
Edmonton police warn extortions, arsons targeting South Asian businesses resurging
Interim Chief of police Warren Driechel said the attacks in Edmonton had stopped after several suspects were arrested in 2024 in connection to about 40 extortions and arsons targeting affluent South Asian homebuilders and business owners.
But since May, he said six more similar cases have been reported, leading investigators to believe the attacks are back and that there may be more victims.
'They're very similar activity,' Dreichel told reporters as community members left the town hall, during which police encouraged members of the South Asian diaspora to come forward if they've been targeted with extortion threats.
'There has been obviously some financial loss to people,' he said.
Local business owner Ashish Verma said he felt a little relieved after attending the town hall as he was one of the people who was threatened this summer.
He said he received a message from extorters demanding $100,000 and threats his children would be kidnapped if he didn't pay up.
Verma said he immediately told police. But even after police got involved, he said he remains worried over his and his family's safety.
'It's very hard for me to go out. Whenever my kids want to go out alone to play downstairs or out in the garden, I tell them not to go. I try to keep an eye on them. I'm scared,' he said in an interview outside the town hall.
'I can't sleep sometimes.'
Dreichel said similar extortions and arsons targeting British Columbia and Ontario's South Asian community, including homebuilders and business owners, have taken place in recent years.
The investigation into the previous 40 cases of arsons, extortions, and shootings in Edmonton has been dubbed Project Gaslight.
In January, EPS said its detectives completed their investigation and several suspects were arrested. Police said they were seeking to extradite Maninder Dhaliwal, the alleged ringleader of the Edmonton attacks, from the United Arab Emirates.
Police have said the suspects often reached out to victims over social media and threatened violence if they didn't receive money.
Several people have lost millions over the threats. Businesses have been shot. Homes have been burned down across the country.
Edmonton's Interim Chief of Police Devin Laforce said in a separate news conference this month that investigators believe the cases across the country and the latest ones in Edmonton could be connected to the Bishnoi gang, led by Lawrence Bishnoi in India who has several associates in Canada.
That's why Laforce said the police service supports calls from provincial governments in Alberta and B.C., and the mayor of Brampton in Ontario, to designate the gang as a terrorist entity.
B.C. Premier David Eby sent a letter to Prime Minister Mark Carney last month asking for the designation. Alberta Premier Danielle Smith and Public Safety Minister Mike Ellis said this month in a statement that the gang is not welcome in the province.
Laforce said the designation would help investigators look into the gang with a national focus. It allows investigators to withhold banking funds, for example, have more resources for surveillance and also deter others from joining the gang.
Police at Monday's town hall told South Asian community members to report ongoing crimes to police and look out for signs of youth being involved in gang activity, alleging ringleaders of the attacks in Project Gaslight recruited youth to commit crimes on their behalf.
Investigators said some of the signs include youth expressing a feeling that they don't belong and lying about where they're going and who they're spending time with.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 28, 2025.

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Calgary Herald
19 minutes ago
- Calgary Herald
Man admits to torching $10 million in properties as part of extortion arsons targeting Edmonton South Asian homebuilders
This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. According to the agreed facts, Heer recruited drivers to transport "arson teams" to properties selected in advance, which were then torched with gasoline. Edmonton police on July 26, 2024, announced charges against six people, including alleged ringleader Maninder Dhaliwal, accused of using arson and shootings to extort money from South Asian homebuilders. Manav Heer, 20, pleaded guilty to participating in the scheme during a court hearing on Aug. 1, 2025. Photo by Lauren Boothby / Postmedia A man who took part in an international conspiracy to terrorize homebuilders in Edmonton's South Asian community has admitted to a raft of crimes, the second plead out in the case known as Project Gaslight. THIS CONTENT IS RESERVED FOR SUBSCRIBERS ONLY Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada. Unlimited online access to articles from across Canada with one account. Get exclusive access to the Calgary Herald ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition that you can share, download and comment on. Enjoy insights and behind-the-scenes analysis from our award-winning journalists. Support local journalists and the next generation of journalists. Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword. SUBSCRIBE TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada. Unlimited online access to articles from across Canada with one account. Get exclusive access to the Calgary Herald ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition that you can share, download and comment on. Enjoy insights and behind-the-scenes analysis from our award-winning journalists. Support local journalists and the next generation of journalists. Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword. REGISTER / SIGN IN TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account. Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments. Enjoy additional articles per month. Get email updates from your favourite authors. THIS ARTICLE IS FREE TO READ REGISTER TO UNLOCK. Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments Enjoy additional articles per month Get email updates from your favourite authors Manav Heer, 20, pleaded guilty in the Court of King's Bench Friday to extortion, arson, conspiracy and using an imitation firearm as part of a criminal syndicate to extort money from around a dozen residential developers and their companies. Heer admitted to participating in arsons that damaged or destroyed a dozen homes worth around $10 million. He sat in the prisoner's box Friday wearing orange and black remand coveralls and did not react as prosecutor Breena Smith read in a 33-page agreed statement of facts detailing his crimes. Your weekday lunchtime roundup of curated links, news highlights, analysis and features. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. Please try again The Crown says the mastermind of the conspiracy, Maninder Singh Dhaliwal, left Edmonton for India on July 31, 2023, and directed the arsons from the United Arab Emirates, where officials have sought an extradition order. One of the victims was told the threats were linked to Brothers Keepers, the notorious gang founded in British Columbia. Smith said the scheme was part of a 'large Indo-Canadian criminal organization.' Heer, who was 19 at the time of his arrest, was one of five adults and a youth charged with carrying out the plots. He said the group usually began by identifying a seemingly wealthy homebuilder in the South Asian community, who received WhatsApp calls demanding payments as high as $1 million. They were told their homes would be torched and they would be shot if they didn't comply. At least two builders suffered drive-by shootings at their family homes. Heer played a mid-level role in the scheme. According to the agreed facts, Heer recruited drivers to transport 'arson teams' to properties selected in advance, which were then torched with gasoline. He was part of teams that lit two fires at construction projects owned by Victory Homes, as well as a third attempted arson targeting the builder. He also fired an airsoft gun at a security guard keeping watch in a vehicle outside one of the builder's properties, after a co-accused smashed the car's window with a hammer. Heer also confessed to setting fire to a pair of properties owned by Berry Homes Ltd., which spread to two other homes, including a property occupied by a family with three kids. Also targeted were Active Homes and Gill Built Homes. Heer was arrested outside the latter's multimillion-dollar Gill Villa apartment project on Jan. 29, 2024, after police observed Heer and his crew buying a jerry can and filling it with gasoline. This advertisement has not loaded yet. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. The group communicated about the crimes in group chats, including one labelled with fire emojis, which was ultimately renamed 'Not Criminals.' Dhaliwal allegedly paid around $1,500 to $2,000 for an arson. The Edmonton police Project Gaslight probe involved thousands of hours of investigation across multiple agencies, including obtaining court orders to intercept hundreds of calls to and from the remand centre, as well as a multi-month wiretap. Police also held multiple town halls to gain trust in the South Asian community (court heard one of the builders temporarily stopped speaking with police, fearing retribution, after a drive-by shooter shot his house moments after a security guard he hired left to check on another property). One of Heer's co-accused, Divnoor Asht, pleaded guilty in May to arson and extortion and received 4-1/2 years in prison. Heer also admitted to a separate count of dangerous driving for a crash that permanently altered the life of a seven-year-old child. In November 2023, while he was participating in the arson scheme, Heer slammed his dad's BMW into a motorist who was turning left at James Mowatt Trail and 17 Avenue SW in Edmonton. Heer's vehicle was travelling 160 km/h in a 60 km/h zone seconds before the collision. The child was rushed to hospital and treated for a traumatic brain injury as well as other injuries. According to an agreed statement of facts, he cannot walk, has lost his vision and hearing and will likely require care for the rest of his life. Heer is next in court Sept. 19 to set a date for sentencing in both cases. Bookmark our website and support our journalism: Don't miss the news you need to know — add and to your bookmarks and sign up for our newsletters. You can also support our journalism by becoming a digital subscriber. Subscribers gain unlimited access to The Edmonton Journal, Edmonton Sun, National Post and 13 other Canadian news sites. The Edmonton Journal | The Edmonton Sun

CBC
4 hours ago
- CBC
Second man pleads guilty in Edmonton 'Project Gaslight' arson and extortion plot
Social Sharing Another man has admitted he was part of a criminal conspiracy targeting successful South Asian home builders in Edmonton with extortion, arson and drive-by shootings. Manav Singh Heer, 20, pleaded guilty to arson, extortion and conspiring to commit extortion on Friday, about a year after he was among several others arrested in the Edmonton Police Service "Project Gaslight" investigation. Heer admitted he was involved in arsons at homes owned by four local developers, as well as an incident where he shot an airsoft gun at a car where a private security guard was watching over one of the developer's homes. He is the second person to plead guilty in the extortion scheme, which began in fall 2023 and continued into early 2024, with local home builders facing demands for cash, violent threats and torched properties. Another young man pleaded guilty earlier this year, admitting he was a "middle manager" in the conspiracy, directing lower-level members, including Heer, about arson targets and reporting progress to higher-ups. Three others, 21-year-old Parminder Singh, 20-year-old Gurkaran Singh and a youth who was 17 when he was arrested and can't be identified, are still before the courts. The charges they face have not been proven. Alleged ringleader Maninder Dhaliwal is also facing charges, but he's in Dubai, where he allegedly orchestrated the scheme from abroad. Court heard Friday that he is still the subject of an extradition request to send him back to Canada from the United Arab Emirates. Arson involvement The details of Heer's role in the extortion plot were laid out in an extensive agreed statement of facts read in court by Crown prosecutor Breena Smith. Heer was aware of threats against the home builders and demands for money, as well as shootings committed as part of the scheme. In committing the arsons, "He was being paid by the syndicate for his work and he was knowingly doing these things at the direction of or for the benefit of the syndicate," Smith said. One local business owner began receiving threatening messages, which didn't come from Heer, in October 2023. Court heard that a caller claimed to be a member of the Brothers Keepers gang and demanded $500,000, saying he "must have the money as he had a nice home and cars." He subsequently received threats that his whole family would be killed and his house would be burned, with the caller describing the car sitting in his driveway and recounting "intimate details" of his life that seemed to be the result of surveillance. After a drive-by shooting at his home where Parminder Singh was arrested, the developer received a text that said, "You want to play this stupid game? You call the cops, let's see how long you survive." Heer was one of the people who set fire to one of the home builder's properties a few weeks later, in the early morning of Nov. 6, 2023. He was involved in a subsequent attempted arson in Leduc where he and two others were chased off by a private security guard. And he was then part of an attack on a security guard's car where he shot and shattered the rear window of the vehicle as the guard drove away. Other developers were targeted in the months that followed, with Heer admitting he was directly involved in some of the arsons, and had advance knowledge of others where he didn't participate. According to the agreed facts, in one arson associated with the extortion plot in December 2023, the fire jumped to two neighbouring properties in the Cy Becker neighbourhood. Two adults and three children had to be evacuated from one of the homes. A firefighter at the scene searching a house for occupants fell two storeys to the basement when the floor gave way. Court heard he was seriously injured and couldn't work for several weeks. Cellphone, surveillance evidence Police gathered evidence of Heer's involvement in the scheme from a wiretap, recorded Edmonton Remand Centre calls and material discovered on Heer's cellphone. In some cases, other alleged members of the conspiracy filmed the process of setting the homes on fire, and shared it with others in the group. According to the agreed facts, in one group text, Heer said he was paid a little more than $1,000 for one of the arsons, and he continued to do it for the money. In another group chat titled "Not Criminals," Heer and other members of the group talked about creating more "arson teams," getting guns and identifying more home builder targets. WATCH | Extortions orchestrated from India, EPS says: Police say Edmonton area extortions targeting home builders orchestrated from India 2 years ago Edmonton police are investigating 27 events in an ongoing extortion, arson and firearms series affecting the South Asian community in the region. An estimated $9 million in property damage has been reported from the arson and shootings. A list of addresses associated with one developer was found in a note on Heer's cellphone, titled with fire emojis, and police found addresses where arsons took place searched and saved on his phone. Police also discovered a web browser searches for home builders that were targeted as well as the phrase, "How much jail time facing for arsons." Heer was caught several times on surveillance video in the area of arsons, often wearing a "distinctive" pair of red and white striped Nike sneakers that were seized after his arrest. On Friday, Heer additionally pleaded guilty to a dangerous driving offence that took place within the same period as the Project Gaslight crimes on Nov. 25, 2023. Court heard that Heer was driving his father's vehicle on James Mowatt Trail S.W., a road with a speed limit of 60 km/h, at 160km/h. A woman driving with her seven-year-old son in the backseat was attempting to make a left turn in the intersection when Heer crashed into the car, with an EPS investigation finding the impact came at a speed of 124 to 137 km/h. The woman and her son were both injured and taken to hospital, where the boy became unresponsive. Court heard that he underwent emergency neurosurgery, but he was left with a severe traumatic brain injury. According to agreed facts read in that case, he's no longer ambulatory, and lost his vision and likely also his hearing. He will likely require full-time care for the rest of his life. Heer's defence lawyer, Rahul Nanda, has requested a psychological assessment ahead of a sentencing date, which will be scheduled later.


Global News
12 hours ago
- Global News
Project Gaslight extortion arsonist pleads guilty to torching Edmonton homes
The years-long Project Gaslight investigation into extortions and arsons in and around Edmonton is now moving through the legal system. One of the accused, Manav Heer, pleaded guilty in an Edmonton courtroom Friday afternoon to four charges related to the Edmonton Police Service's investigation into crimes targeting South Asian community members. Heer pleaded guilty to extortion, arson, conspiring to commit extortion and arson, and using an imitation firearm. From shootings to new or under-construction homes being torched, police investigated dozens of crimes in the Edmonton region between October 2023 and January of this year that investigators said were extortions by members of the South Asian community against their own people — in particular, home builders and affluent community members. Story continues below advertisement The extortion scheme saw successful South Asian business people threatened for money in exchange for 'protection' and officials said failure to pay out led to arsons — primarily at under-construction homes — and drive-by shootings. The result? Tens of millions of dollars in damage and widespread fear in the community. In total, police investigated 40 crimes related to the extortion series. Heer was arrested, along with five other people, on July 25, 2024. Get daily National news Get the day's top news, political, economic, and current affairs headlines, delivered to your inbox once a day. Sign up for daily National newsletter Sign Up By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy At the same time, a Canada-wide warrant was issued for another man: Maninder Singh Dhaliwal, who was believed to be the ringleader of the criminal organization responsible for the series of Project Gaslight extortions. View image in full screen Edmonton police chief Dale McFee speaks about arrests made in Project Gaslight Friday, July 26, 2024. Dave Carels / Global News Dhaliwal was arrested in the United Arab Emirates on separate criminal charges near the end of 2024, and is still incarcerated in the Middle Eastern nation as Canada works to negotiate an extradition — a process complicated by the lack of a treaty to do so between Canada and the UAE. Story continues below advertisement In the meantime, the criminal cases against the other people involved in the crime spree are moving ahead. According to an agreed statement of facts, Heer committed multiple home arsons but not all that were investigated. The fires targeted different companies and the statement said Heer also sent text messages talking about arson and helped identify target properties. It also said Heer shot the back window of a security guard's vehicle with an airsoft gun. The Crown said Heer was involved in arsons totaling around $10 million in damages. No sentencing date has been set. His next court date will be in September, following an assessment. 1:49 Edmonton's south Asian community 'doesn't feel safe' amid new threats Crimes similar to what occurred two years ago have started up again in Edmonton, police said a few weeks ago when announcing a town hall (held this week) for those who are being threatened. Story continues below advertisement For every crime they know about, police suspect there are many others in which victims stay silent — fearful to come forward to police either because they're afraid for their personal safety, or they come from a region where police are not trustworthy. Because of that, officers in Edmonton are working to strengthen relations and build trust with the South Asian community. Edmonton police reminded residents they can report tips anonymously to a third party: Crime Stoppers. The EPS also has a dedicated email (projectgaslight@ and phone number (780-391-4279) for South Asian community members who are being targeted.