Legality of Cannabis by U.S. Jurisdiction

Bamboo Union
Founded1950s
FounderChen Chi-li "King Duck"
Founding locationTaiwan
Years active1950s–present
TerritoryTaiwan, United States, Britain, Australia, Canada and France
EthnicityLargely Sinitic-Taiwanese
Membership20,000 members
Leader(s)Huang Shao-tsen "Yao Yao"
ActivitiesDrug trafficking and contract killing

The United Bamboo Gang (UBG; Chinese: 竹聯幫; pinyin: Zhúliánbāng), also known as the Bamboo Union, is the largest of Taiwan's three main criminal Triads.[1][2][3] They are reported to have roughly 20,000 members.[1][3][4][5] The membership consists largely of waishengren (Mainland Chinese) and has had historic ties to the Kuomintang; they are said to be motivated as much by political ideology as by profit. They are known to simply call themselves "businessmen", but in reality, are also involved in organized killings and drug trafficking. The gang gained global notoriety when it became directly involved in politics in the early 1980s.

History[edit]

Taipei County

The Bamboo Union was formed in the 1950s by waishengren children who wanted to protect themselves from threats by majority Hoklo children. The first members lived on Bamboo Forest Road in Jung Ho City, Taipei County, now Yonghe District of New Taipei City.[6] Its first members were made up of mainland Chinese teens who joined to secure a place in Taiwan after 1949. The mainland Chinese were regarded as an unwelcome minority that was rejected by Hoklo citizens following the end of the Chinese Civil War, when the Nationalist Kuomintang (KMT) government led by Chiang Kai-shek fled to Taiwan. Although the Nationalist Republic of China government continued to hold claims on mainland China after 1949, the mainland was controlled by the Chinese Communist Party, and Taiwan was controlled by the KMT. The Bamboo Union criminal gang began primarily with street-fighting to gain recognition in society.[citation needed]

By the late 1960s, the aspirations of the Bamboo Union membership shifted from street-fighting to profiteering. The gang began making a name for itself in the "protection" business and extorting money from local shops and factories, but the gang's treasury overflowed when thousands of well-paid American GIs flocked to Taipei while on R&R from the Vietnam War.[7] Chinese nightclub owners welcomed Bamboo Union members to their premises to banish rival gangs of ethnic Taiwanese trying to carve out a share of the lucrative trade in gambling, prostitution, and drugs.[7] By this stage, the Bamboo Union was fast developing into a transnational crime syndicate or "triad". For example, leader Chang An-lo, nicknamed "White Wolf," moved to Las Vegas in 1968 to study and keep order of the Bamboo Union's expanding empire, particularly in the Chinatowns of California and the gambling halls of Las Vegas.[7]

The Bamboo Union was closely associated with the KMT and the ruling Chiang family. The Bamboo Union was a key part of the KMT's White Terror which allowed the Dictator Chiang Kai-shek to establish control over Taiwanese society. In 2020 government documents from the Taiwan Garrison Command were declassified which shed new light on the closeness of these ties. These documents revealed that before the mid-1980s Bamboo Union gangsters had been knowingly employed by Taiwanese government agencies including the National Security Bureau and the Intelligence Bureau. Gangsters also served as close aides to Chiang Hsiao-yung. Bamboo Union gangsters were even admitted to military, police, and intelligence academies by the KMT, this allowed gangsters to rise to the very top of government.[8]

In the early 1980s, the gang became even more powerful when they joined hands with the "Iron Blood Patriots" to carry out missions overseas. In return, both gangs were offered a great share of the heroin trade that expanded into the world market. This deal made the Bamboo Union very powerful in Taiwanese politics and social culture, but they were also being watched by major countries like the United States. The gang's powerful relationship with the "Iron Blood Patriots" came to an end after journalist Henry Liu was murdered on 15 October 1984.[7] In the 1980s the gang was sold a large quantity of firearms by the corrupt governor of a province of the Philippines.[8]

Notable cases[edit]

In 1980, the daughters and mother of one of the leading members of the opposition, Lin Yi-hsiung, were brutally killed in their home. The following year, Chen Wen-chen, a Taiwan-born statistics professor teaching at Carnegie Mellon University, was killed and his body dumped in the grounds of National Taiwan University. At around the same time, the dissident journalist Henry Liu wrote an unauthorized critical biography of Chiang Ching-kuo, the president of Taiwan. Liu was assassinated in 1984 by members of the Bamboo Union who were subsequently caught and convicted.[9] His murderers, one being "King Duck" Chen Chi-li, were sentenced to life in prison,[10] although Chen and most of the others convicted were paroled by 1991;[11][12] Tung Kuei-sen was stabbed to death while in prison in 1991; he was the only one convicted for participating in or planning the murder who was not eventually paroled.[13]

In July 2009, Bamboo Union hitman Bai Xiao Ye stabbed and slashed a man to death in a Las Vegas, Nevada karaoke bar and wounded two others. In 2013, Bai was sentenced to life imprisonment without parole. Bai had also been charged with fatally shooting a man and wounding another at a Los Angeles karaoke bar.[14] In October 2015, the Bamboo Union was linked to the kidnapping of Hong Kong businessman Wong Yuk-kwan.[15]

Death of Chen Chi-Li[edit]

One of the most significant events that have taken place in the Bamboo Union's legacy was the death and funeral of their former leader Chen Chi-li. The former leader had maintained a very complicated relationship between the criminal organization and the Chinese Nationalist (Kuomintang) regime.[16] He died of cancer in 2007 and his funeral brought more than 10,000 mourners.[17] His mourners included a number of politicians from Taiwan's still-young democracy which has struggled to shrug off long-standing links to the criminal underworld. Fellow gangsters said that Chen did not understand why the government would treat a patriot like him as a criminal. He was not a normal gangster, but an idealist who had made money to do the right thing.[16] Representatives of Taiwan's three main criminal organizations, the Bamboo Union, the Four Seas Triad and the Celestial Way, were on hand to pay their respects to Mr. Li.[18] Members of Japan's yakuza, dressed in black suits, were also among the guests, while representatives from crime families of Hong Kong, Macau, Malaysia and Thailand also joined the procession under the watchful gaze of thousands of police.[18] More than 1,000 police officers were assigned to monitor and videotape the movements of the mourners, a number of whom are 'big brothers' of local gangs. The family spent NT$2 million (HK$475,000) to charter a China Airlines Airbus plane to transport the body, plus friends and relatives to Taiwan.[19] According to local news media, the family spent at least NT$20 million to make sure Chen's funeral was held in grand style.[19]

Organization[edit]

Unlike Japan's yakuza or Italy's mafia, the United Bamboo does not have a strict rank-and-file. Twenty-four members are each led by a big brother or "da ge" with membership comprising gangland enforcers and individual businessmen.[20] Due to its structure United Bamboo and its activities usually fly below the radar. Mutual benefits and obligations underpin the relationships within the gang, as members who may not do business with one another will turn to one another in times of crisis. All members paid homage to Chang, who was "recognized" by Taiwan's triads as their "opinion leader" in 1995 and who was held in such esteem that legitimate businessmen ask him to help settle disputes.[20]

The gang has a "code of ethics" that has ten rules that all members must follow.[21] The mainland branch of the Bamboo Union is disciplined and well organized, complete with rank systems, promotions, and benefits. Senior gang figures are given the honorific suffix "Da Ge", or "Big Brother". According to the junior Bamboo Union "boss" Big Brother Su, the gang is divided into approximately 13 divisions, or tang kou, with names such as "Tiger Division" and "Dragon Division". Within those 13 divisions, there are 68 branches of members. The Bamboo Union is understood to partner with the Japanese yakuza and multi-ethnic triad like Sam Gor syndicate, and the leaders of these groups including Tse Chi Lop, both for drug trafficking and money laundering.

Leaders (official and acting)[edit]

Historical leadership of Bamboo Union
Spiritual leaders Functional leaders Refs
Start End Name Nickname Image Start End Name Nickname Image
  1956 1964 Chao Ning [zh]
趙寧
1964 1972 Yang Chien-ping [zh]
楊劍平
"Master Yang"
1968 1995 Chen Chi-li[a]
陳啟禮
"King Duck"
1972 1975 Chang An-lo
張安樂
"White Wolf" [22]
1972 1976 Chou Jung [zh]
周榕
"King Chou"
1976 1995 Chen Chi-li
陳啟禮
"King Duck"
1995 1999 Huang Shao-tsen [zh]
黃少岑
"Yao Yao" 1995 1999 Huang Shao-tsen [zh]
黃少岑
"Yao Yao"
 
2001 2007 Chao Erh-wen [zh][b]
趙爾文
"King Chao"  
2002 2006 Li Tsung-kuei [zh][b]
李宗奎
"Zhong Kui"
2006 2009 Hu Tai-fu [zh][b]
胡台富
"Monkey King"
2007 present Huang Shao-tsen [zh][c]
黃少岑
"Yao Yao"
2010 present Huang Shao-tsen [zh][c]
黃少岑
"Yao Yao"
Notes
  1. ^ Also functional leader from 1976 to 1995
  2. ^ a b c Acting leader
  3. ^ a b Second stint as leader

Illegal activities[edit]

Because of the mainland origins of its membership, the Bamboo Union developed close links with military intelligence and security agencies. It participates in many illegal activities like security services, debt collection, loan sharking, gambling dens, hostess clubs, restaurants, and small businesses. It is known internationally for drug smuggling, human trafficking, and silencing journalists as far away as Northern California.[citation needed]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Bishop, Mac William (4 June 2005). "Taiwan's gangs go global". Asia Times. Archived from the original on 4 June 2005. Retrieved 5 April 2014.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  2. ^ Simon, Sheldon W. (21 August 2001). The Many Faces of Asian Security. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. p. 204. ISBN 9781461608387.
  3. ^ a b Kaplan, David E.; Dubro, Alec (20 May 2012). Yakuza. University of California Press. pp. 260–261. ISBN 9780520953819.
  4. ^ "The List: The World's Most Dangerous Gangs", Foreign Policy, 2008-05-08, retrieved 2010-04-21
  5. ^ Huang, Hua-Lun (2007). From the Asian Boyz to the Zhu Lian Bang (the Bamboo Union Gang): A Typological Analysis of Delinquent Asian Gangs. Lafayette, USA: Springer Netherlands. p. 129.
  6. ^ Kyne, Phelim (2000). "Blood & drugs - a guide to the Bamboo Union". The Phnom Penh Post. Retrieved 3 April 2017.
  7. ^ a b c d Garnaut, John (12 July 2014). "Hungry like the wolf". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 3 April 2017.
  8. ^ a b Yang, Sophia (25 June 2020). "Declassified secret documents show close ties between Taiwan KMT, Bamboo Union before 1984". www.taiwannews.com.tw. Taiwan News. Retrieved 26 June 2020.
  9. ^ Maguire, Keith (1997). "Modernisation and clean government: Tackling crime, corruption and organised crime in modern Taiwan". Crime, Law and Social Change. 28. Netherlands: Kluwer Academic Publishers: 83. doi:10.1023/A:1008204328221. S2CID 141800546.
  10. ^ "Taiwan Admiral Gets Life In Killing Of U.S. Journalist". Toledo Blade. AP. 19 April 1985. Retrieved 12 May 2016.
  11. ^ Curtis, Bryan (1 January 1991). "Taiwan releases prisoners". UPI. Retrieved 16 May 2016.
  12. ^ "WORLD: Taiwan Frees Newsman's Killers". Los Angeles Times. 21 January 1991. Retrieved 16 May 2016.
  13. ^ "Inmate pleads guilty in man's stabbing death". Beaver County Times. AP. 7 September 1994. Retrieved 12 May 2016.
  14. ^ Lowther, William (7 March 2013). "US court sentences Bamboo Union gang hitman to life in jail". Taipei Times.
  15. ^ "How Bamboo grew: 10,000-strong Taiwanese triad linked to Hong Kong executive's kidnapping is 'one of world's most dangerous gangs'". South China Morning Post. 29 October 2015. Archived from the original on 2015-10-30. Retrieved 29 March 2017.
  16. ^ a b Chang, Rich (22 October 2007). "The rise and fall of crime boss Chen Chi-Li". Taipei Times. Retrieved 4 April 2017.
  17. ^ Liu, Ling (12 November 2007). "Death of a Triad Boss". Time. Retrieved 4 April 2017.
  18. ^ a b Foster, Peter (26 April 2010). "Gang leaders turn out for funeral of Taiwanese mafia boss". The Telegraph. Retrieved 4 April 2017.
  19. ^ a b Chung, Lawrence (19 October 2007). "Grand mafia-style funeral for boss of Taiwanese gang". South China Morning Post. Archived from the original on 2017-04-05. Retrieved 4 April 2017.
  20. ^ a b Cheng, Allen (1997). "Taiwan's Dirty Business". Organized Crime Registry. Retrieved 3 April 2017.
  21. ^ Mallory, Stephen L. (2011-07-28). Understanding Organized Crime. Jones & Bartlett Publishers. pp. 170–171. ISBN 9781449622572.
  22. ^ "United Bamboo Gang". Geocities. 4 April 2017. Retrieved 4 April 2017.

External links[edit]