Pubdate: Fri, 03 Aug 2007 Source: Nunatsiaq News (CN NU) Copyright: 2007 Nortext Publishing Corporation Contact: http://www.nunatsiaq.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/694 Author: Jane George MINE PAYOUT BRINGS FLOOD OF POT, BOOZE "People will buy drugs instead of supplying their children with diapers or food." Kangiqsujuaq is swamped with drugs and alcohol, police warn, because residents are flush with cash following the distribution of profit-sharing cheques from Xstrata's Raglin mine earlier this summer. The municipality and landholding organization has invested some of the money, but members of the Kativik Regional Police Force say many residents have used the payout, which amounts to several thousands of dollars per family, to travel to Montreal and return with beer, wine and spirits. "People will buy drugs instead of supplying their children with diapers or food. I picked up a three-year-old a few months ago in the middle of the night and brought him home. The kids don't want to be in the house when the parents are drunk even at that age. It's sad," said Const. Shawn McDonald. Police have intervened with a number of drug seizures and arrests in the community, which has a population of about 480. Last Friday in Kangiqsujuaq, police with the KRPF seized 1.8 kilos of marijuana from a man returning home from a visit to Montreal. Armed with a search warrant, Const. McDonald and Const. Jeffrey Marcoux went to the Kangiqsujuaq airport to meet the man after his plane landed. They searched his luggage and body, and in a backpack, stashed inside one of his bags, they found neatly packaged pot, with an estimated street value of up to $85,000. McDonald said charges are pending against the man, and the investigation into the drug trafficker who supplied him with the drugs continues. Before the man's arrival back in Kangiqsujuaq, the Montreal-based Aboriginal Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit had confirmed the man was on the plane, enabling McDonald to seek a warrant from a judge. Also on July 27, McDonald and Marcoux had a warrant to search a residence, where they seized $790 in cash and 10 grams of pot packaged in individually-wrapped bags for sale. McDonald said over the past month he has carried out two other drug seizures. One netted 55 grams of pot. The other led to the seizure of 48 grams of pot, two 60-ounce and two ten-ounce bottles of hard liquor, and a bottle of wine. McDonald, who is originally from the Mohawk community Kanestake, has been in policing for 16 years. He said the potent combination of alcohol and drugs causes most of the problems in the Kangiqsujuaq, which is, in his opinion, the most beautiful place in the North. Even if the ready supply of cash and clients means Kangiqsujuaq has become a haven for drug dealers and bootleggers, McDonald said he's still working to stop them from doing business. "If we don't have the ability to bust them on that day, we're going to get them on another day. It's a cat and mouse game for us," McDonald said. "I want more of them." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek