Pubdate: Tue, 22 May 2007 Source: Guardian, The (CN PI) Copyright: 2007 The Guardian, Charlottetown Guardian Group Incorporated Contact: http://www.theguardian.pe.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/174 Author: Jim Day, staff writer STUDENTS URGED TO DIAL TIP LINE IN EFFORT TO CURB CRIME IN THEIR SCHOOLS Crime Stoppers provincial co-ordinator Paul Stetson says anonymous calls could also help turn around lives of wayward peers in junior and senior high schools. Prince Edward Island students are being urged to pick up the phone to help curb crime in their schools. Paul Stetson, provincial co-ordinator for P.E.I. Crime Stoppers, wants to see this tipster vehicle have a strong presence in Island high schools and junior highs. "What we want to see from those (schools) is they keep the programs out and running in front of the new students as they come in,'' he said of active Crime Stoppers school chapters. Stetson was recently at East Wiltshire intermediate school as part of awareness presentations to students that included a skit by members of the school's drama club as well as gentle pleas from Stetson, a police officer and a youth service worker aimed at encouraging the students to dial the tip line when they become aware of a crime. Students were told they could help reduce crime in their school by calling Crime Stoppers while in the process perhaps also helping turn around the life of a wayward peer by bringing a halt to their criminal activity. Garrett Vessey, 14, of Cornwall, a Grade 9 member of the Crime Stoppers committee at East Wiltshire, got involved to help reduce the level of crime in his school. He said the committee works to spread awareness of the tipster organization among students. He believes the committee has found a receptive audience. "They listen, I think,'' he said. The presentation Thursday certainly caught the ear of at least a handful of students. Paul MacKinnon, a youth service worker at East Wiltshire, said five students requested the Crime Stoppers tip number following the assembly, noting they each had something to report. While he lauds East Wiltshire as being, for the most part, a safe and positive school, MacKinnon concedes the place is not immune to crime. He estimates, for example, that between $3,000 and $5,000 worth of IPODs alone have been stolen at East Wiltshire since Christmas. Cellphones have also been snatched. His main concern, though, is keeping narcotics out of the school. "We don't want it to turn into a drug-based environment,'' he said. Stetson said Crime Stoppers receives about 30 calls a year from Island students. The most prevalent tips centre on identifying people who are selling drugs and informing as to where drugs are being sold. Tips on vandalism and bullying are also common. "You can't act on a Crime Stoppers tip alone,'' Stetson explained. "You can't get a search warrant. It goes in with other information that the police have. It's usually a starting point for a police investigator.'' Still, Stetson said between 20 and 25 per cent of tips from students result in incidents being resolved either through police action or school administration. He said students who call the tip line don't face any retaliation from their peers because they remain anonymous. They also become eligible for a cash award if their call leads to a case being solved. "I would think it would be more that they are doing the right thing, more so than the money,'' he added. Here in P.E.I., people, including students, can contact Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-8477. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin