Pubdate: Sat, 16 Dec 2000 Source: Winnipeg Sun (CN MB) Copyright: 2000 Canoe Limited Partnership Contact: http://www.canoe.ca/WinnipegSun/home.html Author: Tammy Marlowe COCAINE FUELS DRIVE-BY MAYHEM Police Blame Shootings On Gangs Cocaine is feeding the recent spate of gang-related drive-by shootings in Winnipeg, police say. "It's not so much a matter of quantity, it's who's controlling it," police spokesman Const. Bob Johnson said yesterday. Investigators believe two rival gang factions are responsible for at least seven drive-by shootings on the streets of Winnipeg since last month. With so many bullets flying, police say it's surprising no one has been killed -- but six people have suffered relatively minor injuries. Thursday evening -- shortly after a 15-year-old was wounded when he was shot while a passenger in a car in the North End -- police charged a 22-year-old man with attempted murder. Yesterday, University of Winnipeg criminologist Doug Skoog said it's not surprising the gunfights are over cocaine. 'ENORMOUS PROFITS' "The drug trade generally in Winnipeg -- with possibly the exception of marijuana -- has historically been gang-controlled. There's enormous profits to be made," said Skoog. "People are willing to take risks in order to realize these profits." The RCMP describes the illegal drug trade in Canada as "the principal source of revenue for most organized crime groups." By some estimates, the underground market brings in as much as $10 billion a year across the country. In other major Canadian cities, such as Toronto and Montreal, turf wars over drugs have often sparked violence. But Winnipeggers aren't familiar with gang versus gang wars, Skoog said. "In some ways, (it's) an unprecedented level of violent activity, apparently between crime elements and crime elements -- and not between crime elements and the citizenry," he said. "It's something very different." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake