Pubdate: Fri, 19 Jan 2007 Source: StarPhoenix, The (CN SN) Copyright: 2007 The StarPhoenix Contact: http://www.canada.com/saskatoonstarphoenix/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/saskatoonstarphoenix/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/400 Author: James Wood, The StarPhoenix CONDONING SHOOTING MISGUIDED: RCMP YORKTON -- Even as the jury deliberated in the first-degree murder trial of Kim Walker before ending a second day with no verdict, it was easy to find sympathy among those waiting in the ornate lobby of the Yorkton courthouse for the man who killed his daughter's drug dealer boyfriend nearly four years ago. For those who enforce the law, however, those sentiments are understandable but misguided. Sgt. Mark Doratti, who commands Yorkton's municipal RCMP detachment, knows there is a great deal of support for the Walkers -- both in the eastern Saskatchewan city of about 17,000 people and throughout the country as the trial has attracted national attention. But Doratti said the Walker family had options to help their drug-addicted 16-year-old daughter Jadah without Kim Walker shooting to death James Hayward, 24, on March 17, 2003. "Are we ready to say it's OK for one person to take another person's life?" he said in an interview this week. "There are alternatives, and if we let our emotions get the best of us, we'll all be in a wreck." Walker's lawyer Morris Bodnar has criticized the RCMP for treating Hayward -- who had been convicted of trafficking and was believed by police to be selling marijuana -- with "kid gloves" and not seeking a narcotics search warrant for his home. Nick Zulyniak, a retired farmer waiting for the verdict, said many Yorkton residents blame the police for not moving on Hayward before the shooting ever happened. "The real sad story is the guy should have been nailed before," he said. But Doratti said police were building a case against him. "The actions taken by Kim Walker prevented us from doing what we were going to do," said Doratti. "Everything was unfolding but it was unfolding slowly." In fact, police were just minutes away from serving a warrant on Hayward's house to search for a weapon used in an armed robbery that police believed was in the home. Hayward was not a suspect in the robbery. Doratti said even four years ago there was also help available for drug addicts through the health and education systems. But he acknowledges the Mental Health Act warrant by which Jadah Walker was temporarily committed for assessment just before the shooting was not a good tool because it is meant to be used for mental illness. The situation has now greatly improved, he said, because the provincial government has passed the Youth Detoxification and Stabilization Act. It's a law that allows parents to ask a judge to commit their drug-addicted child for treatment for up to 15 days. Walker's trial has seen testimony full of disturbing details -- of high school students getting high over the lunch hour, of easy availability of marijuana, of marijuana and hashish leading to ecstasy, mushrooms, morphine and crack cocaine. Doratti said he didn't want to minimize the issue but the drug problem in Yorkton is more that of individuals than of the broader community. But young Yorkton residents waiting for the verdict said marijuana and ecstasy are prevalent and crystal meth is increasingly common. "It's way too big. It's getting out of hand," said 20-year-old Aron Nielsen, who knows the Walker family. Mitchell Hitchens, 18, said the trial had opened some people's eyes. "Older people don't really know how much drugs are out there. Now they know," Nielsen, who knows the Walker family, said he hoped Walker received "a slap on the wrist." "He saved many lives by doing it. But it's still murder, no matter how you look at it," he said. Justice Jennifer Pritchard told the jury they must find Walker, who has admitted causing Hayward's death but said he did not intend to kill him, guilty of at least manslaughter. Zulyniak said he hoped Walker was found guilty of the lesser charge of manslaughter and not first-or second-degree murder, but acknowledged he was not the most ardent supporter of Walker in Yorkton. "Some guy said he should get a medal. That's ridiculous," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake