Pubdate: Thu, 31 Mar 2005 Source: Province, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2005 The Province Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouver/theprovince/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/476 Author: Stuart Hunter, The Province Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) POLICE TARGET DRUG-TRADE PROFITS Gangs Now Working Together For Greater Gain, Says RCMP Veteran The new boss of B.C.'s Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit vowed yesterday to crack down on organized crime and hit where it hurts the most - -- in the wallet. RCMP officer Marianne Ryan, the new superintendent of the unit -- an integrated team of police officers from across B.C. -- said she's got motorcycle gangs and Asian crime gangs, which control the lucrative drug trade, in her sights. "We're sending a message that we're getting our act together just as the criminal organizations have figured out 'Hey, we can work better by drawing on each other's strengths,' " Ryan said after a news conference attended by several chiefs of police at New Westminster's Justice Institute. "Our mandate will be to target the highest levels of organized crime who have control over much of the movement of marijuana which comes from grow operations. "So we are going after the elements that are involved in the wide-scale distribution, smuggling and the ones who are making the big profits at the higher levels." Ryan, a 23-year RCMP veteran whose background includes drug probes and proceeds-of-crime investigations, said tackling the gang problem is a priority. "Motorcycle gangs are priority for us, but our experience and from what our intelligence-gathering process tells us, these groups are working together and making a co-operative effort, whereas before we would just target a specific criminal group," Ryan said. "Now we find these groups are drawing upon each other because there is so much money to be made and they realize it's better business to deal with each other than to be in competition. "It doesn't just involve grow-ops or going after drugs. These groups are involved in widespread trafficking, money-laundering and high levels of violence and intimidation and extortion and kidnapping, even." Ryan said that using Section 462 of the Criminal Code, which deals with police going after proceeds of crime, will be a central part of her new assignment. "Part of the work is to go after the profits and identify the assets because that's why these people are in it -- they are all crimes of enterprise and people are in it for the money. "So if we go after the profits, it plays a huge role in disrupting that criminal organization." Vancouver Police Chief Jamie Graham welcomed Ryan's initiative. "The goal here is to prevent people from committing offences," Graham said. "We want people to make choices to not get themselves into trouble." Ryan takes over from former chief Dave Douglas, who has retired. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager