Pubdate: Wed, 29 Aug 2007 Source: Kamloops This Week (CN BC) Copyright: 2007 Kamloops This Week Contact: http://www.kamloopsthisweek.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1271 Author: Mark Macdonald COPS TO BEEF UP PRESENCE ON NORTH SHORE Kamloops RCMP have decided to increase patrols in the Tranquille Road area following a fatal stabbing over the weekend, the latest act of violence in the area this summer. The police response comes after 21-year-old Devin Prince was killed early Saturday in Kamloops' first homicide of 2007. "You'll see an increase in police presence on the North Shore," said Kamloops RCMP Insp. Yves Lacasse. "We want the public to know we're dealing with it. We're alive to the issues." Prince's death is the latest in a rash of violence in the area, which has some residents fearing for their safety and confined to their homes. Saturday's murder is the area's third stabbing in two months. Paramedics arrived at 240 Royal Ave. Saturday at 4:20 a.m., responding to 911 call reporting a stabbing. They found Prince, who Const. Scott Wilson said was known to police in a "drug capacity," lying unconscious on the street and bleeding profusely from his wounds. Prince died on arrival to Royal Inland Hospital. A 27-year-old female witness identified the suspect, who police later tracked to a nearby apartment building. Police arrested Michael Paul Dick, 46, acting on a search warrant on his apartment. Dick has been a resident of the apartment building for 15 years. He is not known to police. "We haven't had any negative dealings with the suspect," Wilson said, adding there is a "possibility" Dick and Prince knew each other. Still, the motive remained unclear. Mounties also recovered the knife used to kill Prince, but declined to describe it, noting the make is part of an on-going police investigation. Dick was scheduled to appear before a provincial court judge in Kamloops Monday on a charge of second-degree murder, on the same day an autopsy was planned for Prince's body. Lacasse also said Monday two officers will be added to the city's drug unit next month. He said the new officers give Kamloops police "the opportunity to be more proactive and take on more investigations." The new officers will work with members of the C.A.R.T. team, who deal with 46 prolific offenders known to Kamloops police, and officers from the property crime division. They will form a team of 15 officers, who will work to lower drug-related crimes in Kamloops. Which, Lacasse said, are "on the rise" in Kamloops, noting they increased by 76 per over the last two years in the city. Wilson called the "spike" in violence on the 200-block of Tranquil Road part of a "bad cycle. "Why the volume and frequency we don't know," he said. Lacasse said the incidents were "just not preventable." Prince's murder is the first of 2007, coming on the heels of three murders in the last three months of 2006. The unsolved murders of three prostitutes in Kamloops since 2003 remain under investigation. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek