Pubdate: Thu, 10 Mar 2005 Source: Martlet (CN BC Edu) Copyright: 2005 Martlet Publishing Society Contact: http://www.martlet.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3140 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) GROW OPS NOT THE ISSUE Four young Mounties were killed last Thursday after Jim Roszko, a man being investigated for a shed stocked with stolen auto parts and marijuana plants, ambushed and shot them. Unfortunately, the mainstream media decided right away to frame the tragedy as a marijuana issue. The government barked about greater penalties for those involved with grow ops, reconsidering decriminalization of the drug and the link between casual smoking and organized crime. Pot activists responded by saying legalization would prevent altercations between police and growers. Journalists lapped it up and, in echoing the government line, failed in their responsibility to report critically. The grow op angle was nothing more than a red herring. Were there no marijuana, the incident would likely have unfolded the same--the police originally went to the home to aid in the repossession of a truck, and the discovery of stolen car parts and marijuana plants aided in getting a search warrant. After the officers were killed, the Edmonton auto parts unit was the first on the scene. As one columnist pointed out, if the state is going to increase the penalties for growing marijuana now, we should increase the penalties for car theft too. There are two real stories here, and neither has anything to do with pot. The first is the failings of the justice system to contain a criminal--a violent, cop-hating, harassing, gun-happy pedophile--known and feared in his community. Roszko reportedly shot at people to keep them from crossing on to his property, stalked police officers and sexually abused boys. RCMP officers said he even terrified the police in Mayerthorpe. The man, who was prohibited from owning firearms, was known to have a collection of unregistered guns (remember Alberta's fierce opposition to the federal gun registry). He was given kid-glove treatment in the community--the police and the public just stayed away. The second story is that of dangerous people with severe mental issues who seclude themselves as society turns a blind eye. Roszko was mostly avoided or accommodated in the town of 1,600--this event should have launched an investigation into mental health funding and operations in Canada. It took four days for discussion on these two issues to surface. On Friday, RCMP commissioner Guiliano Zaccardelli called grow ops a "plague on our society." On Monday, he recanted, calling his response linking the murders to marijuana "inappropriate." Zaccardelli said that he knew "full well that at that time [he] didn't have all the information." Because of this knee-jerk reaction, newspapers from New York to Sydney, Australia, led their coverage with the marijuana angle. The RCMP admits this was a mistake, and now real reporting is starting to come to light. In no way are we advocating for grow ops. The fact is that the anti-grow op legislation being advocated by the federal government has absolutely nothing to do with this case. Tougher penalties for grow ops--like a minimum sentence of four years--will only deter so-called "mom and pop" growers, moving the demand for the drug to organized crime groups with the resources and motivation to defend their crops. A four-year sentence for growers will increase the risk to police and do little to stem violence. In fact, the head of the Vancouver police unit said on the weekend that police don't face many armed people or booby traps during raids on grow ops. "We have encountered a few knives inside. I can think of only one or two reports of firearms, and those were hidden away, and we found those in searches," he told the CBC. Journalism should be looking at how Canada's mental health care system failed to help or treat Roszko and at what went wrong in the judicial system. Marijuana is not the issue here. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake