2 Canadians slain in Mexico tied to drug trade: police - Action News
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2 Canadians slain in Mexico tied to drug trade: police

Gang investigators in British Columbia say two men gunned down in Mexico were involved in the drug trade, and had been on the radar of gang investigators before they were found shot to death in a Puerto Vallarta condo complex.

3 gunmen believed responsible for shootings

Gang investigators in British Columbia say two men gunned down in Mexico were involved in the drug trade, and had been on the radar of gang investigators before they were found shot to death in a Puerto Vallarta condo complex.

Sgt. Shinder Kirk of the RCMP's Integrated Gang Task Force said Monday that Gordon Douglas Kendall and Jeffrey Ronald Ivans, who were found shot to death in Puerto Vallarta on Sunday, were known to police in British Columbia.

"We have been aware of them for some time now," Kirk told The Canadian Press. "We also knew of some of their recent activities in Mexico as well, centring around the drug trade."

Mexican police confirmed Monday that gunmen killed the two Canadian men.

Jalisco state prosecutor Guillermo Diaz said Kendall and Ivans were killed Sunday at the apartment building where they were staying.

Witnesses told police that a lone gunman approached the men outside the building and shot Kendall, then chased Ivans to the pool area and shot him. Diaz said Ivans was carrying a gun but was not able to use it.

Diaz said witnesses told police that two other gunmen then arrived and repeatedly shot the dead or dying Canadians.

Diaz said Monday that investigators have not determined a motive for the killing, and no arrests have been made.

But Kirk said the men's activities were far-reaching.

"Certainly Mexico and the exporting of drugs from Mexico and into the United States and then from there at any point up into Canada or across the United States," Kirk said.

At this point, he said police don't have any information about whether Ivans and Kendall were affiliated with any specific gang or organized crime group.

"[But] if you're going to get involved in this type of activity it's not glamorous and violence is not that far behind."

Friends lament on Facebook

Ivans pleaded guilty in Kamloops on Dec. 13, 2002, to one charge of trafficking. He was fined $1,000.

On a Facebook memorial page, friends lamented the loss of two men they remembered as witty, charming and nice. One also warned other friends not to go tothe Mexican news site, which featured graphic photos of the men lying in pools of blood.

Nicole Mason, who posted her condolences on a Facebook memorial page, said she went to high school with the two men in Kamloops.

Mason, who now lives in Calgary, said in a telephone interview she dated Ivans for about four years back then.

She said she felt "empty" when she heard both men had been shot dead.

"They were just two guys always living for today and living life to the fullest and they'll be missed by many, many, many people."

Kirk said Mexico still appears to be a source country for cocaine coming into the United States and then into Canada.

"We still see quantities of synthetic drugs and marijuana that is ultimately shipped into the United States either exchanged for cocaine or weapons or both."

Last summer, two Vancouver-area men involved in the drug trade were also gunned down in Mexico.

Elliott Castaneda and Ahmet Kaawach, who were members of the United Nations gang, were killed in a hail of bullets while they were dining at a restaurant.

According to reports on a Mexican news website, the gunmen in the latest shooting fled in two cars after gunning down the Canadian men.

Police later found three vehicles registered to the victims, a pickup truck with Canadian plates, a Hummer and a Mercedes-Benz with Mexican plates.

Sunday's deaths come less than two weeks after a Montreal woman, Rene Wathelet, was found stabbed to death in her apartment on an island off the Cancun coast.

Mexican police said they have a man in custody who claims to have killed Wathelet