Pubdate: Wed, 28 Jul 2004 Source: Whitehorse Star (CN YK) Copyright: 2004 Whitehorse Star Contact: http://www.whitehorsestar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1493 Author: Sarah Elizabeth Brown Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mdma.htm (Ecstasy) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) DRUG SCENE STABLE OVER LAST DECADE Whitehorse's drug trade hasn't grown over the last decade, though it's gone through highs and lows, according to a study due out this fall. "It didn't appear to have grown," RCMP Cpl. Pete Greenlaw said about Whitehorse's illegal drug market. "It appears to be fairly stable. You have peaks and valleys, but there's no dramatic increase." Greenlaw, the Yukon RCMP's drug awareness officer and a career drug cop, is part of the SASSY committee (Substance Abuse Strategy and Solutions for Yukon) conducting a study of the city's drug scene. It's set for completion by November. Currently, a local researcher is reviewing information from police, the coroner, justice department, first nations, medical personnel and treatment providers. Fourteen similar studies will be done in other Canadian cities over the next two years. The study comes as some downtown residents are tackling the topics of drugs, their dealers and the kaleidoscope of problems that come with both. A public meeting organized by downtown riding MLA Todd Hardy is set for 7:00 this evening. Libby Davies, the NDP Member of Parliament for Vancouver's Downtown Eastside, which is riddled with drugs as one of the country's poorest postal codes, will speak about her experiences at the public forum. It will be held at the Whitehorse Public Library. Community involvement is exactly what's needed if the drug situation is to get any better, indicated Greenlaw. "We're just one cog in the wheel," the corporal said of the RCMP's role. "The community must get involved." Part of the SASSY study's mandate is to provide participants and various levels of governments with options -- various tasks that can realistically be tackled. A common public misconception is that the police always know what's going on, said Greenlaw. People often don't make reports of drug activity to the RCMP for that reason, he noted. "Sometimes the police are the last to know," he said. "But the public has been quite helpful in identifying who's doing what," said Greenlaw. "There have been investigations downtown, there've been arrests, there've been seizures, people have gone to court and have gone to jail." Since mid-March, police have laid unrelated charges of cocaine trafficking or possession for the purpose of trafficking on at least seven individuals. Those cases are currently winding through the courts. Last summer, the RCMP brought in a pair of Outside undercover drug cops in an effort to root cocaine dealers out of downtown bars. Seven individuals were arrested; all were convicted. In the summer of 2002, police broke up what they called a high-level cocaine ring for the Yukon, arresting six people. The stiffest sentence in that case was a 4 1/2-year penitentiary stint for the ringleader. Investigating drug crimes doesn't simply involve taking down witness statements, bagging the evidence and handing it to a prosecutor. A drug squad officer will take a tip about trafficking and try to corroborate that information through other sources, informants and surveillance, said Greenlaw. Though he declined to give a number of suspected houses drugs are being sold out of -- "the less the bad guys know how much we know, the better" -- Greenlaw said drug investigations take time. "I think you'll find the drug squad has been in those drug houses on numerous occasions and they have made numerous arrests and charges, and these people have gone to court several times already." Where a drug investigation can take months of unseen effort, there's always another dealer willing to fill the void left when another supplier is put behind bars, far quicker than the justice process works. "As long as there's demand, there'll be somebody step up to supply it," Greenlaw said. "It will likely happen in the next day or two (after an arrest)." Drug cops learn they can only affect a small piece of the world at any one time, said Greenlaw, who spent years as a long-haired undercover officer in Toronto and southern Ontario's cities after becoming a Mountie in 1975. "Basically, it comes down to substance abuse and drug trafficking is a community problem. It's just not a problem for the police." Prevention is another aspect. So is changing the lifestyles of drug abusers through treatment, education and training, providing them with a safe place to stay until they're on their feet. That's where it becomes far more than an enforcement issue, but a social, economic and cultural problem as well, he said. And for the small group of people who will always be hooked on drugs regardless of efforts to get them unhooked, harm reduction is needed to minimize the risks of a hugely dangerous lifestyle. Even for those who have a hope of escaping drugs, the process to health is long and messy. "You're not going to put somebody in a treatment program for 10 days and wave a magic wand and they're going to be cured. Once you've got them dried out and their systems cleaned, you still have to provide them with education, support, housing, employment ... a lot of steps," said Greenlaw. "And as expensive as that sounds, think of the cost of the police, the courts and health care." It's cheaper to fix the problem than apply Band-aids, he said. A downtown resident took her concern about new drug houses opening for business to her MLA, sparking the NDP leader's community forum this evening. In an interview earlier this month, that resident said she was concerned largely about the constant traffic, noise and used drug needles that cropped up alongside the drug houses. But, she said then, violence is a problem too, noting she's witnessed the brutality involved with peddling an illegal high. Violence is inherent in drug trafficking, Greenlaw said. "A drug trafficker is after one thing, and that's your money, and if they think they can rip you off, they will rip you off -- they will steal your money or sell you something that isn't drugs." Violence spills over when dealers retaliate against those they think have wronged them, and when drug users run up debts. "Then the trafficker has to collect the money, and they'll use violence and intimidation." The most significant change between drug enforcement in the 1970s and now is the realization just how dangerous some of these drugs are, said Greenlaw. "Fire departments find more labs than the police do," said Greenlaw. The chemicals used to create synthetic drugs in illegal labs are highly explosive and flammable, and the people mixing up a batch of speed (methamphetamine) aren't rocket scientists, he added. "Back in the '70s, we'd seize a speed lab ... and we never thought anything of wearing any protective gear ourselves. When we took the people out of the house, we never thought of their health either." It's since been discovered that people who live and work in speed labs have extremely high concentrations of methamphetamine in their bodies, even if they're not drug users. "High to the point where they should be in the hospital," said Greenlaw. After being arrested, an escorted trip to the doctor is now routine, and police officers are garbed head to toe in protective suits. Illegal labs for synthetic drugs haven't been an issue here yet, said Greenlaw, but it's only a matter of time. After alcohol, the most used and abused intoxicants in Whitehorse are marijuana and cocaine, said Greenlaw. Heroin, though only used by a small group, has long been around, as has speed. There have been a handful of deaths attributed to speed over the years, he said. Synthetic drugs like Ecstasy are making a bit of an increase, but that's part of a national trend. Whitehorse tends to be slightly behind on national trends, Greenlaw said. Nationally, only 18 per cent of pills sold as Ecstasy are actually the synthetic stimulant. In the Yukon, Greenlaw said he'd be surprised if more than 10 per cent of pills sold as Ecstasy were the psychedelic amphetamine variant. Speed, like cocaine and Ecstasy, is a stimulant, but speed is known as a "dark drug" even among users because it's so dangerous, said Greenlaw. Speed's effects are similar to those of cocaine, but far stronger. "There's no such thing as an old speed freak." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D