WHO IS RICHARD GOODRIDGE?

Nicknamed Black Jew

During the 1990s, member of the Scorpions, linked to the Rockers, the late Hells Angels club-school.
During the biker war, he had been seen in a convoy in which was Maurice Boucher.
In the mid-2000s, he founded a street gang called 67 with the late caïd Ducarme Joseph.
The two men subsequently fell out and the police suspected Goodridge of having played a role in the attack on Joseph in the latter's clothing store in Old Montreal in March 2010. However, Goodridge did not. never been charged in connection with this matter.
During the 1990s and 2000s, Goodridge was the victim of at least four attempted murders, including one in which a projectile severed his finger in Toronto.
Although well known to police officers, Richard Goodridge has little criminal record.
He was pulled over in a car with a gun in Toronto in 2004.
In Quebec, he was convicted of two counts of gun possession and credit card theft. He was acquitted or had the judicial process stopped in several other cases.
Last December, he was charged with assault and assault with a weapon in an event that occurred last October in Laval. He has pleaded not guilty and the proceedings are still ongoing.
OTHER EMERGING INTEREST GROUPS

In addition to the Moors, police and correctional officers are interested in two other groups that emerged in 2020 and 2021, the Vikings and the Red Power Crew.
Members of the Vikings, including rappers who post videos on YouTube, wear clothing displaying the group's name, along with the letters GDR, for "street gang."
Police say they are linked to the Hells Angels and would not hesitate to use violence.
We would find them everywhere in Quebec, but they are more present in the regions of Montreal, Gatineau, Laval and Granby.
They sell clothes with their effigy on social networks or in a room in Granby.
The Red Power Crew would form a clique affiliated with the Hells Angels. Individuals wearing their clothes were seen at the funeral of Hells Angel Paul Magnan, which took place in Saint-Ubalde, in the Capitale-Nationale region, on May 1.