COLLINS: Battle against extortionists will be a long fight
I DON’T WANT TO BE A PARTY POOPER, but a move by the City of Surrey to try and catch gangs extorting protection money from businessmen is not likely to work.
Here’s why. The chain of command among these gangs is such that the footmen doing the dangerous extortion work often don’t know who they are reporting to — or if they do know the guy above, that’s about as far up the chain as it goes. So, you ask yourself, am I prepared to risk my life for a share of a quarter of a million dollars? Not bloody likely.
And that’s where the plan fails. You almost never get the big guy. Except for TV, where they get the bad guys in under an hour, and that’s including commercials.
These extortion schemes have been going on literally for centuries. The Vikings extorted goods and services from those they conquered, early Roman and Islamic peoples had theirs, feudal lords allowed people to farm the lord’s land for a fee. The Black Hand in the U.S. The Mafia, biker gangs, they are everywhere.


