十四K | |
Founded | 1945 |
---|---|
Founder | Kot Siu-wong |
Founding location | Guangzhou, China |
Years active | 1945–present |
Territory | Hong Kong, Macau, China, and Chinese communities globally |
Membership | 20,000[1] |
Criminal activities | Drug trafficking, counterfeiting, illegal gambling, bookmaking, arms trafficking, arson, fraud, human trafficking, identity theft, money laundering, extortion, murder, illegal immigration, kidnapping, hacking, racketeering, home invasion robberies[2] |
Allies | Ping On[3] Snakeheads[4] Wah Ching[5] Tiny Rascal Gang[6] |
Rivals | Ah Kong Big Circle Gang Sun Yee On Wo On Lok Wo Shing Wo |
The 14K (十四K) is a triad group based in Hong Kong but active internationally. It is the second largest triad group in the world with around 20,000 members split into thirty subgroups. They are the main rival of the Sun Yee On, which is the largest triad.[7]
Criminal focus
The 14K is responsible for large-scale drug trafficking around the world, most of it heroin and opium from China or Southeast Asia. This is their primary business in terms of generating income, but they are also involved in illegal gambling, loan sharking, money laundering, contract murder, arms trafficking, prostitution, human trafficking, extortion, counterfeiting and, to a lesser extent, home invasion robberies.[8][9]
History
The 14K was formed by Kuomintang Lieutenant-General Kot Siu-wong in Guangzhou, China in 1945 as an anti-Communist action group.[10] However, the group relocated to Hong Kong in 1949 when the Kuomintang fled from the Communists following the Chinese Civil War.[11] Originally there were fourteen members who were part of the Kuomintang, hence the name 14K. However, other sources[1][12] say 14 stands for the road number of a former headquarters and K stands for Kowloon.
Compared with other triad societies, the 14K is one of the largest and most violent Hong Kong-based triad societies, and its members appear to be more loosely connected. 14K factional violence is out of control because no dragonhead is able to govern all factions of 14K worldwide.[6]
While Hong Kong's 14K triad gang dominates its traditional areas of operation and has expanded far beyond the former British colony, its focus remains Sinocentric. Hong Kong triads, including the 14K, have also expanded their activities in mainland China; a key motivation for members to cross into China is to avoid police security and anti-gang crackdowns in Hong Kong.[6][13]
During the 1956 riots, the 14K Triad confronted the colonial government at the time. The riot caused 60 deaths and over 400 hospitalizations. After the riot, the colonial government would then arrest over 10,000 14K members with 600 of them being deported to Taiwan. The government would then create the Triad Societies Bureau in order to assist law enforcement in combating triad activities.[14]
In 1997, there were a number of gang-related attacks that left 14 people dead. Under Wan Kuok-koi (nicknamed "Broken Tooth Koi", 崩牙駒), the 14K was being challenged by the smaller Shui Fong Triad. The next year, a gunman believed to be connected to the local 14K killed a Portuguese national and wounded another at a pavement café in Macau. In 1999, a Portuguese court convicted 45-year-old mob boss Broken Tooth Koi on various criminal charges and sentenced him to 15 years' imprisonment. His 14K gang was suspected of drive-by shootings, car bombings and attempted assassinations. Seven of his associates received lesser sentences. Since the crackdown in Macau, the 14K triad resurfaced in various cities such as Los Angeles, San Francisco and Chicago in the United States; Vancouver, Calgary and Toronto in Canada; Sydney in Australia; and also the UK.[15]
Structure and membership
Structure
The 14K Triad is essentially just made up of a number of sub-triads that are only symbolically part of the triad through having similar organizational structure and personal networks. They are decentralized and highly flexible with no overarching leader that commands the Triad as a whole.[16]
Traditional Triad Structure goes as follows: The leader of a triad is known as the 489 or the San Chu, the second in command is usually split up into two different roles called the Vanguard or the Incense master with the role number of 438. The Vanguard is in command of recruiting while the Incense master leads the ceremonial rituals. Next in the chain of command are the Red Poles or 426s who are the enforcers for the triad, the 415 or White Paper Fans who handle administrative work, and the 432 or Straw Handles who acts as the mediator between other triads. Regular members with no leadership roles are just called soldiers or 49s.[5]
Recruiting
The typical target for recruitment is the youth. In California there have been cases of 14K members recruiting teens in Asian densely populated areas such as San Francisco or Orange County. In Hong Kong, 14K members would usually recruit teens in poorer areas such as Kowloon, Kwun Tong, or Tuen Mun while also targeting certain schools.[17]
Role of women
Women have a relatively small role in the 14K Triad, as it is a male dominant society.[18]
International activity
Africa
South Africa
Two 14K groups, 14K-Hau and 14K-Ngai,[19] are among seven Chinese criminal organizations operating in South Africa, represented in both Cape Town and Johannesburg, specializing primarily in extortion and abalone trafficking (in 2000, the estimated gross income from the illegal exportation of abalone to Hong Kong was US$32 million).[20]
Asia
Japan
The National Police Agency stated in 1997 that the 14K had been expanding its operations in Japan since the 1980s and had branches in Fukuoka, Osaka, Sapporo and Tokyo, each with at least 1,000 members. The 14K in Japan has been involved in counterfeiting credit cards and has cooperated with yakuza groups in the importation large numbers of illegal Chinese migrants.[20]
Philippines
The 14K triad has been involved in smuggling arms to Abu Sayyaf and has also reportedly cooperated with the Islamic group in laundering and transmitting ransom money, taking a percentage of the ransoms in exchange for their assistance.[20]
Thailand
The 14K is the largest Chinese crime syndicate operating in Thailand. A haul of 100 kilograms (220 pounds) of heroin bound for the United States confiscated during an operation in Bangkok in January 2000 was attributed to the 14K. In addition to heroin, the 14K is also involved in the smuggling and sale of the amphetamine ya ba; using Bangkok as a commercial and trafficking base, they transport and distribute the Burmese-manufactured drug to the Thai narcotics industry. The influx of other Chinese gangs and syndicates into Thailand has led to a series of turf wars between the 14K and smaller rival groups, fighting over territory in both Thailand and sections of neighbouring Cambodia.[20]
Europe
Belgium and the Netherlands
The 14K triad has been active in the Netherlands since as early as the 1970s, when members of the gang controlled Chinese restaurants in numerous cities in the country.[21] Dutch police authorities believe that the 14K took full control of heroin importation into the Benelux countries in 1987. The line established by the 14K is a direct connection with Hong Kong via Bangkok, the chief transit point. In the Netherlands, the 14K is divided into seven-to-ten-person cells (mainly in Amsterdam) that function as relay posts for moving heroin elsewhere in Europe. However, authorities believe that Belgium now plays an equally important role; heroin laboratories that were discovered in the Netherlands have been reassembled in Flanders, with strong bases in Brussels and Antwerp. A foothold in Belgium also has brought the narcotics traffickers closer to the money-laundering banks of Luxembourg. In 1998, the chief of Belgium's security agency stated of Chinese criminal organizations in the country: "They include several hundred Asiatics and have a strong familial characteristic. Their activities are very diverse, also including [besides narcotics] gambling and illegal workshops. They also are developing money laundering, both small-scale (restaurants, etc.) and large-scale such as real estate and even industrial projects." For example, the 14K controls illegal gambling casinos in Antwerp. Belgium and the Netherlands form two corners of a triangular narcotics route of the 14K Triad; the third corner is Paris.[20]
France
The 14K is among the leading triads in France, where it has cooperated with Turkish, Albanian and Nigerian crime groups in heroin trafficking.[21]
Ireland
The first reported triad activity in Ireland came in July 1979 when the 14K attempted a takeover of a Dublin-based Chinese gang's protection rackets which led to a deadly gang fight resulting in two deaths. Tony Lee, allegedly a high-ranking member of the 14K's Cork branch, was killed along with Michael Tsin of the rival Dublin faction.[22] In August 1983, twelve members of the 14K were arrested in Limerick in connection with attempting to extort money from the owners of Chinese restaurant in the city. Nine of the men were believed to have come over from the UK. During the operation, a hoard of weapons including knives, pickaxes, bars and clubs were found.[23] The 14K and other triads gained a firm foothold in Ireland in the 1980s when large numbers of Chinese restaurants opened in Cork and Dublin.[20] The triad association is still very much active but now operate in smaller groups run by members and distant relatives of the Nam and Tsin family. Underbosses, bosses and high ranking soldiers are believed to have "14K" tattooed on them using ink mixed with blood that's been blessed by Kuang Kong. This dilutes the ink and gives a faded effect which symbolises life in purgatory.
Leaked diplomatic cables obtained by the Irish Independent in 2011 included intelligence reports by the Garda Síochána (Irish police) on Chinese organized crime in the country, specifically the activities of the 14K and their rival Wo Shing Wo. The reported criminal activities of the triads included the trafficking of women and children from China into Ireland, involvement in casinos, and money laundering. Gardaí also reported a great deal of interaction between the Chinese gangs operating in Ireland and Scotland.[24]
Spain
United Kingdom
The 14K was the first triad society to arrive in the United Kingdom, emerging from the Chinese communities of London, Birmingham, Liverpool and Manchester during the post-war period. Although nearly all triad groups operating in the UK at the time were affiliated with the 14K, each operated independently of the Hong Kong 14K and generally viewed each other as rivals. Other triad societies did not arrive in the country until 1964 when the Labour Party encouraged large-scale immigration, bringing a huge influx of Hong Kong diaspora.[25]
While active predominantly in Birmingham and the north of England,[26] the 14K also has a strong presence in London where they have been involved in turf wars with their rival Wo Shing Wo as well as Fujianese snakehead gangs.[27] On 3 June 2003, alleged 14K member You Yi He, who was the subject of a police investigation into people-smuggling at the time of his death, was shot and killed in London's Chinatown.[28][29] The 14K has also battled Wo Shing Wo for control of rackets in Glasgow.[30] Additionally, the two groups have also cooperated in cigarette smuggling in Scotland.[31] In July 2003, 14K members were ambushed in a machete attack on Glasgow's Sauchiehall Street by Wo Shing Wo in a dispute over the control of protection rackets.[32]
North America
Canada
The 14K has been among the most active triad societies in Canada,[20] maintaining a chapter in Toronto.[33] Initially, the group was made up of members from Hong Kong but later recruited from the Vietnamese community, while also absorbing the remnants of the defunct Ghost Shadows. In 1988, the Criminal Intelligence Service Canada (CISC) estimated the number of members in the 14K's Toronto branch at 150, with around 40 criminally active in heroin trafficking, migrant smuggling, theft and extortion.[34] The Sam Gor syndicate is composed of 14K and other Triads and has Canadian roots in and leadership from the Big Circle Boys.[35][36]
Mexico
Intelligence reports from the Attorney General of Mexico and the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency have indicated that the 14K triad is among the suppliers of raw materials used in the manufacturing of methamphetamine to the Sinaloa Cartel.[37]
United States
The 14K has a presence in New York, California, Chicago, Boston and Houston.[20] The 14K has had connections to the leadership of the Ping On triad in Boston[3] and Wah Ching in San Francisco.[5]
High-ranking 14K member Hui Sin Ma aka Frank Ma, who was born in China but illegally immigrated to the U.S. in the 1980s, began his criminal career in Boston and San Francisco before eventually settling in Queens, New York where he became associated with the On Leong Tong and their youth gang the Ghost Shadows, as well as the Hip Sing Tong along with their youth gang the Flying Dragons. In Queens, he oversaw heroin dealing, illegal gambling, a luxury car-theft ring, extortion rackets and immigrant smuggling. Ma ordered numerous killings to protect his criminal enterprise. In 1996, he fled to China to avoid detection by police, but later returned to the U.S. and was arrested in 2003. In 2010, he was convicted of murder and narcotics charges and sentenced to life in prison. Frank Ma was described by law enforcement as "one of the last of the Asian godfathers."[38]
Oceania
Australia
The 14K is among the main groups responsible for meth trafficking in Australia.[20]
New Zealand
New Zealand police have stated that the 14K is the most powerful Asian crime syndicate operating in the country, where they are involved in the importation of pseudoephedrine (a chemical precursor in the illicit manufacture of methamphetamine) from Hong Kong and mainland China which they sell to local drug trafficking gangs, the Head Hunters and the Hells Angels.[39]
In August 2008, the 14K was allegedly involved in a high-profile kidnapping of a Chinese family near Papatoetoe, Auckland. The plan was to demand a ransom, but they were found before the money was paid.[40]
See also
References
- 1 2 Nepstad, Peter (15 March 2001). "Triads". The Illuminated Lantern. Archived from the original on 2 October 2021.
- ↑ McGivering, Jill (17 December 1999). "Cracking down on the triads". BBC News. Retrieved 13 February 2015.
- 1 2 Berdik, Chris (15 May 2006). "In the Shadow of the Dragon". Boston.
- ↑ Flood, John J. & McGough, Jim. "Asian Street Gangs and Organized Crime in Focus". IPSN.org. Archived from the original on 4 February 2012. Retrieved 13 February 2015.
- 1 2 3 Criminal Division, U.S. Department of Justice (February 1988). "Report on Asian Organized Crime" (PDF). National Criminal Justice Reference Service.
- 1 2 3 Wang, Peng (1 November 2011). "Divide and Conquer: Factionalised Triad Gang Spreads its Wings". Jane's Intelligence Review. 23 (11): 46–49.
- ↑ Le Blanc, Annie. "Chinese Triads (Page 1)". Leixiaojie. Archived from the original on 26 October 2009. Retrieved 18 August 2009.
- ↑ Le Blanc, Annie. "Chinese Triads (Page 2)". Leixiaojie. Archived from the original on 25 October 2009. Retrieved 5 February 2019.
- ↑ Le Blanc, Annie. "Chinese Triads (Page 3)". Leixiaojie. Archived from the original on 26 October 2009. Retrieved 5 February 2019.
- ↑ "14-K Triad". Terrorism Research & Analysis Consortium (TRAC). Retrieved 22 November 2018.
- ↑ Prunkun, Henry (2007). "14K (Hong Kong)". In Shanty, Frank G. & Mishra, Patit Paban (eds.). Organized Crime: From Trafficking to Terrorism, Volume 1. Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO. p. 466. ISBN 978-1-57607-337-7.
- ↑ Hays, Jeffrey (April 2010). "Triads and organized crime in China". Facts and Details. Archived from the original on 12 December 2010.
- ↑ Varese, Federico (2011). Mafias on the Move: How Organized Crime Conquers New Territories. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-1-4008-3672-7.
- ↑ Wang, Peng; Kwok, Sharon Ingrid (30 March 2022). "Hong Kong Triads: The Historical and Political Evolution of Urban Criminal Polity, 1842–2020". Urban History: 1–23. doi:10.1017/s0963926821001024. ISSN 0963-9268. S2CID 247874529.
- ↑ Kim, Hannah. "The Origin of Asian and Chinese Gangs in Chicago's Chinatown (Page 4)". Gang Research.net. Archived from the original on 16 July 2015. Retrieved 13 February 2015.
- ↑ Chu, Yiu Kong (March 2005). "Hong Kong triads after 1997". Trends in Organized Crime. 8 (3): 5–12. doi:10.1007/s12117-005-1033-9. ISSN 1084-4791. S2CID 144173297.
- ↑ Attorney General's Youth Gang Task Force (1981). Report on youth gang violence in California (Report). Sacramento, CA: California Department of Justice.
- ↑ Finckenauer, James O.; Chin, Ko-lin (December 2006). "Asian transnational organized crime and its impact on the United States: Developing a transnational crime research agenda". Trends in Organized Crime. 10 (2): 18–107. doi:10.1007/s12117-006-1034-3. ISSN 1084-4791. S2CID 152011491.
- ↑ Gastrow, Peter (September 2003). "Triad Societies and Chinese Organised Crime in South Africa" (PDF). Crime & Justice International. 19 (76): 12–18 – via Africa Portal.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Berry, LaVerle B.; Curtis, Glenn E.; Elan, Seth L.; Hudson, Rexford A.; Kollars, Nina A. (April 2003). "Transnational activities of Chinese crime organizations" (PDF). Library of Congress. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 July 2015. Retrieved 13 October 2019. This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
- 1 2 3 Siegel-Rozenblit, Dina (2011). Asian Organized Crime in the European Union (PDF) (Report). European Parliament. Archived from the original (PDF) on 5 August 2023. Retrieved 9 October 2019.
- ↑ Collins, Liam (5 August 2018). "The night the bloody Triad wars erupted on the streets of Dublin". Irish Independent.
- ↑ Forsyth, Owen (18 January 2019). "The Triad Gang War of Dublin in 1979". The Irish Mob.
- ↑ Brady, Tom (8 June 2011). "Chinese Triad gangs trafficking women into Ireland for sex industry – cables". Irish Independent.
- ↑ Berry-Dee, Christopher (21 September 2009). Gangland UK. Kings Road Publishing. ISBN 9781843586913 – via Google Books.
- ↑ "Triad link to Essex murder". BBC News. 26 July 1999.
- ↑ Keeley, Graham (13 April 2012). "Terror of the triads". Evening Standard.
- ↑ "Chinatown shooting 'gangs link'". BBC News. 23 June 2004.
- ↑ Thompson, Tony (10 April 2005). "Triads 'infiltrate' Soho casino". The Guardian.
- ↑ Page, Cara (10 February 2007). "Scots die in Triads shooting". Daily Record.
- ↑ Lo, Shiu Hing (11 August 2009). The Politics of Cross-border Crime in Greater China: Case Studies of Mainland China, Hong Kong, and Macao. M.E. Sharpe. ISBN 9780765623041 – via Google Books.
- ↑ Walker, Andrew (18 July 2003). "Triads in Turf War; Battle for control of city". Daily Record – via Thefreelibrary.com.
- ↑ Helfand, Neil S. (July 2003). Asian Organized Crime and Terrorist Activity in Canada, 1999-2002 (PDF) (Report). Federal Research Division. Archived from the original (PDF) on 1 April 2019.
- ↑ Schneider, Stephen (9 December 2009). Iced: The Story of Organized Crime in Canada. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 9780470835005 – via Google Books.
- ↑ Douglas, Jeremy (28 October 2019). "Opinion: Asia has an organized-crime problem. Canada is well placed to help". The Globe and Mail.
- ↑ Douglas, Jeremy (15 November 2018). "Parts of Asia are slipping into the hands of organized crime". CNN.
- ↑ Harris, Bryan (12 January 2014). "Hong Kong triads supply meth ingredients to Mexican drug cartels". South China Morning Post.
- ↑ Feuer, Alan (16 April 2010). "The Last of the Asian Godfathers". The New York Times.
- ↑ Carney, John (12 September 2010). "Asian drug links reach south with meth deals". South China Morning Post.
- ↑ Meng-Yee, Carolyne (17 August 2008). "Xin Xin's family flee over Triad gang threat". The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 14 September 2011.