Pubdate: Mon, 21 May 2007 Source: Edmonton Sun (CN AB) Copyright: 2007 Canoe Limited Partnership. Contact: http://www.edmontonsun.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/135 Author: Andrew Hanon EMBATTLED HAMLET'S HAD ENOUGH Break-Ins And Thievery By Drug Users Enraging Residents WILDWOOD -- Fed up with crime, traffic and noise, Patti Boone wanted to raise her young family in the safety and security of a small town. She couldn't have been more mistaken. In 1995, Boone, her husband and three sons left Edmonton and moved an hour west to the tiny hamlet of Wildwood. RELOCATED They relocated their trucking business to the area, bought a small patch of land and put a trailer on it. They figured that as the business grew, they'd build a nice house in their adopted community. Twelve years later, they're still in the trailer, the business hasn't expanded as expected and Boone can barely contain her outrage and frustration. "Why would we bother trying to build a house?" she says through gritted teeth. "They'd just steal all the material and tools." "They" are the drug addicts who make life miserable for most of Wildwood's 350 residents. As Sun Media reported last week, business owners and residents are seething over an epidemic of break-ins and thefts. They say that crack and crystal meth addicts plaguing their community are stealing everything that isn't nailed down. Even the local legion hall was broken into three times in two months, prompting members to volunteer to be armed guards overnight (the idea was rejected). Lori and Doug Rehn, who own a local forestry company, say they are continually having equipment stolen from their company yard, everything from compressors to trucks. During one maddening period, their business was broken into five times in three weeks. Many residents, like Lutheran minister Jon Estes, are calling for a citizen's patrol patterned after the Guardian Angels, who are setting up shop in Edmonton's most notorious neighbourhood, Alberta Avenue. "Many of my parishioners are afraid to go out at night," says Estes. He's heard rumours that some people in Wildwood are carrying handguns for their protection. "I've never seen it myself, though," he admits. "But that's what I'm hearing." No one who spoke to Sun Media knew of any incidents of drug-related violence. All thefts that they knew about were committed while the businesses were closed or the homes unoccupied. But they say the thieves are growing more brazen, and their neighbours more angry. "People are going to start taking action themselves," warns a frustrated Bob Fettis. But Cpl. Jamie House, head of the Evansburg RCMP, which is responsible for Wildwood, said the hamlet's drug problem is "no worse than anywhere in Alberta." House acknowledged that "it's challenging" for his staff of five constables to patrol a jurisdiction covering 3,200 sq km (nearly five times the size of Edmonton), with a total population of about 10,000. 'UP TO THE CHALLENGE' "But we're up to the challenge," House says. In 2006, the local Mounties conducted 11 drug raids, including two in Wildwood. One of the Wildwood raids resulted in a man getting slapped with several charges in relation to marijuana, and he's now before the courts. One of the problems police face, House says, is gathering enough evidence to get a search warrant. House said many of the incidents chronicled by Sun Media were never reported to police. And without reports, it's tough for police to get a clear picture of what's going on in small, rural communities and collect the information they need for warrants. Edmonton Det. Clayton Sach, a senior member of the Green team, a combined RCMP/EPS task force fighting the marijuana trade, said city cops and Mounties used to have a team of undercover cops who would go into small communities for a week or so, figure out who the dealers were and conduct drug stings. "It was really effective," Sach said. "They'd go into town, wave the flag, bust some of the street-level dealers and help people feel a little safer." The so-called Joint Force Operation Street Team operated for eight years until 2005, Sach said, until the RCMP redeployed its members. "It was a shame," Sach said. "They did some good work." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek