Saturday, June 27, 2026
ADVT 
National

Three People Charged for Keeping an Illegal Gaming House

Darpan News Desk CFSEU BC, 17 Mar, 2022 12:16 PM
  • Three People Charged for Keeping an Illegal Gaming House

Three people have now been charged after The Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit of British Columbia’s (CFSEU-BC’s) Joint Illegal Gaming Investigation Team (JIGIT) conducted an investigation into an illegal gaming house.

In October 2020, the Vancouver Police Department (VPD) responded to a residence in the 200 block of W. 45th Ave, after receiving a 911 call. When VPD officers arrived, evidence of an alleged illegal gaming house was observed.

CFSEU-BC’s JIGIT was immediately engaged and began an investigation into the alleged illegal gaming house activity and executed several search warrants in relation to the investigation. Evidence gathered indicated that the Vancouver residence was being rented for the purpose of setting up and operating an alleged illegal gaming establishment.

The search warrants resulted in a number of items being seized including:

• Score sheets with client names and cash balance sheets;
• Cellular phones;
• Money counter;
• $220,775.60 in Canadian cash; and
• Poker chips, poker tables and playing cards.

Charged with one count each of keeping a common gaming house contrary to section 201(1) of the Criminal Code are;

“CFSEU-BC continues to target all aspects of criminal activities including illegal gaming as a part of a coordinated organized crime enforcement strategy in B.C. Illegal gaming activities undermine the integrity of our financial institutions and allow criminals to secure the proceeds of crime not just for personal benefit but to fuel additional crimes. Enforcement action such as this one has a strong immediate impact and long-term disruption implications.” says Inspector Mandeep Mooker, Investigations Officer of the CFSEU-BC’s JIGIT.

Rong Zan Wu a 45 – year-old male from Burnaby, Wen Bo Li a 47 – year-old male from Burnaby and; Mun Bun Ng, a 55 – year-old male from Vancouver.

Photo courtesy of Istock. 

MORE National ARTICLES

Tories push for committee to dive into vaccines

Tories push for committee to dive into vaccines
The government announced the $44-million project in May as part of a partnership between the NRC and a Chinese company to develop a made-in-Canada vaccine.

Tories push for committee to dive into vaccines

UPDATE: Vancouver Police pleas for help in search of missing woman

UPDATE: Vancouver Police pleas for help in search of missing woman
UPDATE: SHE HAS BEEN FOUND SAFE AND SOUND Autumn is Indigenous. She is five feet one inch tall, has a slim build, and is missing all of her top teeth. She has a fair complexion, brown eyes, and long, straight brown hair with blonde highlights. Autumn was last seen wearing a black zip-up puffy jacket and black yoga pants.

UPDATE: Vancouver Police pleas for help in search of missing woman

BC Liberals announce MLA critic roles

BC Liberals announce MLA critic roles
The team brings exceptional skills, energy, and a commitment to hold John Horgan and the NDP government to account. “As the Official Opposition, we have a responsibility to make sure this government deals with the critical issues facing British Columbians. 

BC Liberals announce MLA critic roles

Man dies in a targeting shooting in Surrey over the weekend

Man dies in a targeting shooting in Surrey over the weekend
Police found a “critically injured man” at the scene. He was attended to by paramedics but succumbed to his injuries and was pronounced dead.

Man dies in a targeting shooting in Surrey over the weekend

The 2021 BC Housing Market Outlook & Updates

The 2021 BC Housing Market Outlook & Updates
Recent years have seen BC housing prices soar to unexpected heights, leaving many to believe it’s just a matter of time before the real estate bubble bursts. 

The 2021 BC Housing Market Outlook & Updates

B.C. says land registry makes market transparent

B.C. says land registry makes market transparent
Beginning Monday, any corporation, trustee or partnership that buys land in B.C. must disclose the interest holders of that land through the Land Owner Transparency Registry.

B.C. says land registry makes market transparent