Pubdate: Wed, 09 Mar 2005 Source: Kamloops This Week (CN BC) Copyright: 2005 Kamloops This Week Contact: http://www.kamloopsthisweek.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1271 Author: Dale Bass Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/Rochfort+Bridge (Rochfort Bridge) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/opinion.htm (Opinion) IT'S NOT ABOUT DRUGS Maybe I'm just a cynic but Kamloops Thompson Cariboo MLA Betty Hinton's "petition" about marijuana grow operations seems opportunistic. And, sadly, if her motivation was more than a great photo op, she's missing the point we all should be taking from the catastrophe that has befallen the RCMP as they start to bury their four dead comrades. The facts are simple enough. Four young RCMP officers were ambushed at an Alberta farm last Thursday while they stood guard over a hydroponic grow-op at James Roszko's property in Rochfort Bridge, Alta. Almost immediately, many media declared the men killed while investigating the grow-op, despite police explaining the officers came upon it as they attempted to seize a repossessed truck. Former Globe and Mail columnist Martin O'Malley demanded the army be brought in to bust grow-ops. Even the New York Times got in on the act, quoting a U.S. customs enforcement officer in Seattle who said the incident was drug-related and showed "the length to which these criminals are willing to go to protect it." Later, federal public safety minister Anne McLellan announced she'll consider toughening the marijuana laws. And then comes Hinton and her petition. But let's be clear: This tragedy has nothing to do with marijuana grow-ops and everything to do with mental health and the shredding of our social and justice systems. And it's a lesson we in British Columbia need to pay close attention to as our government continues to revamp those same systems here. No one who knew Roszko is surprised he snapped and gunned down the four officers. Even his own father called him the devil. People in the small community were terrified of him. The police force there knew he was an explosion waiting to happen. Consider his history with the law: - - As a teenager, Roszko and a friend robbed a gun shop. - - He later got involved selling illegal drugs and moonshine. - - In 1993, Roszko was charged with 12 offences after a dispute with a local school trustee. These included unlawful confinement, pointing a firearm, assault with a weapon, impersonating a police officer and failing to comply with bail conditions. - - In 1994, a sheriff's officer arrived to seize some property accompanied by two RCMP. Roszko said he would comply if the officer came back alone. He didn't. - - In 1999, a female bailiff hired to seize property again noted he was likely to have firearms, to have booby-trapped his property, used a spike belt to discourage vehicles and would likely shoot anyone on sight. - - In 2001, Roszko faced five assault and firearm charges. They were dismissed. - - Last August: He was charged twice with mischief after using a spike belt on a truck driven by two provincial election enumerators, and was due in court later this year. This was a bad man with a long history of criminal activity who was known to despise police and had an abnormal devotion to weapons. He was the "black sheep" of his family and yet no one, not a single agency or level of the justice system did anything but let him run rampant in the town he was terrorizing. There's a conflict that arises in situations like this, one that is best left to the ethicists and human rights advocates. For the rest of us, who tend to see incidents like the cold-blooded murder of four young men by a deranged man everyone knew had mental-health issues, it's a little more cut-and-dry. Our social and justice systems exist to protect the weakest among us. They were designed to ensure our safety, even if it is to protect us from ourselves. We all understand that sometimes there have to be decisions made, actions taken, compromises accepted for the greater good. All of those systems failed James Roszko. They failed RCMP Consts. Peter Schiemann, Leo Johnson, Brock Myrol and Anthony Gordon. And ultimately, they failed all of us. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake