Pubdate: Fri, 16 Aug 2002 Source: North Shore News (CN BC) Copyright: 2002 North Shore News Contact: http://www.nsnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/311 Author: Trevor Lautens Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) WVPD NEED MEDIA LESSONS Today's question: What's the difference between the West Vancouver Police Department (WVPD) and the Keystone Kops? Answer: The Keystone Kops were supposed to be funny. Here's another fine mess where simple public/press relations would have saved the WVPD's flatfoots from stepping squarely on the dog droppings: It says here that the WVPD and other police were absolutely correct - no matter what this paper's editorial voice boomed, in chorus with the usual champions of fastidious rights for suspected and convicted criminals against the rights of the conned, robbed, raped and murdered public - in using trained dogs to sniff out marijuana stowed in vehicles on BC Ferries. The police scooped 7.2 kilos of the stuff and laid three charges. Did the Sherlocks correctly deduce that professional drug dealers have had easy passage in their mainland-to-islands trade, simply using the ferry system? Elementary, my dear Watson. Were they therefore justified in countering that illegal, exploitative trade? Also elementary. So far, so good. But then the opinion-mongers in the media predictably scrambled to snatch the who's-the-most-"liberal" prize, happily steadying the soap box of those like Mr. Justice John Dixon of the Capilano College Supreme Court while he ponderously ruled that the searches were illegal, lacking search warrants. Wrong. It transpired that the cops got telephoned search warrants from ashore. Rafe Mair divulged this crucial information the morning after he and Dixon had a toothless like-in on the subject on CKNW. (Rafe, unlike many open-line show hosts, has the integrity to make corrections.) But that was last week's column. This week's is: Last Friday, more than a week after Rafe's corrective, three of B.C.'s big-bang media biz people were still repeating the canards against the cops - still talking "civillibertiesspeak" about the (non-existent) lack of proper search warrants. The three - Bill Good, Keith Baldrey and Paul Wilcocks, the latter filling in for Vaughn Palmer, on Bill's excellent "Cutting Edge of the Leg(islature)" segment on CKNW - then obviously got the high sign from Bill's producer that, oops, they were wrong about that little matter. Heaven knows it is hard for we gods of the media to admit error, especially on air. (Bill had an excuse: He was on holiday when the cops struck.) But not to embarrass these three sages. The point is that a police department alert to public opinion - and properly protective of its own and its town's reputation - would seize the initiative. It would have a definitive list of media contacts. It would flash the facts to them by every technology in the book as soon as the fiction emerged. But WVPD Chief Grant Churchill seems to prefer invisibility. A chief should, selectively, take public positions, say I. The citizenry should be steamed at the chief, Mayor Ron Wood in his role of head of the police commission, and commission members for yet another, and needless, black mark - which darkens not only the department but the town. Straight-up PR doesn't have to use smoke, mirrors and free lunches for reporters to make the best case possible for the client. Stating the facts can help a lot. As for the dopes of the Marijuana Party trying to foil the bud-sniffing dogs - book 'em, Sarge. I believe it's called obstruction of justice. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager