Pubdate: Tue, 25 Jan 2005
Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC)
Copyright: 2005 The Vancouver Sun
Contact:  http://www.canada.com/vancouver/vancouversun/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477
Author: Jeff Lee
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?188 (Outlaw Bikers)

B.C. TO CRACK DOWN ON ORGANIZED CRIME

Planned Are A New Proceeds Of Crime Bill, More Police And Special Teams

The provincial government is bringing in sweeping changes to the way it 
investigates and prosecutes organized and sophisticated crime, including 
creating a new five-member "prosecutorial team" to help speed cases through 
the courts.

When the legislature resumes sitting Feb. 8 for its last session before the 
May 17 general election, the government will introduce a new "proceeds of 
crime" bill that would force people accused of crimes to show that their 
properties were not obtained with illegal funds.

And the province plans to hire 215 new RCMP officers to help promote 
experienced and senior officers into special duties in fighting organized 
and cyber crime, as well as in rural and first nations communities.

But the $122 million package, which will be spread over three years, also 
includes a special task force within the attorney-general's ministry that 
will assign five senior prosecutors to intensive police investigations soon 
after they begin.

"It is a significant change in the way we will be prosecuting organized 
crime," Premier Gordon Campbell said. "By having legal counsel involved 
throughout the process, we think we will be more effective in terms of 
investigation, in terms of evidence-gathering . . . and in terms of 
convictions."

The province already assigns prosecutors on an ad-hoc basis to major 
investigations, but this agreement -- which took nearly three years to 
negotiate -- will formally address when and how Crown counsel work with 
police, according to RCMP spokesman Sgt. John Ward.

The RCMP already works with federal prosecutors on proceeds-of-crime cases, 
Ward said, but "this on the provincial side of the house will really help 
. it is something we really look forward to doing."

B.C. appears to be trying to replicate the success of Quebec organized 
crime-fighters, who have made a major dent in that province's outlaw 
motorcycle gangs.

A recent Vancouver Sun series on organized crime found that more than 30 
criminal prosecutions launched against members of the Hells Angels in B.C. 
over the past decade have failed.

In Quebec, however, an aggressive campaign by special police squads, 
coupled with teams of dedicated prosecutors, dramatically curbed the effect 
of outlaw motorcycle gangs. In the last four years, almost 500 biker gang 
members and their associates have been charged.

Ward said the use of the prosecutorial team will help steer police 
investigations into more successful attacks on organized crime.

"We're very pleased with the announcement over all," he said. "Certainly it 
is a big part of what we've asked for."

Geoff Gaul, director of legal services for the criminal justice branch of 
the attorney-general's ministry, said it has not been decided where the 
five prosecutors will be based, but they will be available to work on any 
major investigation around the province.

Campbell used a provincially organized "provincial congress" conference 
attended by B.C.'s MLAs, Members of Parliament, local municipal 
organizations and first nations representatives, to make his announcement.

On the agenda of the one-day session were issues of federal, provincial and 
local importance, including strategies for controlling the mountain pine 
beetle infestation, improvements to the Pacific Gateway transportation plan 
and research in life sciences.

But it was the province's unilateral plan to boost funding for police, 
corrections and courts that took centre stage.

Under the sweeping proposal, which will be detailed in the province's 
budget this spring, the 215 new RCMP positions include 89 positions for 
major and serious crime units, a 14-member team to fight cyber crime, 32 
officers for first nations communities, and 80 officers for rural 
communities and general policing.

Campbell said most of the officers in the last category will go to 
communities with fewer than 5,000 people, for which the province normally 
has to cover most of the costs. It is the first time in more than a decade 
that the province has added officers to its rural contingent.

(Under federal-provincial-municipal funding agreements, municipalities with 
populations over 5,000 pay for policing from their own budgets.)

Ward said it will take some time for the RCMP to recruit the new officers, 
although the training academy in Regina has the capacity to meet B.C.'s new 
demand. Recruits will be used to free seasoned officers who will move into 
the serious, major and cyber crime divisions.

Campbell and Solicitor-General Rich Coleman said the government will also 
table new proceeds-of-crime legislation this spring for public discussion. 
The measures, in which police and prosecutors would use civil courts to 
seize assets they believe were products of crime, are controversial.

The province announced the legislative plans last year, but the proposal 
became bogged down over constitutional questions and the presumption of a 
person's innocence. Under the proposed legislation, the threshold for 
seizure would not be as high as that required for a criminal conviction.

Coleman said the province was proceeding with the legislation after being 
unable to convince the federal government to undertake the legislation itself.

People targeted under the new law, expected to be in place later this year, 
would face the reverse onus of having to prove the asset was not purchased 
with illegally obtained funds.

"If somebody buys a house, or buys a TV, or buys a car with cash that they 
got as a proceed of crime . . . I don't think they should be allowed to 
keep it," Coleman said.

Campbell said the legislation was sufficiently controversial to prompt the 
government to first table the proposal in order to seek public consultation.

Conservative MP Randy White applauded the province, which he said is more 
progressive in trying to fight modern crime than the federal government.

NDP House leader Joy MacPhail said Campbell's announcement sounded like one 
he'd made two years ago. She called the announcement a cynical election 
move, saying the Liberals had cut policing and corrections services since 
their election in 2001.

More Police, More Money:

Where the 215 new officers will be used:

- - 89 officers for serious and major crime sections.

- - 14 officers for cyber crime (child pornography, seniors, lotteries, etc.)

- - 80 officers for rural communities and general policing.

- - 32 officers for first nations communities.

New recruits will be used to free experienced and senior officers for the 
top categories.

How the $122 million will be spent over three years:

- - 2005-2006: $35 million ($30 million for police and corrections, $5 
million for courts.)

- - 2006-2007: $42 million ($32 million for police and corrections, $10 
million for courts.)

- - 2007-2008: $45 million ($34 million for police and corrections, $11 
million for courts.)
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MAP posted-by: Beth