Ping, an assignment which Wan accepted. This provoked a year-long turf war, finally coming to a close when Ping had to flee Macau to avoid a murder charge.

[edit] Gang war with former associateHowever, tension between the two gangsters grew as Wai grew wary of Wan's high-profile persona. Teaming up with rival triad group the Shui Fong, a vicious turf war broke out in 1996 and 1997. In early 1997, an unsigned letter was sent to several newspapers in the area. It said: "Warning: From this day on it is forbidden to mention Broken Tooth Koi in the press; otherwise bullets will have no eyes, and knives and bullets will have no feelings."

In 1997 Wan briefly fled Macau to avoid two arrest warrants, one from a new anti-triad law enacted in Macau, and one for drug-trafficking from China. However in August a Portuguese judge cleared Wan of all charges, and unexpectedly retired and moved back to Portugal the very next day.

Wan then proceeded to attack Wai in public, putting up posters claiming he was a drug trafficker and declaring that anyone visiting Wai's casinos would become his enemy. Ultimately, Wan amassed enough power and influence and took over Wai's rackets completely. By this time he was earning $6 million a month from his legal gambling establishments.

[edit] Involvement in the film industry and arrestIn the autumn of 1997, Wan approached Hong Kong movie producer Henry Fong Ping to produce a film based on his life. The result was the 1998 movie Casino (aka Ho Kong Fung Wan) starring Simon Yam as Giant, a triad boss living the high life in the Macau underworld. Wan agreed to extensive research meetings to make the film as accurate as possible, as well as using his influence on Macau to help the crew film.

One of his most outrageous stunts was to close down the Macau-Taipa Bridge for some hours to allow filming of a crucial scene in the movie. The producers had asked the Macau Government for permission to film on the bridge, closing it to traffic, but permission was denied. However, Wan wanted the scene to be shot anyway so he closed traffic from both sides of the bridge without any warning and the scene was filmed in this manner. Traffic to and from Macau was, because of this, halted for around two hours. No police intervention was made or any other measures by the Macau Government were taken to reopen the bridge to normal traffic flow on what was then the only link between the Macau mainland and Taipa-Coloane.

A week before opening night, as he watched his own movie Casino, Wan was arrested and charged with illegal gambling, loan-sharking, criminal association, and attempted murder of the chief of police. In November 1999, in a landmark trial, he was convicted and jailed, along with eight associates including his brother Wan Kuok-hung. Wan was sentenced to 15 years in prison. All assets of the nine were confiscated.[1] His jail term was later reduced to 13 years and 10 months.[2]

Wan is scheduled to be released from prison on December 1, 2012 and is planning to re-enter the casino junkets business.[2][3]

[edit] Private and public lifeMuch like Nicky Barnes and Al Capone, Wan kept a very stylish public appearance, driving expensive sports cars and wearing expensive suits and jewellery. Prior to his prison sentenced he went through three marriages and has fathered six children.

As a result of his gangster lifestyle he has also acquired a number of wounds. He has been shot twice and has had his arms badly mangled by meat cleavers, and as a result cannot straighten his two middle fingers.
 

hokkien

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
20121201_141249_20121201-brokentooth.jpg

Saturday, Dec 01, 2012
MACAU - A Macau triad boss known as "Broken Tooth" walked free from jail Saturday after more than 14 years behind bars for heading a gang blamed for a string of murders and bombings in the former Portuguese colony.

The release of Wan Kuok-koi has triggered tightened security in the world's biggest gaming hub although experts say it is unlikely Macau will witness a return to the violence seen before the city returned to Chinese rule in 1999.

Wan, wearing a white T-shirt, walked out from a high-security prison and was collected by two men - one reported to be his brother - in a white car just before 7:00 am, an AFP photographer saw.

Now aged 57, he smiled but did not gesture to waiting journalists.

Wan was leader of the 14k triad, the largest organised crime outfit in Macau in the mid-1990s, and was jailed over offences linked to loan sharking, money laundering and triad activities.

At his trial, police said his gang had been involved in a string of murders, bombings, drive-by shootings and kidnappings that plagued the colony in the run-up to the handover to Chinese rule.

He stood trial with nine other gang members facing a raft of charges, among them membership of a triad society, illicit gambling, extortion, drug trafficking, smuggling and illegal possession of firearms.

His release has rekindled memories of Macau's darker days, but a lawyer representing Wan, said he intends to lead a quiet life.

"The only thing he wants is for people to forget him," Pedro Leal told the South China Morning Post.

"In recent weeks he's been on the cover of many magazines and they've all talked about his past. All he wants is to be left in peace. He's going to lead a quiet life from now on," the lawyer said.

During Wan's time in prison, Macau has been transformed into the world's top gaming destination after the casino sector that was once monopolised by tycoon Stanley Ho was opened up to foreign competition in 2002.

The semi-autonomous territory, the only place in China where casino gambling is legal, now earns five times the gaming revenue of Las Vegas.

Six firms are licenced to operate casinos in Macau.
 
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