Pubdate: Thu, 08 Nov 2007 Source: Province, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2007 The Province Contact: http://www.canada.com/theprovince/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/476 Author: Stuart Hunter, with files from John Bermingham and Lena Sin ANTI-GANG TASK FORCE TO BE B.C.'S BIGGEST YET It Stands for Violence-Suppression Team and It Will Cross Police Boundaries The Lower Mainland's top cops stood united yesterday in their fight against gang violence. Twenty-two senior officers from the Mounties and municipal forces stood shoulder-to-shoulder at a news conference at RCMP headquarters to announce the creation of the Violence-Suppression Team -- VST -- to combat the recent spate of gang violence. "We stand here today, united and on common ground," RCMP Asst. Commissioner Al MacIntyre said. "We want to disrupt, dismantle, not just displace [gangs]." Just one day after the Vancouver Police Department announced its own gang task force, VPD Chief Const. Jim Chu said the VST involves more police agencies. He said intervention and awareness were keys. "We are merging our resources to create the largest street-level gang-violence task force B.C. has ever seen," Chu explained. "We have to stop the killing. We must all work together -- police, government and the criminal-justice system." The 60-member VST will primarily be made up of VPD officers and will be headed by Insp. Dean Robinson, currently in charge of the VPD's gang-crime unit, who said the team will take a proactive, "in-your-face" approach to the growing gang problem. VST members will wear identifiable blue jackets and will hit the streets next week, starting Nov. 14. Robinson said members will visit the usual gang hangouts, such as gyms, bars and restaurants, to target high-level gangsters. "We're throwing the best people we have at this problem." he said. The announcement came just hours after Vancouver police were called to the area near 70th Avenue and Granville Street, following reports of shots fired. Investigators found three bullet casings, but were not sure whether they were connected to Tuesday morning's shootings, which left two men dead. Ronal Shakeel Raj, 31, and Ali Abhari, 25, were shot to death through a window of Raj's Mercedes after two SUVs boxed-in the vehicle. The men's deaths bring the number of people killed in Vancouver this year to 10. In total, 19 people have been killed in gang-style murders in Metro Vancouver this year. Supt. John Robin, officer in charge of the Integrated Gang Task Force, said of the VST: "We are going to reach farther out than we have in the past. The public needs to be reassured." Robin added that because gangs and the illicit drug trade are so closely entwined, the VST will focus on the drug trade. "The growth has been exponential," Robin said. "These people are sophisticated and know how we do business and that's a challenge. It's not so much a change in direction, it's enhancement of direction." In 2005, an RCMP report stated that Mounties could not deal with a whopping 72 per cent of known organized-crime groups in B.C., because of limited resources. When asked yesterday if the force still lacked resources, Robin said: "Yes. We're only able to target 20 to 30 per cent at any one time. These types of investigations are very resource-heavy." In Vancouver yesterday, Prime Minister Stephen Harper also vowed to get tough on gangsters. He said he hoped to rush through legislation imposing mandatory jail time for serious gun crimes and toughening bail rules for those accused of gunplay. "The recent murders in Surrey and Shaughnessy only underscore why all the national parties campaigned in favour of tougher laws against violent crime, and why the public is so fed up with the soft-on-crime approach," said Harper. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake