Pubdate: Fri, 25 Mar 2005 Source: Similkameen Spotlight (CN BC) Copyright: 2005 Similkameen Spotlight Contact: http://www.similkameenspotlight.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3484 Author: Christopher Foulds Note: Christopher Foulds is the Editor of the Abbotsford Times ALBERTA - ABOUT A MADMAN NOT A MARIJUANA ISSUE A crazed man opens fire on Mounties on his rural property in northern Alberta, killing four police officers before turning the gun on himself, and all of a sudden Canada needs to get tougher on marijuana grow operations? Make no mistake: The tragedy in Alberta is about a mentally unstable man with a known hatred of police, armed with a high-powered weapon and a thirst for destruction. It is not about marijuana grow operations. It probably doesn't matter if there were marijuana plants growing on his property, or tulips and roses. It just happens that, in this instance, it is the illegality of marijuana that sent Mounties to the property in the first place. In this instance, the law deeming marijuana as contraband prompted police to investigate and enforce -and led to their deaths. Based on what has emerged, James Roszko would likely have shot and killed a police officer for walking onto his property to enforce a speeding ticket fine. Roszko was a 46-year-old recluse who hated almost everyone. His own father called him a "wicked devil." In 1999, he was charged with shooting at two people who entered his property. In 1993, he was charged with assault and pointing a firearm, among other charges, following a confrontation with a school trustee. And he was scheduled to appear in court next month to face charges in connection with damage to vehicles from a spike belt he liked to lay across his driveway to discourage visitors. Those four police officers died because Roszko decided to kill them. They did not die because of marijuana grow operations, which makes the ensuing rush to call for a major crackdown on grow operations - from Abbotsford Police Det. Don Mckenzie as president of the B.C. Federation of Police Officers, to Solicitor General Rich Coleman, to RCMP Commissioner RCMP commissioner Giuliano Zaccardelli - all the more ridiculous. Stiffer penalties for growing marijuana would not have prevented the deaths. Repurcussions are an afterthought to a man mad enough to murder four other men before killing himself. The more salient question that needs answering - yet was buried under the blitz yesterday to blame the deaths on marijuana grow-ops - is how and why a man with a history of being charged with weapons offences and well known in the community as being dangerous had in his possession a rapid-fire auto carbine assault-style rifle. * Christopher Foulds is the Editor of the Abbotsford Times - --- MAP posted-by: Derek