Pubdate: Wed, 18 Jan 2006 Source: Red Deer Express (CN AB) Copyright: 2006 Red Deer Express Contact: http://www.reddeerexpress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2920 Author: Johnnie Bachusky CITY GETTING ANTI-GANG SQUAD Red Deer city RCMP, concerned over growing gang activity in the city, are creating a new Organized Crime Unit. Funding for the new two-officer unit (OCU) is coming from the 2006 policing budget, which is being put forward to the city today. As part of the city RCMP's overall plan to crack down on organized crime, the detachment is also expanding its drug enforcement Street Team from six members to eight. Red Deer city RCMP Supt. Jim Steele said the OCU will work in conjunction with not only the Street team but with the existing Criminal Intelligence Unit (CIU) out of the 55 St. building. Steele said there is no significant difference between the two units, other than the CIU has a wider mandate around the area while the OCU will target the city. He said the OCU will generate strategic information for the Street Team, and will be responsible for a portion of the tactical duties. The OCU will also share intelligence information with police forces from other centres. The new OCU has been part of the city detachment's business plan for the last few years and was identified as a key need for the city in the Crime Prevention and Policing Study, which was completed after extensive public input in 2004. "The growth in the city has been phenomenal. It presents opportunity for the entrepreneurs but also the criminals," said Steele, who hopes to have the unit's team hired in April. "We are seeing drug dealers coming from Edmonton and Calgary that are associated to known organized crime outfits. It is time for us to move in that direction." Steele said Mounties have begun seeing organized crime operations spreading their tentacles from the bigger cities to smaller centres. "Stony Plain, Spruce Grove, Sherwood Park and Airdrie are noticing that, and so are we," said Steele. The Red Deer city RCMP detachment is a regular member police agency of the Criminal Intelligence Service Alberta (CISA), which has a mandate to facilitate the exchange of criminal intelligence between law enforcement groups across the province and the rest of Canada. CISA has identified outlaw motorcycle gangs, Asian-based groups, aboriginal-based gangs, Eastern European-based groups and Jamaican-based gangs as the province's main organized crime groups. The Hell's Angels have a chapter in Red Deer, and all other organized crime groups have at least established business contacts in the city. Steele said all groups are being watched. "Not necessarily because they are here but because they do some business here," said Steele. Meanwhile, city officials are already viewing the new OCU initiative favourably, noting Red Deer's geographic location puts the city in a vulnerable position to attract organized crime. "A gang in Edmonton can meet with a gang in Calgary and meet in Red Deer because of our location," said Colleen Jensen, director of the city's community services department, which oversees policing in the city. "As Edmonton and Calgary take a more aggressive approach to gang activity then that gets pushed out and they go somewhere else for activity," she added. "Because of our location being so central I think it puts us in a position where the opportunity is enhanced for gang activity here." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom