Hells Angel Larry Amero and two men from his Wolfpack gang alliance will appear in B.C. Supreme Court today charged in connection with the 2012 murders of rivals Sandip Duhre and Sukh Dhak.
Amero, Dean Wiwchar and Rabih “Robby” Alkhalil are on the court list for a 2 p.m. appearance at the Vancouver Law Courts.
Amero, 40, was arrested in Ottawa Thursday and charged with two counts of conspiracy to kill Duhre and Dhak, who died months apart in targeted 2012 shootings.
A new murder charge was also laid last week against Wiwchar, 32, in Duhre’s January 2012 assassination. The convicted hitman was also charged last week with conspiracy to commit the murder of Dhak in November 2012.
Alkhalil was already facing charges in the Duhre murder, laid in 2013, and has made several B.C. court appearances.
Despite not being charged until last week, Wiwchar was identified as the suspected Duhre hitman when he was on trial in B.C. Supreme Court in 2015 on several firearms charges.

Hells Angel Larry Ronald Amero in file photo
Justice Gregory Bowden said in his ruling convicting Wiwchar on the gun counts that Vancouver police had linked a getaway car used in the Duhre hit to Wiwchar and that witnesses described the shooter as having the same height and build as Wiwchar.
And police had an informant who said someone named Alkhalil had paid Wiwchar. Investigators later found $140,000 in Wiwchar‘s safe deposit box, Bowden noted.
Postmedia has learned that Wiwchar was recently injured in a stabbing inside federal prison.
Both Wiwchar and Alkhalil were convicted last year of first-degree murder for the June 2012 execution of John Raposo in Toronto’s Little Italy. Their Ontario trial heard that Alkhalil brought Wiwchar in, describing him in a text message as the “best hitter.”
Wiwchar dressed like a construction worker with a reflective vest and dust mask and wore a wig to kill Raposo outside the Sicilian Sidewalk Cafe.
Until last August, Amero was charged in Quebec as an alleged leader of an international cocaine smuggling ring. But his charges were stayed after his lawyer argued that the case had taken too long to get to trial.

Amero, a B.C. longshoreman and member of the West Point chapter of the Hells Angels, was seriously injured in the August 2011 Kelowna shooting that left Red Scorpion leader Jonathan Bacon dead. Independent Soldiers gangster James Riach was in the targeted Porsche Cayenne with Bacon and Amero, but escaped injury.
Three men linked to the United Nations gang — Jason McBride, Michael Jones and Jujhar Khun-Khun — are currently on trial for the 2011 shooting. Sukh Dhak is alleged to have ordered the Kelowna hit, according to evidence at their trial.
After the Bacon murder, anti-gang police issued repeated public warnings that anyone connected to the Dhak-Duhre group could be targeted in retaliation.
A few months later Duhre was shot to death in the lobby of the Sheraton Wall Centre in downtown Vancouver. The violent conflict continued and in November 2012, Dhak and his bodyguard Thomas Mantel were gunned down outside a Burnaby hotel.
Several associates on either side of the conflict were also murdered in cases that remain unsolved.
Amero was once part of the White Rock Hells Angels, but in 2012 moved over to the new West Point chapter, based in Langley. He was also part of the formation of a gang alliance called the Wolf Pack, made up of some Hells Angels, some Red Scorpions and some members of the Independent Soldiers.
After he was released from a Quebec jail last August, Amero settled in Ottawa, but had been returning to B.C. for brief visits.