Pubdate: Wed, 18 Apr 2007 Source: North Shore News (CN BC) Copyright: 2007 North Shore News Contact: http://www.nsnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/311 Author: Jerry Paradis ORGANIZED CRIME A CONVENIENT BOGEYMAN In the good old days, the phrase "organized crime" meant something. The Godfather. John Gotti. Certainly something to do with the "mob," the romanticized tableau of punks in shiny suits and loads of bling, with cute names like Joe Bananas, whacking each other. But it's a safe bet that no one would have thought that kids recruited into street gangs were participating in organized crime, as was suggested recently in Abbotsford. For almost all of us, "organized crime" means a widespread, amorphous, high-stakes criminal enterprise that operates mostly in secrecy and maintains a rigid hierarchy. Sure, there are occasions when that real organized crime bubbles to the surface. Prosecutions of Hell's Angels members and the very successful recent raids on crime families in Quebec are prime examples. But the currency of the phrase has been so debased that it's worth about as much as the Zimbabwe dollar (.04 cents, if you're interested). In particular, if the RCMP is involved and drugs are part of the story - - or even if they aren't but the Mounties want to leave that impression - it can mean everything and nothing. It is true that the Criminal Code defines a "criminal organization" very broadly. All you need is a group of three people committing or facilitating crime for their own benefit. On the other hand, the B.C. Supreme Court struck down that definition in December 2005 because it was too vague, specifically with reference to the word "group." That ruling is under appeal. But the fact that a definition exists for the purpose of criminal responsibility doesn't give carte blanche to those who would play to public anxiety by using the phrase at the mere mention of a drug bust. Yes, those cashing in on drug prohibition are in some sense "organized." It is, after all, a market: there have to be producers, sellers and buyers who interact to move the product. But in the vast majority of cases, there isn't even a whisper of what everyone understands to be "organized crime." In 25 years of hearing more than a thousand cases of possession, production of or trafficking in drugs, on the North Shore and in Vancouver, only a handful suggested any truly organized enterprise - and even then, it was usually in the deep background. There is no doubt that during those years, the courts occasionally dealt with true "organizations" involved in drugs. Those cases were the exceptions that proved the rule. Yet, for those whose political well-being or funding depends on fostering fear, those two words have become a mantra. Remember the Tunnel Under the Border? The three men caught as they came out at the other end have since been sentenced in Seattle to nine years for drug smuggling and trafficking. None was ever charged with racketeering or any other of the myriad offences available in the United States to deal with organized crime. Nevertheless, the public line on this side of the border has always been that this was a major organized crime event, that the effort was very "sophisticated" and that other arrests would follow. We never heard another word about it. The reality was that three guys saw a huge profit to be made from building a tunnel and smuggling drugs through it. But it was, like many other drug investigations, a handy opportunity for the RCMP to ramp up the rhetoric. Sgt. John Ward is the officer in charge of what is called the Communications and Issues Analysis Unit of the force in British Columbia - the head ramper, if you will. His comments on the Great Raid on the Legislature remain the gold standard for the genre. The morning after the raid, he held a press conference. His performance was dazzling, but, like a peacock, far more show than substance. "Let me start by saying that illegal drug activity by organized crime in British Columbia has reached critical mass . . . today we have murders, beatings, extortion, and gang warfare at a level never before seen in this province." Unfortunately for him, this was December 2003, when violent crime in British Columbia was in sharp decline. He went on about the recent arrests of nine individuals in Victoria, Vancouver and Toronto, "alleged to have been in an organized crime network." Alleged by whom? It has been more than three years and nothing more has been heard about those nine unidentified organized criminals. He then said that the execution of search warrants on the offices of "two non-elected officials" (David Basi and Robert Virk) and on the home of one of them (Basi) was a result of "two things - information specifically related to the organized crime/drug case, and unrelated information that was . . . a by-product of (that) investigation." Anyone would be forgiven for drawing the conclusion that Basi and Virk were somehow connected to organized crime, specifically with respect to drugs; and, by extension, were linked to "murders, beatings, extortion and gang warfare." The two were charged a year later with abusing their office by unlawfully obtaining a benefit. All that bombast and the most the RCMP could come up with was bribery. Ward's comments gratuitously vilified Basi and Virk for no other reason but to keep hammering at the bogey of "organized crime." Their trial begins today, April 18. It may well collapse soon under the weight of bungles in the investigation and prosecution. But if it proceeds, don't expect any mention of organized crime - there won't be any. At a symposium I attended about 18 months ago on drug abuse and harm reduction, RCMP Chief Supt. Bud Mercer was the sacrificial lamb for the negative point of view. I admired his willingness to speak to that gathering; and his firm opposition to easing up on the drug war was coherent and maybe even heartfelt, if not persuasive. In his remarks he made liberal mention of organized crime. During a break I mentioned to him that I was interested in getting a realistic picture of the issue. He gave me his card and invited me to call. He said he would set up a lunch and invite along the force's B.C. expert on the subject. I called twice. His gatekeeper told me both times that he was a very busy man but that he would eventually get back to me. He never did. Maybe he had something concrete to show me and got sidetracked into other priorities. On the other hand, maybe he just preferred to stay away from the subject. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek