Gerald "Gerry" Matticks
    Gerald "Gerry" Matticks was born in on July 4, 1940, in an eight-room apartment in Goose Village, near Griffin-town, in Montreal. His father worked  a stagecoach for the  city while  his  mother  had  her hands full  taking care of their 14 children.

      As  a young boy, Matticks would  not  conform to  authority. He dropped out of school  at  age 12, after slapping  a teacher. He began to work in construction  and  a pulp and paper factory. He married at the age of 17 and was the father of four children by the age of 21.

      Matticks, along with several of  his brothers, hooked up with the West End Gang in the late 1950s or early 60s. The  brothers  became expert hijackers, specializing in loads of  television sets, meat, booze, and cigarettes, sitting  at the top of  a successful ring of  theives  and armed robbers.
   
     Over the years, the Port of Montreal would become their personal playground. Matticks got  a cut of all illegal activities at the port and he, along with several other family members, belonged to the checker's union, responsible for sending containers to the right places.

     On  June 19, 1972, Matticks  and his brother John were  acquitted of  attempted  murder. The two  allegedly tried to kill  a  smoked-meat salesman  who they believed was  informing  police on their activities. Three witnesses testified on the stand that Matticks was in a bar  at the time of the incident. He was acquitted.

     Matticks, who once  boasted  to  a  report that  he was  able to drink 40 ounces of  gin  in one sitting, was next  arrested on November 12, 1979. He  and two of his brothers were charged with conspiracy to commit theft, possession of stolen goods, and perjury. Matticks beat the case once more.

     Over the years, Matticks did very well financially. He opened up several  businesses, including a country  bar called 
Mickey's, a  Point-Saint-Charles trucking company, and  a whole-sale  meat business, and bought  a large ranch in  La Prairie, on the  South Shore of  Montreal. The property holds nine buildings and is surrounded with security cameras.

     Matticks  also earned  a  reputation  as being very generous. He  regularly donated money  and food to the  poor. During the 1998 ice storm  alone, he donated enough  food for 2,000 meals. At Christmas, Matticks drove a truck with a Santa and give presents to poor families.

     Matticks and brother Richard were arrested for hijacking a truck full of suitcases in 1989. The two  pleaded  guilty on  June 8, 1992, and were  sentenced to 90 days in  prison, to be  served on weekends, and fined $10,000.

     Gerald Matticks  and his  brother Richard, along with  underlings Steve Brown, Felice Italiano, Roger Goulet, William Hodges, and  Don Driver, were  charged with  importing narcotics on May 26, 1994. The arrests came after police seized 26.5 tons of hashish at the Montreal Port on May 4 and evidence  that  the  group had  successfully  imported  a  shipment of 10 tons in  March. The drugs were distributed on the streets of Montreal. The 26.5 tons seized by police had an estimated street value of over $360 million.

     During  the  raids, police  seized  $800,000  in  cash, two  one-kilogram  gold  bars, electronic surveillance equipment, including infra-red  night-vision goggles, a .38 calibre firearm, a  machine to count money, and a small quantity of counterfeit $2 bills.

     The charges  against the seven the  men were dropped on June 15, 1995, when Quebec Court Judge Micheline Corbeil-Laramee  ruled  that  Surete  du  Quebec officers  had  planted  evidence. Copies of four incriminating  maritime  lading  documents were  falsely  identified  as part  of  the goods seized from Werner Philips International, a  maritime  salvaging  company raided during the bust. Four officers were later charged with fabricating evidence but were later acquitted.

     Matticks and his crew regularly did business with both the Hells Angels and the Rock Machine and in 2000, as the  biker gangs  waged  a war that  had  taken  more  than 150 lives  since 1994, Matticks was approached by members of the Rock Machine that wanted peace. He helped leaders of the gangs negotiate an uneasy truce. The truce was later broken and the killings continued.

     Matticks  and  underling  Elias  Luis Lekkas  were  arrested  on  March 28, 2001 when  police launched
Opération: Printemps 2001 and arrested over one hundred  Hells Angels and  associates. Matticks was  accused of being the biker club's main hashish supplier and was charged with drug trafficking and gangsterism.

     Shortly  after being  arrested, Lekkas  contacted  investifators  and  spilled  the  beans. He told police everything he knew about the Matticks gang, including their method for smuggling drugs at the port. When  word of  his  defection  hit  the  streets, photographs of  Lekkas were  put  up  in numerous bars with words like "rar" or "stool" scribbled on them.

     For a 25% cut, either in drugs or in money, Matticks would safely smuggle drugs through the Montreal Port for traffickers, Lekkas explained. When he was paid in  merchandise, Matticks sold the drugs to the Hells Angels. On  several occassions, the  biker club  owed  him  as  much  as $7 million.

     Matticks pleaded guilty on August 6, 2002  and was sentenced to 12 years in prison. Evidence showed that in  about one year, Matticks and his gang had smuggled 33,363 kilograms of hashish and 260 kilograms of cocaine through the port.

     He pleaded  guilty  after  a guarantee from  authorities that  he would  not be  extradited  to the Unites States, where he would face stiffer sentences.
West End Gang