Canadian CrimeCast: Coast to Coast True Crime

The Soldier, the Spy, and the $3850,000 bank heist

Ryan Dell Episode 4

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It's just after midnight on March 19th, 1998. Two Brink's guards push through the south entrance of Calgary's North Hill Shopping Centre, bags heavy with cash — $385,000 bound for the CIBC branch inside.

They don't know it yet, but two men are already waiting for them inside the darkened bank. Men dressed in fake security uniforms. Men armed with AK-47 assault rifles, military-grade tear gas, and hundreds of rounds of ammunition.

What happens next will shatter the silence of that empty mall — more than eighty-eight shots fired in a point-blank gunfight — and launch an investigation that would stretch from Calgary to Ottawa, from the barracks of Canada's elite military units to the docks of Cherbourg, France, and deep into the violent world of South African white supremacists.

This is the story of a decorated soldier, a self-styled spy, and the most spectacular armoured car robbery attempt in Canadian history.


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It's just after midnight on March 19th, 1998. Two Brink's guards push through the south entrance of Calgary's North Hill Shopping Centre, bags heavy with cash — $385,000 bound for the CIBC branch inside.


They don't know it yet, but two men are already waiting for them inside the darkened bank. Men dressed in fake security uniforms. Men armed with AK-47 assault rifles, military-grade tear gas, and hundreds of rounds of ammunition.


What happens next will shatter the silence of that empty mall — more than eighty-eight shots fired in a point-blank gunfight — and launch an investigation that would stretch from Calgary to Ottawa, from the barracks of Canada's elite military units to the docks of Cherbourg, France, and deep into the violent world of South African white supremacists.


This is the story of a decorated soldier, a self-styled spy, and the most spectacular armoured car robbery attempt in Canadian history.


I'm Ryan, and this is Canadian Crime Cast.


CHAPTER ONE: TWO BOYS FROM REGINA

To understand what happened that night at North Hill mall, we have to go back — way back — to Regina, Saskatchewan, in the mid-1980s.

Two teenagers are growing up in the same city but from very different worlds. Darnell Bass is the son of Gary Bass, an RCMP staff sergeant who would eventually command a small detachment in Langenburg, Saskatchewan. Darnell's stepbrother, Kelly West, would also become a Mountie. This was a law-and-order family.

Patrick Steven Ryan, on the other hand, grew up in Regina's affluent south end, the son of a physician. Neighbours remembered him as a quiet kid — a role model, even — who liked to walk up the street wearing big boots and a backpack. There was something almost endearingly earnest about him.

But what bonded these two very different boys was a shared obsession: the Canadian military.

They met as teenagers in the Royal Regina Rifles cadet corps, and the friendship stuck. A former cadet leader who knew them both remembered Bass as a "gung-ho little soldier," while Ryan was more meek and shy. Despite those different personalities, the two were inseparable. They spent Christmas holidays together, took cross-country motorcycle trips, and kept in close contact for twenty years.

Bass was the first to make his dream real. At twenty-one, he left Saskatchewan and was assigned to the Canadian Airborne Regiment at CFB Petawawa, Ontario — about a hundred and fifty kilometres northwest of Ottawa. This was the elite. The paratroopers. The best of the best, or at least that's what they were supposed to be.

Bass served with 3 Commando for five years, then joined the regiment's reconnaissance team for another two. He deployed to the Golan Heights, to Somalia during that ill-fated peacekeeping mission, and later served during the devastating ice storm in eastern Ontario. He earned three medals and a commendation from the Chief of Defence Staff.

His commanding officer, Colonel Mike Houghton, called him "a very bright young man" who "loved the military."

But even early on, there were warning signs.

In January 1990, Bass and five other Airborne soldiers were found with a collection of non-military firearms in their barracks — assault rifles, shotguns, pistols, and ammunition. When military police questioned him, Bass offered an unusual explanation: he said the weapons were needed in case global food supplies were cut off and he had to protect himself. Military officials didn't take the comments seriously. They figured he was joking around. Bass was fined two hundred dollars and sent on his way.

Years later, when Bass appeared before a Commons defence committee visiting Petawawa, he told parliamentarians that fitness standards in the Canadian military were dropping and that honour had gone out of the Armed Forces. He complained that too many younger soldiers were just in it for the money. "You do not want an army with guys who are just in it for the money, because that sucks," he said. He also griped that regulations prevented him from wearing his combat uniform downtown when he went to places like the bank. He wanted the policy reversed and told MPs: "If I go to war, this is the uniform I'm going to be wearing."

This testimony, remarkably, was given on April 20th, 1998 — exactly one month after the North Hill robbery.

Ryan's path was less dramatic but equally telling. He served two stints as a private in the Royal Regina Rifles — from January to December 1985, and then from June 1987 to March 1990. Both times, he was released honourably. He went on to attend the University of Regina, graduating in 1993 with an arts degree, majoring in French.

But what Ryan really wanted was something more exciting than conjugating verbs. He wanted adventure. He wanted intrigue. And he would find it — or at least convince himself he had — on the other side of the world.


CHAPTER TWO: THE SPY WHO WASN'T

In 1994, Patrick Ryan made his first trip to South Africa.

This was a country in the throes of historic change. Nelson Mandela was about to be elected president. The old apartheid regime was crumbling. And in the shadows, right-wing extremists were threatening civil war rather than accept Black majority rule.

Ryan used connections with South Africans living in Saskatchewan to arrange a stay with relatives on a farm in the town of Lichtenburg, about two hours west of Johannesburg. He only stayed about two weeks before moving on, but the family remembered him — a nice enough person who seemed wide-eyed and naive. They still laughed about how scared he was of the Black workers on the farm.

Ryan then drifted to the coast — to the seaside community of Port Elizabeth, where a woman opened her farm to him. She remembered a pleasant young man who was always writing in his books, saying he wanted to be an author. But the most vivid memory was the protective measures he took when he went jogging: he always wore a knife strapped to his ankle.

By late April 1994, Ryan claimed to have taken a job with the Independent Electoral Commission, helping erect polling stations in Nelspruit, near Kruger National Park, during South Africa's first democratic elections. He told people he profited from information he gathered — that it was "a commodity in great demand."

But according to the South African Home Affairs office, there was no record of Ryan ever working with the Commission.

More troubling, South African police sources said the man Ryan claimed he worked with during the elections had links to the AWB — or Afrikaner Resistance Movement — a white supremacist group that had actually attempted to disrupt those very elections. The AWB advertised in publications worldwide seeking young white men to come to South Africa, work on farms by day, and protect the leadership at night.

Ryan also claimed to have met a former high-ranking official of the apartheid-era government — a man with ties to the notorious secret police and the South African Police. Intelligence sources in South Africa later told investigators that Ryan was part of a probe into the AWB and its connections to Johann Niemoller, a former soldier described by one police source as "a significant role player in the right wing in South Africa, a hardened counter-revolutionary."

Back in Alberta, Ryan started an import-export business called Assegai Imports — an assegai is an iron-tipped spear used by South African tribes. He also operated something called Security Intelligence Service, listing himself as "Operations Executive." Alberta Justice, which governs security firms, had never heard of either Ryan or his company.

In 1997, Ryan returned to South Africa for a five-month visit. His movements there — car rentals, border entries, tour bus trips — were all eventually tracked by investigators.

Ryan was building an elaborate self-mythology: the spy, the intelligence broker, the man who moved in shadowy circles. But beneath the cloak-and-dagger fantasy, he was doing something far more practical. He'd moved to Calgary and gotten a job with Brink's Canada as a bank machine technician — a guard who serviced automated teller machines and made cash deliveries. It was steady, unglamorous work. But it gave Ryan something invaluable: an intimate knowledge of Brink's security protocols, alarm codes, delivery schedules, and the inner workings of the very machines he would later rob.


CHAPTER THREE: THE UNRAVELLING OF A SOLDIER

While Ryan was playing spy in South Africa, something was breaking inside Darnell Bass.

In 1995, the Canadian government disbanded the Airborne Regiment. It was the fallout from Somalia — the scandal that erupted after two Canadian paratroopers tortured and beat a sixteen-year-old to death after he'd been caught sneaking into their camp. Members of the unit were also tied to racist and white supremacist activities. The images from Somalia became a national shame.

For Bass, the disbandment was devastating. He told a parliamentary committee it felt like "someone ripped my heart out and stomped on my guts."

Bass was posted to the Royal Canadian Regiment, still at Petawawa. He applied for a spot on the secretive Joint Task Force 2, Canada's elite counter-terrorism unit — but was rejected. He complained that the disbandment had taken away everything soldiers could strive for: "There are a lot of guys who want to come into the army, and they want to do things, but there's nothing left to do, nothing left to strive for. There's no special units to go to."

He was promoted to sergeant and put in charge of seven men. But behind the uniform and the medals, Bass was hollowing out. He was embittered, frustrated, and angry at a country he felt had betrayed him.

As his lawyer would later put it, Bass was "adrift, confused and frustrated" — ripe to be recruited.

And then Patrick Ryan called.


CHAPTER FOUR: THE PLAN TAKES SHAPE

It started in February 1996 with an idea.

Ryan, who was working at Brink's, explained the inner workings of the armoured car company to Bass during one of the soldier's visits to Calgary — the alarm codes, how money was loaded into machines, the security protocols. The pair went on a reconnaissance mission to a CIBC branch on 32nd Avenue Northeast, scouting the position of the doors relative to the ATM room and the inside of the branch.

They discussed various options: how to get the money, how to get keys for the machines, whether they would go in disguised as Brink's guards. Ryan assembled a team of people, each with a code name and a specific role. Bass described the planning to the court like a scene out of *Reservoir Dogs*.

Kelly Burke, another Brink's employee, was code-named "Michael" and was to provide keys and serve as the driver and lookout. Bass was introduced to Burke as "Jimmy." Randy Ferguson — "Shawn" — owned a Calgary embroidery shop and would make the fake uniforms. Ryan told Ferguson they were the core members of the "Western Brotherhood," a counterpart to an "Eastern Brotherhood" providing the weaponry. Bass later laughed at the name — he said it came from an outlaw motorcycle gang in the movie *48 Hours*.

Bass would be the entry man. Ryan would grab the cash. The trio dressed in coveralls embroidered with "CIBC Service Crew" on the back, wore ball caps with the CIBC logo, and carried radios and balaclavas in their pockets.

But the first attempt was a disaster. The keys Burke provided didn't work — they weren't cut properly. After unsuccessful attempts to pick the locks, the trio gave up and returned to their hotel, where Bass argued furiously with Burke over the mistake.

Bass returned to Petawawa. He and Ryan regrouped, planned another attempt at Christmas, and that also failed. It would take several more months and multiple botched plans before they'd finally succeed.

Meanwhile, Bass was gathering the tools of their trade. In the summer of 1997, after his promotion to sergeant gave him new access to military equipment, he stole explosives and tear gas from the Armed Forces. He bought two-way radios. He shipped weapons to Calgary on the Greyhound bus.

His friend Brent Countway, a sergeant in Canada's elite JTF2 counter-terrorism force, stored assault rifles in a secret gun room in his Ontario home.  Another army buddy, Thomas Koch, a former JTF2 commando now working security at the Royal Canadian Mint, purchased plane tickets for Bass in his own name so Bass could travel to Calgary without leaving a trail.

Then there was Heather Hedger — code-named "Red." She was Ryan's girlfriend and also a Brink's employee. Ryan cultivated the relationship, and eventually Hedger gave him the master keys and security codes for the CIBC branches. She later claimed she was coerced — that Ryan had pursued her relentlessly. She said she initially refused but finally succumbed to his constant pressure.

There was one detail that complicated her story: Ryan paid $4,800 for her breast enhancement surgery. She denied benefiting from the crimes.


CHAPTER FIVE: THE DRESS REHEARSAL

On the night of January 23rd, 1998, the plan finally came together — but not for the big score. This was the warm-up.

Using the codes and keys Hedger had smuggled out of Brink's, Ryan and his team entered the CIBC branch on 32nd Avenue Northeast after it closed for the day. They used Brink's internal security codes to get into the automated banking machine room and cleaned out two ATMs.

Ryan rented a red Aerostar van from Budget that morning under his own name — astonishingly careless for someone who fancied himself a spy. He listed his company, Securities Intelligence, on the rental paperwork.

They escaped with $134,000. Ryan used a portion to buy a new BMW motorcycle.

The ATM heist was clean. No alarms. No confrontation. No witnesses. It should have been enough.

Bass later told the court this money was supposed to bankroll a bigger operation — the one that would be their last. He and Ryan called the North Hill job "the finale" — a score they believed would net them between $250,000 and $500,000


CHAPTER SIX: PREPARING FOR WAR

In the weeks that followed, Ryan turned his full attention to the main event: an armed ambush of Brink's guards during a late-night cash delivery to the CIBC branch inside North Hill Shopping Centre.

This wasn't going to be a quiet break-in. Ryan and Bass knew the guards would be armed. They would have to overpower them with speed, firepower, and fear.

Ferguson sewed fake Brink's patches onto bomber jackets. Bass sent two heavy duffel bags containing weapons from Ottawa to Ryan in Calgary via Koch. Ryan and Bass reconnoitred the mall, studied the bank's layout, and identified the south entrance where the Brink's truck would park.

They would enter the bank before the guards arrived, posing as security personnel. They'd use phoney security uniforms to trick the mall's overnight cleaning staff into letting them inside.

For weapons, they had assault rifles. They also had military-issued tear gas canisters stolen from CFB Petawawa, hundreds of rounds of ammunition, body armour, balaclavas, and two-way radios.

Ferguson was asked to participate in this one too, but he drew the line at armed robbery. Ryan's response was chilling. He told Ferguson anyone could walk away from the Western Brotherhood — but they'd better not talk. Then he drew his hand across his throat.

Ferguson understood: that meant death.

Meanwhile, Bass arranged his alibi through Koch, who agreed to tell police that Bass had been in Ottawa the entire time. Bass was booked to leave Calgary on March 17th — two days before the robbery.

One more crucial piece: Brad Weber, Ryan's former roommate, was also a Brink's guard. He would be one of the two guards making the delivery that night. Whether Weber was a victim or a willing insider would become one of the most contested questions of the entire case.


CHAPTER SEVEN: MIDNIGHT AT NORTH HILL

Shortly before midnight on March 18th, 1998, Ryan and Bass entered the North Hill Shopping Centre.

Wearing phoney security uniforms, they presented themselves to the overnight cleaning staff, who let them into the CIBC branch. A member of the cleaning staff would later identify Bass as having been in the bank more than an hour before the shooting started. Once inside, Ryan and Bass donned their balaclavas and gas masks, checked their weapons, loaded their rifles, and waited.

At approximately midnight, three armed Brink's guards arrived in the armoured car and parked at the south entrance. One guard stayed with the vehicle. The other two — Paul Bisson and Brad Weber — entered the bank carrying bags containing $385,000.

Bisson and Weber were ambushed the moment they stepped inside. Ryan and Bass, in balaclavas and body armour, opened fire with automatic weapons. The eruption of gunfire in the enclosed space was deafening.

But Bisson didn't freeze. A former soldier himself — a corporal with the Lord Strathcona's Horse who had once survived five hours under fire in the former Yugoslavia and received Canada's highest honour for rescuing a fellow soldier during a firefight — he drew his sidearm and fired back at Bass.

Weber dove for cover and tossed his gun away.

A wild gunfight erupted. Ryan and Bass fired eighty-eight rounds from their assault rifles.  Bullets smashed into the adjacent hot dog kiosk. Windows at the Safeway shattered. Two Safeway night workers heard the shots.

Then the tear gas canisters went off.

Choking clouds of military-grade irritant filled the bank and eventually two floors of the mall. Ryan and Bass used the cover to make their escape. They fled into the night — empty-handed. The $385,000 they'd come for was left on the floor.

No one was injured. It was, as one prosecutor later put it, "the grace of God" that saved Paul Bisson's life that night.

Eighty-eight bullets. Body armour. Assault rifles. Tear gas. And every last dollar left behind.

The most spectacular armoured car robbery attempt in Canadian history was over in minutes. Now came the manhunt.


CHAPTER EIGHT: THE MANHUNT

In the hours after the shootout, Calgary police were left with a crime scene unlike anything they'd ever processed. Eighty-eight shell casings. Bullet fragments in the hot dog kiosk. Tear gas residue so thick it forced dozens of professional offices on the mall's second floor to close for the weekend. Mall customers were still rubbing their eyes the next afternoon.

But the suspects had worn masks. The guards couldn't provide useful descriptions. Police weren't sure if any of it had been captured on security cameras. The first descriptions released to the public were vague at best.

The break came from forensics. The tear gas canisters were military in origin — not surplus store purchases, but genuine military-issue dispensers. Detective Dan Mullan later said the stolen tear gas was "definitely one of the keys." Calgary police reached out to the Department of National Defence's Investigative Service, and the trail led straight to CFB Petawawa.

On July 16th, 1998 — four months after the shootout — Detectives Mullan and Tom Marriott walked into an office at the base and arrested Sergeant Darnell Bass. He didn't resist.

The next day, police executed simultaneous search warrants across the Ottawa area in a coordinated operation involving five police jurisdictions. At a house in Orleans, officers searched for twelve hours and loaded evidence into three vans. The haul was enormous: grenade launchers, tear gas dispensers, AK-47 rifles — a military arsenal.

On July 22nd, tactical officers blew the door off a basement suite on 26A Street Southwest in Calgary — Ryan's apartment. Inside, they found weapons, a computer, and something no one expected: neo-Nazi paraphernalia. An Aryan Nations flag. Films about Hitler's Germany. Books by Holocaust denier David Irving. White supremacist literature.

The next day, police publicly identified Patrick Steven Ryan as the second suspect. He hadn't been seen in weeks — not since trying to pawn two handguns at a gun shop, telling the owner he needed money for a trip.

Bass, meanwhile, was transferred to Calgary under extraordinary security. The police helicopter circled overhead. An RCMP jet delivered him to the airport. Seven tactical officers in black surrounded the aircraft. A motorcade of Suburban trucks, eleven motorcycles, and eight cruisers escorted him downtown. Snipers took positions near the courthouse. Metal detectors were installed at the courtroom door.

Police had intelligence that others connected to the heist had access to serious weaponry — and might try to silence Bass.

Ryan was the subject of a Canada-wide warrant. But investigators soon learned his beloved BMW motorcycle was being prepped at a Calgary shop for shipment to England. They tracked the shipping details and alerted customs officials overseas.

On August 4th, 1998, Ryan boarded a ferry from Southampton to Cherbourg, France. French customs officials were waiting. He was arrested the moment he set foot on French soil and jailed in Caen, about a hundred and twenty kilometres east of Cherbourg.

The international manhunt — involving Calgary police, the OPP, Ottawa-Carleton police, the Department of National Defence, Interpol, and CSIS — was over. Ryan would spend six months in that French prison, writing letters describing how he enjoyed beer, chocolates, and library books, and quoting Viktor Frankl, the Holocaust survivor. He was eventually extradited to Canada on February 19th, 1999, escorted by Mounties on a commercial flight — a stark contrast to Bass's helicopter-and-sniper arrival.


CHAPTER NINE: JUSTICE

The legal proceedings unfolded over the next two years and exposed the full bizarre cast of characters.

Darnell Bass went first. On November 30th, 1998, he pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit robbery. Five other charges, including attempted murder, were dropped. He was sentenced to seven years.

"It is important to note the accused has disgraced the Armed Forces of this country," said Justice Brian Stevenson. Bass stood and apologized: "I feel very sorry for what I've done. I take full responsibility for my actions."

His lawyer said Bass had become "adrift, confused and frustrated" after the Airborne's disbandment and was recruited at his lowest point.

Heather Hedger pleaded guilty to theft for providing the keys and received an eighteen-month conditional sentence — no jail time. Brad Weber was charged as an accomplice but the charges were eventually stayed due to insufficient evidence.

Patrick Ryan's trial began on May 3rd, 2000, before Justice Peter Martin. It lasted five weeks. Bass was the star witness, delivering crisp military-style testimony that laid out the entire conspiracy and pointed at Ryan as the mastermind. Ferguson, the getaway driver who came forward after the trial started, corroborated Bass's account and put Ryan at the scene of the January ATM theft.

The defence, led by Balfour Der, never called a single witness — not even Ryan. Der tried to paint his client as a mere information broker, a pawn in a scheme run by military men. He even accused Countway, the JTF2 commando, of being the real second gunman. Countway denied it. Bass contradicted him.

One piece of physical evidence proved devastating: a burn mark above Ryan's lip that appeared the day after the robbery. Multiple unconnected witnesses described seeing the same mark. Ryan told different people different stories about it — claiming it was a cigarette burn. The Crown argued it came from a searing bullet cartridge ejected from Bass's rifle as the two men fired side by side.

On June 16th, 2000, Justice Martin delivered his verdict: guilty on all counts. Ryan was sentenced to eight years — reduced from twelve for time served. He was ordered to pay $75,000 in restitution and given a twenty-year firearms ban.


CHAPTER TEN: AFTERMATH

The fates of those involved diverged sharply.

Bass served less than three years. The National Parole Board initially called him a "walking time bomb," but with the surprising support of Detective Tom Marriott — the very officer who'd arrested him — Bass won day parole in February 2001 and full parole by September. He became a licensed locksmith in Calgary, took up mountain climbing, climbed Kilimanjaro, and wrote an autobiography called *What Manner of Man*.

A day after being granted parole, Bass sent Ryan a coded postcard — written in the numeric cipher they'd used while planning the robbery. Ryan decoded it and told reporters “Lets just say he’s not wishing me the best of health”

Ryan served his time at various prisons. He was granted day parole in February 2003 and full parole on April 21st, 2004 — six years after the shootout. He told the board he wanted to become a teacher.

"I did something ridiculously crazy and terrible," he said, "and I've been punished for it."

Meanwhile, the military's role was quietly buried. At least one JTF2 member was secretly charged after admitting he'd planned to participate in the robbery — but the charges were dropped five months later. Thomas Koch, who laundered money and provided a false alibi, was never charged. Brent Countway, who stored the assault rifles, was never charged. Kelly Burke, identified by multiple witnesses as a participant, was never charged. Randy Ferguson, who admitted being paid thirteen thousand dollars and making the fake uniforms, was never charged.

Of roughly ten people investigators identified as playing roles in the crime, only two went to prison.

Paul Bisson, the Brink's guard who fired back and survived eighty-seven bullets flying past him that night, stayed in Calgary. He kept working for Brink's. When Ryan sent him a letter of apology from prison, Bisson was unmoved.

"He said he was sorry," Bisson told a reporter. "I was born at night, but not last night."

Asked about Ryan's parole, Bisson said he tried not to think about it. "Wasting my time thinking about Ryan and Bass is a waste of my time.”


EPILOGUE

The North Hill Shopping Centre is still there. The CIBC branch is still there. And if you walk through that south entrance late at night, past the spot where the Brink's truck used to park, there's nothing to mark what happened on a cold March night in 1998.

A decorated soldier undone by bitterness. A self-styled spy undone by ambition. A cast of military commandos, ex-girlfriends, and embroidery shop owners — most of whom walked free. And one Brink's guard who refused to stay down when the bullets started flying.

Eighty-eight shots fired. $385,000 left on the floor. And by the grace of God, not a single person killed.

I'm Ryan. Thank you for listening to Canadian Crime Cast.


Canadian Crime Cast is researched and hosted by Ryan. If you enjoyed this episode, please subscribe, leave a review, and share it with someone who loves a good Canadian true crime story.


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PRODUCTION NOTES


**Sources:** Calgary Herald reporting (1998–2006) by Rick Mofina, Sean Gordon, Sasha Nagy, Suzanne Wilton, Daryl Slade, Jeremy Hainsworth, Jason Van Rassel, Lisa Dempster, David Pugliese, Gary Dimmock, and others. Court testimony from the trials of Darnell Bass (November 1998) and Patrick Ryan (May–June 2000). National Parole Board decisions (2000–2004).