Pubdate: Tue, 30 Dec 2003 Source: Victoria Times-Colonist (CN BC) Copyright: 2003 Times Colonist Contact: http://www.canada.com/victoria/timescolonist/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/481 Author: Les Leyne, Times Colonist WHIFF OF CRIME IN CORRIDORS OF POWER When Police Investigations Lead to Seat of Government We Should Worry The authorities have been warning for years about the pervasive nature of organized crime in this province. If the official suspicions that lie behind the eye-blinking police raids on the B.C. legislature turn out to be well-founded, then maybe they are right. Maybe this province is going rotten. Maybe the drug trade has corrupted us from the bottom almost to the top. Authorities were still being circumspect Monday after 20 officers marched in and scooped documents and hard drives from the offices of two cabinet ministers' aides. The raid apparently stems from a drug investigation that started here about 20 months ago, grew into an organized crime investigation that reaches at least as far as Toronto, and then somehow morphed into a commercial crime probe. Along the way it indirectly snared a Victoria policeman in some corruption charges. Now it has ended the career of David (Udhe) Basi, fired Monday as Finance Minister Gary Collins' ministerial assistant, and imperilled the job of Bob Virk, the now-suspended MA to Transportation Minister Judith Reid. (All indications are that this thing is rapidly headed toward the federal Liberal Party -- see Jody Paterson's column elsewhere in this paper.) The details will take months to become clear and years to resolve. The individuals named above aren't even charged at this point, and are innocent unless proven guilty. All that's known is that officials compiled enough evidence to convince a B.C. Supreme Court justice that they should be entitled to their own look through the offices of various politically connected people. We all have to suspend judgment until more is in. But B.C. Liberals will be counting every minute until this is behind them. All they're clinging to now is the police assurance that no elected officials are involved. The striking thing so far in the guarded official comments to date is the "we told you so" tone when it comes to the broad brush outline of the drugs-organized crime-commercial crime trail they're following. RCMP spokesman Sgt. John Ward issued a perfunctory statement giving just a rough outline of the case. But he took the opportunity to remind B.C. once again about the extent of organized crime's involvement in everyday B.C. life. He said it's reached "epidemic proportions in B.C., touching every region and every major street corner." He said; "The RCMP have grave concerns about the dominance of organized crime and drug-related activity throughout B.C. "I can say that, in general, the spread of organized crime just in the past two years has been like a cancer on the social and economic well-being of all British Columbians. Today the value of the illegal marijuana trade alone is estimated to be worth in excess of $6 billion. We are seeing major increases in organized crime-related murders, beatings, extortion, money-laundering and other activity which touches many innocent lives." RCMP have made organized crime one of the force's top five priorities and Ward made a curious point of crediting Solicitor General Rich Coleman for developing a "comprehensive attack on organized crime." Coleman is no doubt as stunned as everyone else to find that his comprehensive attack's latest target is about 50 metres away from his own legislature desk. But he, too, wasted no time in reminding people that the authorities have been worried about this for a long time. "I've been telling you guys for a long time that the marijuana grow business into the cocaine trade, the money-laundering is a significant problem with organized crime, both with Asian gangs and the Hells Angels in this province." Some might worry his comprehensive attack is compromised, at worst, and profoundly embarrassed, at best, now that it appears to have prompted a police raid on the legislature. A raid on the offices of aides, moreover, that Coleman has routinely been doing government business with for the past two years. But he put the best spin he could on the situation, pointing out that the execution of a search warrant, right in the symbolic heart of the provincial government, tells people they won't allow any area of the province to be compromised by organized crime. Or, at least, any more than it already has been. I asked Premier Gordon Campbell if this shows that B.C. is rotten to the core and he curtly said no. But you have to wonder how this looks from outside. Give a snap word association quiz to 100 people around the world and the first word out of their mouths after "B.C." is "Bud." The province is inextricably linked to marijuana; grow-ops are everywhere and in the last few years before it becomes a legal commodity, the black market for the stuff is enormous. (The official $6 billion estimate is almost one-quarter of the entire provincial budget.) So when the world at B.C.'s doorstep hears that an investigation that originated in the dope trade has reached right to the level of cabinet ministers' aides, maybe they'll just shrug and accept it as a British Columbia commonplace, like street riots. But from here, sitting perhaps naively in the seat of government, it is profoundly disturbing and a little frightening. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake