Pubdate: Mon, 22 Jan 2007 Source: Edson Leader (CN AB) Copyright: 2007 Edson Leader Contact: http://www.edsonleader.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/780 Author: Jeremy Lye, Special to the Leader ORGANIZED CRIME NETWORKS TARGET EDSON, RCMP SAY The RCMP has spoken publicly about organized criminal networks operating in rural areas surrounding Edmonton including the Town of Edson. Sergeant Jim Desautels of the Edson RCMP said these networks, including motorcycle clubs and youth gangs, were attracted to the business opportunities they believe Edson's growing transient population offered. "It's no different than McDonald's having a franchise here; crime groups have franchises all over the place. And typically what the crime groups think is 'where do people go every Friday and Saturday night to have fun?', well they go to the bars, so of course they have people in bars doing their thing, selling drugs, taking illegal debts, loaning money, trading stolen property," Desautels said. "Edson's an area where we have a population of people who live in motels because they're here to work in the oil-patch, they're here for maybe a week or a month or a couple of months at a time, and some of these people use drugs," he said. "So the higher-ups in the organization know 'we've got a good market in Edson so let's put some people in position there to sell things to them'." Desautels said the "good market in Edson" also created the demand that encouraged other criminal activities. "How many thefts from vehicles do we have a week? And how many thefts from well sites and attempted break-ins? Probably 90 per cent of all these crimes were committed to feed and fuel the drug habit. Which in turn supports the drug industry," Desautels said. In Edmonton, the RCMP's Staff Sergeant Dave Wilkinson agreed. "I would suggest that a larger percentage of the crime in your community is driven by the drug trade and for example, vehicle break-ins. A lot of those types of offences are committed by people with addiction issues," Wilkinson said. Wilkinson is the criminal operations co-ordinator for the Metro Edmonton Gang Unit, a task force that has established the difference between Organized Crime Groups (OCG) such as the Hells Angels from the smaller criminal network (street gangs) who carry out the dirty work on behalf of the OCGs. "(Street gangs are) really the main force behind the majority of drug trafficking anywhere in the province of Alberta," Wilkinson said. The Metro Edmonton Gang Unit has identified at least 18 street gangs in Edmonton involved in such a client-based relationship. "I would suggest any one of those 18 networks probably control the majority of the drug sales production and supply to the communities you live in outside of Edmonton," Wilkinson said. "The way they would approach that is to come into a community and ascertain who the local dealers are and then, in most cases by means of violence, take over the drug-trafficking and trade in that locality," he said. Wilkinson said that OCGs determined the communities to set up shop by following the demand for their product. "There's a high percentage of transient populations that moves in and out of the communities. In those particular instances when people have a lot of cash and they're moving around between localities, there's a higher demand for controlled substances and drugs," Wilkinson said. "Again I go back to the issue of the criminal networks they're just part of the transient population. You've got transient workers, you've got transient criminals." Sergeant Desautels said it was because OCGs target Edson's transient population that their activities were largely kept out of the public eye. "A lot of it is not really visible on the surface, you've got to dig down and read between the lines," Desautels said. "The average person doesn't see it unless you're dealing with the effects of it like social services, the hospitals, the nurses who see the overdoses and the people that are suicidal because they can't get off the drugs, things like that. That's the bottom end of the whole thing," he said. However Desautels added there was a risk, especially in relation to young people, of glamorizing the gang culture. "I'm not going to call it gang activity because I think in some respects it even romanticizes it a bit, these are definitely criminal organizations," he said. Desautels' concern for youth involvement in gang activity has also been reflected in several recent reports on the emerging gang culture in Alberta. A 2006 report by the joint government and community group The Community Solution to Gang Violence isolated several risk and protective factors for communities including an availability of drugs in the community, high residential mobility, and a community's lack of understanding of gang violence issues. The report found that family and community involvement with young people reduced the risk levels of them getting involved with gangs. The Town of Edson's recreation co-ordinator, Andrea Laboucane, said Edson has been proactive in giving youths alternatives to the gang culture. "The only way to really affect choice is to be close to that youth, to have contact with them," Laboucane said. "Which is what we try to do through our youth inter-agency and have other events with that teens can go to to learn about alternatives to drugs and alcohol and what they can do instead of doing those kinds of activities," she said. However Laboucane said community groups could influence the choices young people make only so far. "It goes back to the home. Where the kids who are actually involved in something positive it's because their parents probably helped them sign up and are watching their hockey game or their basketball game," Laboucane said. "It could be a lot worse as Edson's grown so much in the last few years and there's so many new people moving into town," she said. - --- MAP posted-by: Elaine