Pubdate: Sun, 19 Jan 2003 Source: Kenora Enterprise (CN ON) Copyright: 2003 Kenora Enterprise Contact: http://www.kenoraenterprise.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2358 Author: Cynthia Fines CRIME STOPPERS CLEAN UP The potent blend of a cash incentive and a guarantee of anonymity helped Crime Stoppers bag property, drugs and narcotics worth just over 5.7 million in northwestern Ontario last year. Crime Stoppers marked their fifteenth year in the region with 982 cases and helped make 1,241 arrests. Total recoveries included $884,204 in property, $1,979,969 in drugs and $2,864,173 in narcotics. The region includes eight Crime Stopper boards, each one made up of 10 to 12 volunteers. Petrina Taylor, OPP detective constable, coordinates the entire northwest region covering, Sioux Narrows, Atikokan, Dryden, Ignace, Fort Frances, Sioux Lookout, Pickle Lake, Red Lake, Ear Falls and Kenora. The service is based on confidentiality. Once a caller provides information, a code number is assigned to that person who is asked to call back within approximately two to three weeks. Then, the caller is asked if there are any updates on the case. Any tips that help solve a crime are rewarded with cash. A dollar figure is assigned as a reward, Taylor said, based upon how many cases were solved, number of charges laid, amount of property returned and the value of drugs seized. The maximum tip is $2,000. To her knowledge, the biggest reward paid was $1,500 for a drug-related tip. Cash payment is made in whichever manner the caller prefers. They can select a drop zone of their own choosing or use the program's system. While larger cities use banks to pay callers, northwestern Ontario uses local businesses. Up to three are selected in each town as pick-up spots. The caller is asked if he or she knows anyone at any of the business. If not, then the caller goes to an agreed upon business, identifies themselves to a contact using the assigned code number and receives an envelope of cash in return. "Then they walk away, no words exchanged," Taylor said. Only at that point does the caller discover the amount of the award. Taylor remembers some creative drop spots. One caller requested the envelope of cash be pinned to the cork message board in the Kenora Shoppers Mall. Another asked to have the envelope taped beneath a merry-go-round. "The person is sitting there watching you," she said. "You don't know who it is nor do you care." You walk away, she said, and pray that they got it. Some callers have either come to other communities or go to other communities to pick up their payments. "You have to do what works in your area," she said, adding that the program hasn't had any problems so far. Total rewards paid last year equaled $93, 575. She said people call for different reasons. Some want to help their community while others want to rid themselves of their competition, "such as other drug dealers," she said. "We don't care who calls, who we take the information from," she said. "We just want the information." Callers, she said, don't immediately enquire about the money, but they do ask how the system works. "They want to know if they're being taped, if we have call display or tracing," she said. Headquartered at the downtown OPP office, Taylor said the caller's identity is secure, that there are no tracing systems. "I don't even have a display module on my phone," she said. Although the majority of tips are drug related, calls come in for all sorts of reasons, she said. They can include theft, bootlegging and fraud. During hunting season, illegal hunting tips come in for the Ministry of Natural Resources. In her nearly five years experience, Taylor hasn't received a homicide tip. Crime Stoppers originated in Albuquerque, New Mexico in 1976 when a cash reward was offered to help solve the murder of a gas station attendant. - --- MAP posted-by: SHeath(DPFFlorida)