Pubdate: Wed, 14 Nov 2007 Source: Burnaby Now, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2007 Lower Mainland Publishing Group Inc. Contact: http://www.burnabynow.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1592 Author: Simone Blais and Mia Thomas Burnaby GANGLAND HIT RENEWS CALL FOR ACTION Mayor Questions Whether Regional Police Force Would Help Solve The Problems Calls for a regional police force have gotten a little louder as several police agencies in Metro Vancouver grapple with rising levels of gang-related homicides and shootings throughout the region. Lower Mainland police forces announced Nov. 1 that a new violence suppression team would be targeting gang activity, a day after the Vancouver Police Department announced it would create a task force to address the escalating violence. But as the violence dots a Lower Mainland map, West Vancouver police Chief Const. Kash Heed and others are coming forward to suggest that the area should consider discussing amalgamation of services. "There needs to be, I think, a greater integration with other gang units and crime units in the Lower Mainland," the NDP's public safety critic Mike Farnworth, MLA for Port Coquitlam-Burke Mountain, said. But Burnaby Mayor Derek Corrigan says the answer lies deeper. "It's another of those suggestions that says there's a simple solution to a very complex problem," he said. Drugs and weapons, along with immigrants who commit crimes when they come to Canada but aren't deported, are among the other factors that need to be considered, the mayor added. "There is no easy or simple solution to this, and a regional police force is not going to solve gangs." The city would not refuse to participate out of hand in an initiative that involves working with others, the mayor said, pointing out that local police have not been an island in the past. "Obviously Burnaby's always been cooperative with anything we think will make our community safer," Corrigan said, noting the local detachment works with RCMP in other regional communities and with municipal forces on different teams. "That being said, nothing has shown us that a regional police force will do a better job of policing. If a regional police force succeeded in stopping gangs, then Toronto wouldn't have any gangs." Corrigan says the solution lies farther up the political ladder, with the provincial and federal governments providing more resources and dealing with non-crime problems that take up local policing resources. Burnaby's police officers, he said, are on the street, reacting to immediate problems in the community and often dealing with people who are homeless or mentally ill, or both. "Our police officers are very often directed from dealing with the big crime to dealing with the day-to-day crime that's on our street." Const. Tim Fanning of the Vancouver Police Department said last week that information is passed through all municipal departments and RCMP detachments. "All the Lower Mainland police agencies readily and fervently share information," he said. "We have an integrated approach to policing, and we have an integrated gang task force, we work with IHIT (the integrated homicide investigation team)." In the middle of the back-and-forth talk of amalgamation and regionalization of services, is Sgt. Shinder Kirk. Kirk is the spokesperson for the B.C. Integrated Gang Task Force, which does behind-the-scenes work on the gang underworld within the province. Regionalizing police services won't solve anything, he said, because on many levels policing has already integrated a variety of departments and specialties - like homicide, emergency response and, of course, gangs - from both municipal and RCMP headquarters. "The integrated model has been very effective and, from my personal experience, it's been very effective. "Those sorts of barriers that used to exist between jurisdictions are no longer there," he said. Some have asked Kirk why his integrated department hasn't taken a lead on events transpiring in the past couple weeks, but he maintains that integration involves more than just action. "The gang task force's role is not to go in and assume control of the investigation," Kirk explained, "but to provide specialized resources to assist in the investigation. "We were created to deal with the worst of the worst and to provide specialized resources to the gang-related issues." Part of offering "specialized resources" to various police agencies includes knowing just what they're facing with respect to B.C.'s criminal underbelly. "In the Lower Mainland, we're faced with a growth of gang-related issues over the past 10 to 15 years," he said. "All of it is fuelled, at some point, by the drug trade." The "prolific marijuana industry," Kirk explained, is often just the beginning, as it leads into harsher drugs - all of which is directly correlated to the amount and use of firearms. A total of 129 gangs are operating in the province at any given moment, a number that has increased as more police officers gather intelligence on those involved. Instead of stumbling upon gangs, Kirk said, better investigative techniques have helped police identify emerging gangs in their development phase. After years of intelligence gathering and study, Kirk said police can now classify gangs into three different categories: street-level gangs, mid-level gangs and organized crime groups. Street gangs consist of younger members, generally meeting each other at the middle or secondary school levels, within close proximity to each other. They're involved in lower levels of criminal behaviour, have less hierarchy and are fluid in their makeup, meaning people may come and go or the group may disband and carry on in another form. At the top of the gang spectrum are traditional organized crime gangs, the ones that typically get the most attention from Hollywood. "This is our Asian organized crime, Eastern European mafia, Russian or otherwise, outlaw motorcycle groups," Kirk said. In this group there is significant structure and hierarchy, with codes of conduct, rules and/or bylaws that organization members must adhere to. In organized crime there is a distinct boss, who may also delegate responsibilities: "Soldiers, captains and lieutenants, if you were going to pattern it after the traditional Sicilian mafia," Kirk said. They're extremely sophisticated groups in not only hierarchy but in the types of criminal activity and how they go about conducting those crimes. But what fascinates Kirk, and may be behind the violence from the last month, are the mid-level gangs, which are much more difficult to pin down. Some have a hierarchy, some don't; some may have a 'brand' or name, with others being anonymous; some may have a core group of one ethnicity while most are multi-ethnic. These are the ones that have franchised out to other regions of the province, with no direct link to the main gang in the Lower Mainland, just someone who trades on the gang name, affording them the power of intimidation and criminal contacts to ensure success. "Another characteristic is that they're friends one minute, enemies the next," Kirk said, "even within the groups themselves." The three levels of gangs do interact with one another, forming alliances that can sour over time. "They also may on occasion form alliances horizontally with other crime groups in that level and be making friends one minute and enemies the next," he said. "They are extremely violent." Just like its membership, the weapons of choice for gangs have changed over time. "When I first began my career and firearms became commonplace in the criminal world, it was a sawed-off rifle or sawed-off shotgun," Kirk said. "Now what we're seeing are semi-automatic pistols, semi-automatic assault rifles or even automatic weapons. We are seeing a proliferation of very exotic firearms within the criminal underworld, beginning with the semi-automatic pistol." While the profile of B.C. gangs is better defined than two decades ago, Kirk said it is still incredibly difficult for investigators to build a case against gang members. "What's interesting is that, very often with these types of cases, investigators have identified the people responsible," he said. "Unfortunately, we can't prove it." Kirk pointed to cases such as that of Laurie Tinga, the Port Moody woman who was shot while watching TV in her house in 2005. Investigators haven't laid charges in that case but have suspects in mind. "We're looking at how we develop a case beyond a reasonable doubt when, in fact, there's very little physical evidence and no one's talking," he said. "These cases never go away. They've never been shelved or simply put in a box and put away. There always is some activity, regardless of the scale of the case, there's always some activity, there's always someone with their ear to the ground." In the interim, Kirk said it's imperative that the province start looking at prevention, which must start at a much earlier age given the external influences kids face. "Look at the pop culture that exists: We have mass media, the commercialization and glamourization of the 'gangsta' lifestyle by movies, music," he said. "We also have a culture where we are telling, through advertising, that people must have these material things in order to be considered a success. "How do you gain those material things? One could work for a living and build up over time, or one can engage in criminal activity and get those things much sooner in life." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek