Pubdate: Sun, 10 Nov 2002 Source: Winnipeg Free Press (CN MB) Copyright: 2002 Winnipeg Free Press Contact: http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/502 Author: Mary Agnes Welch CARRIER CAUGHT IN DRUG BATTLE'S CROSSFIRE Shot Hits Car, Core-Area House Torched A Free Press newspaper carrier was caught in the crossfire when an apparent dispute between two groups of crack-cocaine dealers and users erupted in gunfire and a suspected arson. The carrier, who did not want his name used for fear of retribution, was delivering papers along Spence Street south of Broadway when he heard what he thought was a brick or a rock shatter his windshield on the passenger side. As he got out of the van to check the damage, he noticed three men in their 20s or early 30s standing a few houses down the block. He yelled at them, then got back into his car to continue his route. As he slowly drove by the men, the carrier noticed one was pointing a shotgun at his Ford Aerostar van. The carrier hightailed it to the nearest pay phone to call police. "I was pretty freaked out. I was barely coherent," he said. "Sometimes there's a few drunks on the street. I've encountered a few of those, but nothing like this." As the carrier was calling police, he heard the sirens of fire trucks arriving to fight a blaze at 86 Spence St., the house at the location where he came under fire. Winnipeg Police Duty Insp. Bob Irwin confirmed the carrier's windshield had been blasted by a sawed-off shotgun. A box of shotgun shells was found on the boulevard at the site of the shooting. Police said the carrier was caught in the middle of a dispute involving about 10 people belonging to two groups of crack users and dealers. Police said the carrier was caught in the middle of a dispute involving about 10 people belonging to two groups of crack users and dealers. Details were sketchy last night, but police believe members of one group intentionally set fire to the ramshackle three-storey home at 86 Spence while the rival group was inside. As the group inside the house fled outdoors, a shot was fired and hit the carrier's van. The major crimes unit and arson investigators were still sorting through statements and evidence last night and had not yet laid charges in the incident. "For the type of people who are involved in crack cocaine, for them to be co-operative with us takes a long time," Duty Insp. Tom Kloczko said last night. Kloczko said crack cocaine was definitely at the centre of the dispute, but he said there's no evidence yet that the incident involved any of the area's gangs. "It was a drug-related incident, but at this point we can't say it's gang-related," Kloczko said. The clapboard house at 86 Spence appeared abandoned yesterday, with a pile of rubble in the backyard and several windows without panes. Firefighters said the blaze caused $80,000 in damage, mostly to the exterior of the house and to the third-floor ceiling. The shooting happened in an area of the city that is in transition. Extensive community efforts by several south Broadway groups have transformed dilapidated streets farther west. On Spence Street, derelict homes stand side by side with houses that have been fixed up by their owners. Wayne Martin, a circulation district manager at the Free Press, said carriers serving tough parts of Winnipeg often encounter hostility. Some have been beaten up or robbed, but no one has ever been shot at before to his knowledge, he said. If he can get his van back from police in time, the carrier plans to return this morning to his West Broadway delivery route, which he has had for three years. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake