Pubdate: Wed, 03 Dec 2008 Source: Stettler Independent (CN AB) Copyright: 2008 Stettler Independent Contact: http://www.stettlerindependent.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2445 Author: Tom MacDougall NEW LAW ENFORCES CRIME REALLY DOESN'T PAY Legislation amended in the provincial legislature last week turned Alberta's proceeds of crime bill from a cow chewing its cud into a school of piranhas. More commonly referred to as Bill 50, the Victims Restitution and Compensation Payment Act adopted last Wednesday widely expands already existing police powers. Before the amendments, police were able to seize the property of criminals if they could prove said property to be the proverbial "proceeds of crime." That's not necessarily the easiest determination for police to make. Suppose your neighbourhood drug dealer - who also holds down a legitimate day job - bought a family vehicle. His spouse kicked in a little, his salary covered a bunch, but his sideline paid for all leather interiors with backseat-mounted DVD players. Under the old legislation, proving the vehicle was a benefit of criminal activity was problematic. How much of his ability to buy the vehicle was the result of ill-gotten gains, and how much was legitimate? Now, however, that "proceeds" hobble is gone. Police can now seize and apply to sell anything the courts agree to be an instrument of crime - including that family vehicle if it was used to make an illegal drop off or pick up. Suddenly police have a much bigger stick. Cars, homes, ATVs, cell phones, you name it; if police can convince the courts an item is "an instrument of crime," the province can sell it off at auction. Typically, this type of legislation is targeted at bigger criminals: drug dealers, B&E perpetrators, gang members. But Alberta's Justice Minister Alison Redford foresees the law casting a much broader dragnet. "It is possible that they could use this with respect to people who are drunk drivers. I think it's important that we look at crime as a whole and we give the police the tools that they need to have to make our community safer," Redford told reporters. Yes, you read that right. Because driving under the influence is a Criminal Code offense, drunk drivers also stand to lose big. Expect to hear a few vocal complaints from everyday criminals and chronic DWI offenders about life being unfair. Also expect the courts to turn a largely deaf ear to those complaints. B.C. and Ontario have had similar laws in place for several years, and have seen snivellers and complainers take their bellyaching all the way to the provincial top courts. And lose. There are a few points of concern; most notably that items can be seized without a conviction. While the deliberate looseness of the legislation gives police sharper teeth, it also heightens the responsibility of the courts to appropriately weigh all applications for auction. Of course, that is the job of the courts: provide a close examination of the facts and then render a decision. Such oversight should be sufficient to prevent abuse of the more pointed law. It will be interesting to see how this plays out over the next few months. Applied judiciously, police might finally be able to tell the public that, just like in the Golden Age of comic books, crime doesn't pay. - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath