Pubdate: Sat, 05 Mar 2005 Source: Ottawa Sun (CN ON) Copyright: 2005 Canoe Limited Partnership Contact: http://www.ottawasun.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/329 Author: Greg Weston, Sun Ottawa Bureau Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/Rochfort+Bridge (Rochfort Bridge) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/opinion.htm (Opinion) POT NOT THE PROBLEM HERE Within hours of the horrific killing of four young RCMP officers by a rifle-toting lunatic on an Alberta pot farm, everyone from politicians to police and pundits was pointing fingers at the scourge of marijuana grow operations. "The issue of grow ops is not a Ma and Pa industry," RCMP Commissioner Giuliano Zaccardelli told a news conference Thursday night. "These are major serious threats to our society, and they are major serious threats to the men and women in the front line who have to deal with them." Sadly, like most heinous crimes, the worst police massacre in our modern history is not so easily explained. Indeed, far from bringing reason to a society's grief, chasing marijuana grow ops is to go looking in all the wrong places for the causes and culprits of this unspeakable tragedy. There is no doubt the proliferation of pot farms, as Zaccardelli put it, is a spreading plague in our society. In cities across the country, pot producers are setting up shop by the thousands, sometimes in warehouses, but mostly in residential homes in otherwise quiet, family neighbourhoods. According to the latest estimates by Canadian law enforcement agencies, the total annual marijuana production in this country is hitting an astounding 2 billion grams, or something over $20 billion. Little wonder it is an industry dominated by organized crime and other underworld elements steeped in violent law-breaking. As the latest RCMP criminal intelligence report states: "Home invasions, drug-rip-offs, burglaries, assaults and murders, are only a few examples of the dangers that are par for the course when dealing in drugs." Treacherous as the marijuana industry may be, however, it had little to do with this week's horrendous bloodbath in a quonset hut in the Alberta countryside. In this case, the culprit was a madman, not marijuana. The real issue is why a well-known nutbar named James Roszko was still loose in society, not that he had pot plants growing in his garage. It doesn't take a criminologist to know that Roszko was bound for horror -- the only question was when the end would come, and just how terrible it would be. Just ask his own father. "He is the devil," Roszko's dad told the Sun hours after the shootings. "He's been in trouble so many other times, I hate it. I don't want him as my son." As the Sun's team of reporters on the scene this week discovered, Roszko was a reclusive freak with a rap sheet that should have sounded alarms throughout the criminal justice system. Among other things, that lifetime of trouble included shooting at two people who ventured on his property in 1999; holding a gun to a neighbour's head; and enclosing his property in double-wire fences and what police described as "booby-traps." Roszko did some prison time -- for raping a family member repeatedly over a six-year period. "He's a nutcase, just insane," said one neighbour who was actually an acquaintance of Roszko for 13 years until "he had me on his couch in his house with a gun pointed at me." But Roszko was not only "known to police," as they say in the official reports. He was known to hate the police, and none more than the RCMP. The questions are so obvious: Why was this maniac not in captivity? Was there nothing at any stage in all of his run-ins with the law that tripped a light in someone's head enough to say, this man is a danger to society? Why were two and then four young constables armed with nothing but handguns sent into a likely confrontation with a nut known to have guns, hate cops and be crazy enough to kill? Confronted with precisely this question yesterday, an RCMP spokesman stated: "We have to treat people with respect. And while we have to be mindful of their past, if we see someone walking down the street that we've had a past history with, we wouldn't automatically pull out our guns. The situation has to be assessed and that will be part of our review and recommendations will be put forward." Cold comfort for four dead police officers. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake