Pubdate: Wed, 14 Jan 2004 Source: Duncan News Leader (CN BC) Copyright: 2004 Duncan News Leader Contact: http://www.cowichannewsleader.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1314 Author: Patrick Hrushowy Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/corruption SILENCE ABOUT LEGISLATURE RAIDS UNDERMINING CONFIDENCE View From The Right Memo: Associate Chief Justice Patrick Dohm. Re: Legislature Search Warrants. If it pleases your Worship, we would like to petition you from this corner on the matter of unsealing the search warrants that were the basis of police raids on offices in our provincial legislature. As you are no doubt aware the raids themselves have been the subject of intense media interest. A number of excellent and experienced reporters have been following up leads, and published stories have begun to fill in some of the details of what may be involved. It has been fascinating sitting here in quiet Cobble Hill watching as a story of such provincial and national interest unfolds. While I've been troubled that there has been a privacy seal placed on all police information about the raids, and the level of pure speculation that has developed, it was only when the story hit me where I live - literally around the corner - that I am moved to seek some relief from your Court. Your Worship, there are entirely too many loose threads of wild speculation arising from this issue. While the RCMP has repeated publicly that no politicians or political parties are under investigation, the tangled web of connections between politically active individuals, a suspended police officer and drug raids is now threatening confidence in government, both provincially and federally. It is becoming increasingly detrimental to the public interest for the seal to remain on the search warrants. The public's right to know the basis of this investigation and raids is now superseding any potential risk to the integrity of the police investigation. If anything, it's statements from the RCMP itself that should set the stage for unsealing search warrants. RCMP spokesman Sgt. John Ward was quoted as saying at a news conference: "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." By inference you could be forgiven for thinking this cancer may have spread to the legislature. Ward went on: "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." Ward said because of the huge revenues generated by the illicit drug trade it "shouldn't surprise anyone that many people are susceptible to being corrupted." Your Worship, Sgt. Ward speaks for the RCMP and those words quoted above cannot but lead one to suspect that the RCMP believes that this corruption has made its way into the legislature. Our system of government, that relies so heavily on trust in the individuals who work in the public service on our behalf, cannot long tolerate such suspicion. Several years ago your Court considered a similar request to unseal the contents of a search warrant that was used in the search of the home of former premier Glen Clark. Those proceedings dragged on for months, doing untold damage to Clark and his family, and literally brought the process of government to a halt. Your Worship, we request you meet the public interest and inform voters in B.C. of the details of how far the RCMP suspects corruption has crept into government, for clearly, any interested member of the public cannot draw any other conclusion. To allow speculation to continue will only further undermine confidence in government. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin