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Mohammed was granted bail and ordered to stay at his parents’ Surrey home. But when the Gang Enforcement Team did a curfew check on March 2, he slammed the door on them and escaped, leading to charges of breaching a release order, wilfully resisting a peace officer, and escaping lawfully custody.
Mohammed, who is also a suspect in other gang investigations, has been on the run ever since.
But that hasn’t stopped him from maintaining a prominent social media profile and disparaging rivals both before and after their murders.
He even dropped a new rap song called Shirt two weeks ago and invited inquiries to be made via email. He did not respond to a Postmedia request for comment sent to that email.
Shirt’s lyrics reference putting a, “n—a on a shirt, put that n—a in the dirt. Shot first, had to get his ass murked.”
Mohammed also says in Shirt that the “feds trying to find me. F–k the Crown and the jury.”
He has also called out the Bacon brothers, in particular Jamie Bacon, who was close to Kang. Kang’s supporters and others have been trash-talking Mohammed online as well, even falsely claiming last weekend that he had been shot to death after a lull in his Instagram posting which corresponded with his trip to southeastern B.C. to cross the border.
His “opps,” or rivals, have also attacked Brothers Keepers founder Gavinder Grewal, who was shot to death on Dec. 22, 2017 in the North Vancouver luxury condo he rented. In fact, Anigbo posted a song called Dedman last year attacking the Brothers Keepers founder that included the recorded 911 call his brother made after finding his body.
Mohammed also started a Twitter account this month.
On Jan. 20, he posted that he “ain’t no rapper ima mother–king grave digga.” On Jan. 13, he tweeted: “I never wish death on anyone I bring death to anyone.”
kbolan@postmedia.com
Blog: vancouversun.com/tag/real-scoop/
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