The RICHEST Hells Angels Family In CANADA - They Run An Entire Province

In December 1977, a francophone motorcycle club in Sorel, Quebec patched over to become the first Canadian chapter of the Hells Angels. Forty-nine years later, the organization controls between 85 and 90 percent of the drug distribution territory in an entire Canadian province — and one chapter in particular sits at the financial center of it all. This documentary traces how the Quebec Hells Angels built a near-monopoly drug economy across an entire province, including the centralized accounting system that processed over $111 million in 21 months, the fixed wholesale prices set in partnership with the Sicilian Mafia, the 8-year war that killed more than 160 people, and the wealthiest single biker chapter in Canada — the one that paid a $12 million cocaine bill in 3 weeks while operating completely outside the centralized supply chain. We pulled court transcripts from the Mega-Trials, the 1,741-page Charbonneau Commission report, Justice James Brunton's 2011 disclosure ruling, and 40 years of investigative reporting from La Presse and the Montreal Gazette. What we found at the center of this story was not a gang. It was a partnership — between bikers, the Italian Mafia, the Irish, the construction unions, and at least one decorated Montreal police detective who sold his department's secrets to the people he was supposed to be hunting. The redacted pages of the Charbonneau Commission have never been released. The chapter that organized the original massacre still operates 30 minutes from where the bodies were dumped. Disclaimer: This is a researched documentary based entirely on publicly available court records, government commission reports, and investigative journalism. All individuals named have been the subject of public legal proceedings, official inquiries, or established journalistic reporting. This video is intended for educational and historical purposes.