Pubdate: Mon, 01 Nov 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 RCMP'S ANTI-DRUG PLAN `EVOLVING QUICKLY' In the midst of increased public interest in the Whitehorse drug problem, the Yukon's new police chief comes to the job as one of four Mounties who put together the national police force's strategy to combat organized crime. Chief Supt. David Shewchuk, a career Mountie born and raised in Winnipeg, took over the job of commanding officer of the Yukon's M-Division this past summer after the former top cop, Darrell Madill, headed east to take over command of the Manitoba division. Shewchuk, 53, comes to the Yukon fresh from a four-year stint in Calgary as the officer in charge of the national organized crime initiative for the Northwestern Region, one of the four regions into which the RCMP split the country. In that role, he steered the big picture -- ensuring proper intelligence was gathered and used properly, building partnerships with other law enforcement and government agencies, as well as making sure the money was spent on the most effective targets. Organized crime is pretty simple -- it's in the business to make money, as much money as possible. "It's greed," said Shewchuk, who despite being M-Division's chief executive, retains the blunt language of a street cop. Common money makers are false insurance claims to manufacturing fraudulent credit cards, right up to drugs, he said in a recent interview. Because drugs are one of the most profitable forms of ill-gotten gains, it's one of the most common for organized crime groups like the Hells Angels -- which the Yukon RCMP say supply the territory's cocaine from Outside -- to be involved with. In his experience, public interest and concern help cops get their job done, said Shewchuk. "It's when the community gets up in arms when we can get things done," he said. He points to the years-long police campaign against outlaw motorcycle gangs in Quebec, a fight that largely stemmed from public outrage following the death of an 11-year-old Montreal boy who was killed after a bomb exploded outside a biker hangout in 1995. In Whitehorse, a downtown resident's complaints to the riding's MLA resulted in two high-profile public meetings on drugs in the area, particularly on the houses from which they're sold, as well as a myriad of media attention and public discussion. "Enforcement alone isn't going to solve anything," said Shewchuk, noting that while reducing the supply is important, paring the demand for drugs is also essential. The RCMP have a hand in that too, he said, noting work done by officers who teach a drug education program in Whitehorse and Watson Lake elementary classes, along with the efforts of M-Division's drug awareness officer. A number of suspected cocaine dealers have been arrested on a variety of offences in recent months, and the RCMP quietly evicted the illicitly-employed residents of one of the downtown's more notorious coke houses in late summer. While the effects of entrenched organized crime groups vary between different types of operations -- marijuana grow operations, crack cocaine or crystal meth labs -- the basic result is more addiction and crime. The increased crime particularly comes in the form of petty crime committed by users to support their habits. Community members can do their part by supporting police and government initiatives and not using drugs or supporting crime elements, the commanding officer said. While he stressed organized crime groups like the Hells Angels aren't personally entrenched in the Yukon, they control the supply of drugs arriving in the territory, said Sgt. Guy Rook, the M-Division spokesman who sat through the interview with Shewchuk. Drugs from down south are supplied to people selling them in Whitehorse, the sergeant said. "Organization and control is something we intend on disrupting," said Rook. Currently, the Yukon RCMP are working on a plan to fight the drug situation, but Shewchuk isn't putting his cards on the table. "I'm not going to tell you what we're going to do, but it's not going to take two years," said Shewchuk. "It's evolving quickly." One change he could talk about was the result of an internal evaluation of the shift system in the Whitehorse detachment. For years, four watches of between five and seven officers have worked two days and two nights before taking four days off. The result is the same number of cops working at 6 a.m. Tuesday as at 10 p.m. Friday. The new system, taking effect in the immediate future, will often see two shifts working at once. One will be on the road and the other will catch up on paperwork, updating their training, working on special projects or doing bike, foot or snowmobile patrols, though they will still be available to answer calls if needed. The idea is to have more overlaps, particularly at shift-change time. What it will look like is more uniformed officers on the streets of Whitehorse, which Shewchuk hopes will tell residents the RCMP have heard community concerns and is doing something about them. He's also counting on the change to allow officers to catch up on investigations and do a more thorough job of them, as well as get in more time for professional development. His personal priorities for his tenure in the Yukon -- he's retiring after this posting -- are to improve service to the public and to improve the quality of investigations, not that Yukon cops have been anything to sneeze at up to now. "I think things are working well here," he said. In the RCMP, the northern divisions are volunteer positions, meaning officers have to want to be there and aren't simply posted to the North. And competition to get one of the few Yukon jobs can be fierce. Shewchuk noted the impressive number of volunteer hours Yukon cops put in, pointing to the officers who donned red serge for July 4 in Alaska. Those officers paid for their own hotel rooms, he noted. "Boy, I tell you, I don't think you'd see that in the south," said Shewchuk. When he heard about the Yukon commanding officer job, he started calling around to people who'd worked here before, said Shewchuk. All RCMP divisions have former police officers who'd go back and those who wouldn't. Except the Yukon, he said. "There wasn't one person I spoke to who wouldn't come back here," he said. "Everybody said ,`You'll love it. After a year, you won't want to leave.'" When Shewchuk spoke to his counterpart in Nunavut, Chief Supt. John Henderson, about the Yukon slot, Henderson just chuckled. "He laughed," said Shewchuk. "He said, `That's not a northern division, that's a northern park.'" It was more than 33 years ago a 20-year-old Shewchuk looked around for a good career and chose a Mountie's uniform. After an initial posting to Rocky Mountain House in Alberta, he spent six years in Red Deer, Alta., before heading to Boyle, Alta., to open and head up the highway patrol unit. A nine-year stint in the Edmonton RCMP's commercial crimes unit followed. Since then, Shewchuk, who's also a certified general accountant, has done other stings in organized crime, commercial crime and criminal intelligence. He comes by the legal interests honestly -- one brother is a Mountie and the other is a civil lawyer. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin