Pubdate: Fri, 11 Mar 2005 Source: Winnipeg Free Press (CN MB) Copyright: 2005 Winnipeg Free Press Contact: http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/502 Author: William Neville Note: William Neville is head of the Department of Political Studies at the University of Manitoba. Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/Rochfort+Bridge (Rochfort Bridge) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/opinion.htm (Opinion) IT WASN'T ABOUT ARMS AND DOPE THERE is still much about the terrible events near Mayerthorpe, Alberta, last week that we do not know. The investigations of the murder of the four young RCMP constables seems to be proceeding very slowly, which may reflect nothing more than the fact that the RCMP, investigating events in which they themselves are involved, no doubt feel under very particular pressure to do it right and get it right. This is particularly true when questions are now being asked as to whether the four constables were placed by their superiors in a dangerous situation for which they were inadequately equipped or whether they were otherwise ill-prepared for an encounter with Jim Roszko, the man who ultimately killed them. If there are, indeed, a number of things about the murders that remain unclear, there are a few collateral issues upon which there is considerable clarity. Two of these matters have been rather disheartening and, perhaps not surprisingly, both have political dimensions. The first touches on the matter of marijuana. The discovery of a large marijuana grow operation was originally cited as the reason for the RCMP being staked out on Roszko's property to begin with. This report was wrong in at least two respects. The RCMP came to be there because an attempt to seize a truck, on which Roszko had failed to make payments, had led to the discovery of stolen automobile parts. This discovery immediately transformed the issue from a civil to a criminal matter. Once there, the RCMP also discovered that Roszko was growing marijuana. The suggestion of a major marijuana operation provided instant fodder for the media, which engaged in speculation as to the impact that marijuana-related murders would have on pending federal legislation which would decriminalize possession of small amounts of pot, while increasing penalties for large-scale growers. Not surprisingly, the media found politicians willing to buy into the proposition -- or, at least, the implication -- that the murders of the RCMP constables were somehow dope-driven. For Conservative politicians already opposed to decriminalizing marijuana, this connection was manna from heaven and proved, of course, that they had been right all along. Anne McLellan, the deputy prime minister, who represents an Edmonton riding in the House of Commons, was equally quick to leap to a dubious conclusion. She commented that large-scale grower operations were of particular concern to the government and that the legislation, so far as it dealt with that matter, might have to be reviewed in light of the events at Mayerthorpe. She did not let the facts -- or their absence -- get in the way of this opinion: The facts were that this was no large-scale marijuana operation; the police operation was not mounted as a drug bust; and the murders had nothing to do with drugs or the growing of them. McLellan's rather lonely position as an Alberta Liberal in a Conservative sea is no doubt awkward. She does not, on a great many issues, share the opinions or the prejudices of many others in Alberta, and political survival for her is always dicey. Yet, it must be said, her immediate response to the Mayerthorpe murders was little short of pandering to knee-jerkers making connections where none existed. Given the authority she exercises, this lapse of judgment is quite striking. If dope was the issue for some, others focused on the fact of Roszko's having possession of a high-powered rifle. That he was able, thereby, to murder four police officers was quickly cited by some as demonstrating the failure and futility of the federal gun registration law. On the face of it, the fact that a man with Roszko's history and temperament should have possessed such a weapon might seem to validate the argument that, under a system of gun registration, it will be criminals and others with serious personality disorders who will end up owning guns. The whole gun registration regime has, no doubt, been mightily flawed but, if memory serves, there was a point when, as a measure of his contempt for the gun control law, Ralph Klein proclaimed that he had no intention of doing anything to enforce it in Alberta. Personally, I'm not convinced that even an effectively enforced gun law would guarantee that the Roszkos of the world would never own guns; on the other hand, in the face of opposition from several provincial governments, there may be relatively less basis upon which to claim that, in this instance, the gun law was tried and -- demonstrably -- found wanting; it might equally be argued that it was wanted but not tried. The real problem here, as has become clearer with each day, is that this community lived with, was intimidated by and, in some cases, terrorized by a sociopath widely known to be a danger to the public peace. Roszko was a man who had been charged, convicted and released but who, at liberty, remained an offender or potential offender and a dangerous one. The real question that needs answering, therefore, is not about pot, or even about gun ownership: It is about whether the police and the justice system had the power, and did everything within that power, to prevent Roszko from posing a threat to those around him. Indeed, the question is at least equally about people like Roszko, for if this could occur in an apparently peaceful, out-of-the-way place like Mayerthorpe, it seems naive to suppose that something like this could not occur in many other places across this country. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake