Pubdate: Thu, 21 Aug 2003 Source: Edmonton Sun (CN AB) Copyright: 2003, Canoe Limited Partnership. Contact: http://www.fyiedmonton.com/htdocs/edmsun.shtml Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/135 Author: Doug Beazley Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) COPS WANT REHAB FOR ROBBERS City cops are asking Crown prosecutors to start making mandatory drug treatment part of their sentence requests for robbers with substance abuse problems. The idea is among eight recommendations included in an internal Edmonton Police Service report, drafted in May, aimed at curbing what cops say are rising robbery rates in the city. "It's based on the experience of police officers - that robbers with substance abuse problems are more likely (to reoffend)," said Const. Tony Freund, of the armed robbery unit. "Right now, (drug treatment) isn't always a mandatory thing, often it's voluntary. And if they don't follow through on their treatment, we don't know whether it's working." Freund said statistics on the rise in robbery rates and the role drug addiction plays in property crime in Edmonton "are being compiled." An Alberta Justice spokesman said the department hadn't yet received a formal request from the city police. A senior counsellor with the Alberta Alcohol and Drug Abuse Commission said convicted robbers with substance abuse problems frequently are forwarded to treatment programs as a condition of their sentence. But Mary Ellen Jackson-Herman said mandatory treatment will only work if the convicts stick around long enough to be convinced they have a problem. "What does 'mandatory treatment' mean? Does it mean talking to a counsellor once?" she said. "Because, quite a few of our clients come to us not believing they actually have a problem. And three weeks in counselling, for them, isn't going to do diddley-squat." And prominent local criminal lawyer Robert Davidson wonders whether increasing the number of robbery convicts taking treatment might overwhelm services available in federal prisons. "I'm not sure our prisons have the capacity to put all those people in drug programs," he said. "What do you do if there's a waiting list a year long?" The city police armed robbery section is also recommending the service detail an officer to examine robbery scenes and advise shopkeepers on how they can prevent robberies, through better video surveillance and staff training. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh