Pubdate: Wed, 07 May 2003
Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC)
Copyright: 2003 The Vancouver Sun
Contact:  http://www.canada.com/vancouver/vancouversun/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477
Author: Greg Joyce, Canadian Press

VANCOUVER POLICE DISMISS REPORT THAT ALLEGES ABUSE IN DRUG CRACKDOWN

VANCOUVER  (CP)  -  A  U.S.  human  rights group is accusing Vancouver 
police  of  abusing  drug  dealers  in  the  city's notorious Downtown 
Eastside as part of a controversial crackdown.

But  police say the report by Human Rights Watch lacks credibility and 
that  parts  may have been fabricated. The New York-based human rights 
organization's  report cited numerous allegations of police misconduct 
and  abuse  of  process  during  a month-old campaign in the area that 
targets drug dealers.

But  the  police officer overseeing the crackdown in the blighted area 
around  Main and Hastings streets suggested Wednesday the authors were 
ignorant of Canadian law.

Insp.  Doug  LePard said the group relied on hearsay, "double hearsay" 
and  even  fabricated  comments  from some of those who were allegedly abused.

In the report, Abusing the User: Police Misconduct, Harm Reduction and 
HIV/AIDS  in  Vancouver,  the  authors  say  the  crackdown has driven 
injection  drug  users  away  from  services  there to help them. This 
raises a fear of increased spread of HIV in an area already ravaged by 
HIV/AIDS.

The  report  also  contained  comments from people who described their 
mistreatment  to the authors - including excessive force and arbitrary arrest.

"Our  impression  is  that the crackdown is extremely heavy-handed and 
people  are  being  driven  out  of  reach  of  life-saving services," 
Jonathan Cohen, one of the report's authors, said at a news conference at a 
church in the Downtown Eastside.

He  and a colleague spent four days conducting their research, talking 
to  26 injection drug users, about a dozen health experts and outreach workers.

Cohen  acknowledged  that  he  and his colleague had not witnessed any 
police abuse except a "strip search" of one person done in public.

"That  was  probably the most egregious incident of abuse we ourselves 
saw," said Cohen.

But LePard doubted the allegation.

"I  don't  know  the circumstances and they (Human Rights Watch) don't know 
either," he said.

"It's  not  something  we do in a public place. We know the law and we know 
what the Supreme Court of Canada says about that."

LePard said the report lacked credibility.

"The  rest  of  it  (the  alleged  abuses)  mostly is people reporting 
hearsay  or  double hearsay in which they say someone reported to them that 
someone else reported that they'd seen something."

None of the people, who used pseudonyms in the report, were present at 
the   news   conference  and  Cohen  said  he  wouldn't  reveal  their 
identities.

LePard  said  a Downtown Eastside advocacy organization known as PIVOT 
had  members  with  video  cameras  following  police before the Human 
Rights Watch researchers came to the city.

"PIVOT  followed  us  with video cameras and they (Human Rights Watch) 
were  here for four days and the one single incident that they saw was a 
strip search," said LePard.

LePard  cited  examples  in  the report that suggest some incidents or 
comments were made up.

One person, Gerald B., said he police went through his pockets without 
his  consent  and he remarked, "What did I do wrong, other than living in 
the poorest zip code in Canada?"

LePard said a Canadian would have said "postal code," not the American 
phrase "zip code."

Other  people,  said  the  report,  were  threatened  by  police  with 
"vagrancy"  violations but LePard said vagrancy has been off the books 
for  decades  and  that young officers not only would never use such a term 
but might not even know what it means.

"There is no such offence," said LePard.

Another  man, identified in the report as Gary L., said police grabbed 
him  on  an  outstanding  drug  warrant  and put him in cuffs and "leg irons."

LePard said he has never seen leg irons "outside of the movies."

He  didn't  want  to  give  the  impression  that police were perfect, either.

"I'm  not  saying  misconduct  never  occurs. I'm saying this is not a 
credible report. They never produce evidence."

He  wondered  why other organizations in the area mandated to help the 
disadvantaged had apparently not heard of the alleged abuse.

"How  is  that none of the other service providers who are not working 
for  us,  providers  down  there for a long time, they are not getting 
these reports of police misconduct?"

As  of  Wednesday,  LePard  said there had been no complaints of abuse 
lodged with the police department.

The drug crackdown began April 6 and was to last three months.

The  epicentre  of  drug  sales, near the corner of Main and Hastings, used 
to have as many as 150 dealers a day.

"Some have not left but others have found more covert ways to do their 
dealing," said LePard.

"We  never  thought  we  were  going  to  eliminate that. We wanted to 
eliminate  the disorder in public spaces so everyone is free to have a 
sense of safety."

Cohen  said  the  city drug abuse strategy in the area - the so-called 
"four  pillars" approach of enforcement, treatment, harm reduction and 
prevention  -  isn't  working  because  of  too  heavy  an emphasis on 
enforcement.
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MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart