Pubdate: Wed, 16 Mar 2005 Source: Lakeside Leader, The (CN AB) Copyright: 2005 The Lakeside Leader Contact: http://www.lakesideleader.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2365 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) DON'T LET MURDERS UPSET POLICE/COMMUNITY RELATIONS Not much can be said about the RCMP officers killed near Mayerthorpe on Mar. 3 that hasn't already been said, or written. But the tragic deaths of four fine young peace officers have implications that warrant a few more words. One thing became clear in the days following the shootings: it was not cut and dried evidence that the home-grown drug industry is getting out of control. Such comments were aired in the immediate aftermath, and they turned out to be dead wrong. There was no evidence of organized crime. No outsiders moving into a sleepy community with guns and a willingness to use them to protect their criminal enterprise. Not at all. This was a local guy, born and raised. Somebody that everybody knew. The fact that James Roszko, the killer, was growing marijuana plants in his shop was not of central importance. Neither was the fact that he apparently was using the building to store parts from stolen vehicles. No, what really counts in this story is Rosko's unbalanced state of mind, his hatred of anyone in uniform. People who knew him say they aren't surprised. It was only a matter of time. Anybody still trying to make it into a drug issue is just blowing smoke. What a tragedy that it had to end as it did. We'll leave it up to the experts to decide if it really was inevitable that James Roszko would take somebody with him when he went down. In the aftermath, there are issues to consider. For example, how will the RCMP cope? On the whole, the RCMP members who serve in our town and rural detachments across the province are a friendly, tolerant, patient bunch. They so little resemble the hardened, cynical shoot-first-and-ask questions later cops one sees on television and in the news that it seems they must almost be in another profession. Most RCMP members are highly decent folks who are used to giving the people they deal with the benefit of the doubt. That leads to good community relations. They treat us well and we trust them. We feel more or less on the same side. That good will goes a long, long way to making our communities decent places to live. In a lot of crime-ridden urban situations, it isn't like that at all. There's often a large degree of antagonism between the cops and the people. Much less trust. Constant bad experiences lead the cops to be more edgy, less tolerant and less lenient, certainly less friendly. Some behave poorly under those circumstances and the situation gets worse. Good will goes on permanent vacation. It can happen. It has happened. It can happen here too if we let it. It would be perfectly understandable if RCMP members came out of this latest outrage with their hands a little closer to their service revolvers, determined not to take any crap from anybody. It would also be a terrible shame if one crazed, sick murderous -- and now very dead -- ba ard succeeds in damaging the good relations between the RCMP and the people of Alberta. That's a slippery slope we don't want to get on at all. It will take effort on both sides to stay off it as it always has. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth