Pubdate: Mon, 05 Nov 2007 Source: Montreal Gazette (CN QU) Copyright: 2007 The Gazette, a division of Southam Inc. Contact: http://www.canada.com/montreal/montrealgazette/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/274 WAR ON STREET GANGS SHOULD BE A PRIORITY What is holding up the long-promised and much-delayed Quebec plan to deal with Montreal's escalating street-gang crime? After Montreal police chief Yvan Delorme said he'd "had it up to here" with waiting, and after Claude Dauphin, the Montreal executive committee's public-security man, backed him up, the Parti Quebecois and Action democratique du Quebec made it unanimous by also insisting loudly last week that Quebec finally produce the blueprint to eradicate that particular plague. Premier Jean Charest keeps saying the project will be ready by Christmas. We hope so, and we wonder why it has taken so long. At an international conference on street gangs held last week in Montreal - itself an eloquent indication of our growing problem - Los Angeles police chief Gary Brennan had an important message for us. LA, he said, has long been chasing the problem after the fact, dealing with each murder as it happens. Canada's problem is not yet nearly as well developed, he added, and so we still have an opportunity to get ahead of the curve with preventive measures. Not many problems are more urgent to police than gang crime. When dedicated thugs go at it, there's generally a lot of blood spilled, and worse, it's often the blood of very unlucky innocent bystanders. Daniel Desrochers, 11, became the tragic example of that "collateral damage" in the Hells Angels bikers' war in 1995. After his death, Montreal-area police forces finally buckled down and mounted an operation that eventually put many top bikers in jail. The tactics will have to be different against street gangs, but an equally tight focus on this problem, too, could also serve to deal with the more prosaic - and often more brutal - 50 or so street gangs now infesting neighbourhoods in and around Montreal. After many months of waiting, Dauphin and Delorme are asking that Ottawa and Quebec stop dithering and pony up the $40 million over three years necessary to fight these bandits - and assign at least one single, solitary crown prosecutor devoted full-time to work along with police investigators in their inquiries (Toronto has 60). That's not a lot of money for such an important task - stopping the violent hoodlums who now, we're told, recruit in schools. Dauphin and Delorme sensibly point to Toronto, which responded quickly and well after 15-year-old Jane Creba was gunned down by a street gang at midday in downtown Toronto two years ago during Christmas season. Queen's Park immediately earmarked $26 million and pooled 116 investigators for a task force to deal with the problem. Montreal had more gang murders in January and February of this year than in all of last year (14 vs. 12), and one crime-fighter said gangs are now moving to Quebec's hinterland and Indian reserves. We'll have to fight them there, too. All the more reason to stop waiting and finally produce the plan. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek