Important Canada British Columbia

Accused Bishnoi gang member living in Alberta ordered deported

An Alberta man accused of working for the Lawrence Bishnoi gang has been ordered deported by the Immigration and Refugee Board (IRB).

Accused Bishnoi gang member living in Alberta ordered deported
Text to audio Audio version available

An Alberta man accused of working for the Lawrence Bishnoi gang has been ordered deported by the Immigration and Refugee Board (IRB).

Accused Bishnoi gang member living in Alberta ordered deported Sahibjot Singh, 21, appeared before the Immigration and Refugee Board on Friday An Indian national living in Alberta who is accused of working for the Lawrence Bishnoi gang has been ordered deported by the Immigration and Refugee Board (IRB). Sahibjot Singh, 21, was the subject of an admissibility hearing Friday after he was identified by authorities as a suspected member of the extortion network operating primarily in Ontario, Alberta and B.C. Canada’s Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship sought to have Singh deported for his participation in organized crime.

Cell phone evidence Singh did not fight the deportation order, which was made by IRB member Trent Cook shortly after a joint statement of facts was read into the record at the virtual hearing. Singh did deny allegations that he is a member of the criminal organization or that he directly committed extortions in Canada, but he conceded that he participated in the organization’s criminal activity by “engaging in possession and discharge of unauthorized weapons.” He also admitted that he’d been “wilfully blind to the nature of the organization.”

“There are reasonable grounds to believe that Mr. Singh engaged in activity that is part of the organization's criminal activity,” said Cook, reading from the agreed facts. “[This is] supported by the digital evidence seized from Mr. Singh’s cellphone.” A 'sophisticated' network The extortion-related activities took place between May and December 2025 and are detailed in a comprehensive timeline of events exhibited at the hearing from the RCMP’s investigation into the Bishnoi network.

Cook also noted the pattern of crimes committed by the Bishnoi group includes extortion by phone calls or messages, drive-by shootings, arson, firearms offences, drug trafficking and criminal mischief. While the criminal organization wasn’t named during Friday’s proceedings, pre-hearing applications make clear it is the Bishnoi gang at the heart of the case. The presiding officer called the group a “sophisticated” hierarchical network and noted the RCMP investigation has intercepted phone calls from France, Portugal and Amsterdam.

Edmonton charges The immigration ruling requires a lesser standard of proof than a criminal conviction. Both parties agreed that the evidence in this case met the standard of “reasonable grounds to believe” that Singh was engaged in activity connected to organized crime, which is enough to rule a person inadmissible to Canada. “It’s conceded that you voluntarily participated in this organization’s criminal activity by engaging in possession and discharge of unauthorized weapons,” said Cook.

Singh still faces criminal firearms-related offences in Edmonton and is due in court later this month to face those charges. A person can't be deported while facing unresolved criminal charges. CBC News reached out to Singh’s lawyer Simon Trela but did not receive a response.

Since April 2025, police report 49 extortion-related incidents in Calgary, including 19 shootings. So far, police have arrested 16 people and laid a total of 56 charges. Meanwhile, police in Edmonton have launched Project Insight, its latest operation for investigating South Asian extortion crimes.

With files from Jason Proctor

Published
Jul 17, 2026
Updated
Jul 17, 2026
Source
Cbc
Category
Canada
Read time
2 min
Key facts

Key facts

SectionCanada
Open
SourceCbc
Open
PublishedJul 17, 2026
UpdatedJul 17, 2026

Why this matters locally

This canada story matters locally because it may affect readers, businesses, commuters, families, or public services in British Columbia.

Local impact

BC Post links this item to British Columbia coverage so readers can follow related city updates, weather, traffic, events, and category news in one place.

Timeline

PublishedJul 17, 2026, 4:45 PMThis story was published by BC Post.
ImportedJul 17, 2026, 6:00 PMThe item entered the BC Post source pipeline.
UpdatedJul 17, 2026, 6:00 PMThe article record or local context was updated.
Transparency

Source and credit

BC Post may summarize, organize, and add local context for reader clarity. Original reporting remains with the listed publisher.

Cbc Published Jul 17, 2026 Imported Jul 17, 2026
Read Original Source
Cbc Jul 17, 2026
Read Original Source