Pubdate: Sat, 06 Dec 2008 Source: Edmonton Sun (CN AB) Copyright: 2008 Canoe Limited Partnership. Contact: http://www.edmontonsun.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/135 Author: Richard Liebrecht GANGS FEEL THE PINCH Pressure Of Tough Economic Times Leads To More Clashes, Killings The global economic crisis may cost some people their jobs - but it's costing some gangsters and drug dealers their lives, say cops. Just yesterday, police released the names of two homicide victims that members of the local Somali community have said are Somali. Both were killed Tuesday. Several Somalis have turned up dead in the last few months. According to Edmonton's top gang cop, they may be the latest victims of a slowing economy. Insp. Kevin Galvin, head of the Edmonton police gang and organized crime unit, said that crime groups are really just underground corporations dealing a product. They have costs to pay, brands to maintain - and they suffer as consumers cut back. "You have established (drug) groups feeling the same economic pressures as regular business," he said. They even have a credit system, he said, and credit is getting tighter for them, too, said Galvin. A regional cocaine dealer will go to B.C. to buy large quantities of the drug - about 10 kilograms supplies 10 days of sales for the average unit operating in Edmonton, said Galvin. The B.C. source will charge for five kilos, but will front the other five, he said. That loaning continues regularly, and the debt may build up if more kilos are fronted. But pressures arise that can end the lending. The price of cocaine has skyrocketed recently, said Galvin, with turf wars in Mexico boosting costs up to $50,000 per kilogram. Mix that with a slowing demand in a slowing economy, and the big-time distributors are feeling nervous about their business prospects; Galvin said they've been calling in their debts. "'I (local dealer) have got to find my money or someone is going to deal with me,'" he said. The debt filters down to the street as gangs resort to breaking into each other's gang houses and stealing the hundreds of thousands of dollars needed to pay debts, said Galvin - leading to increased inter-gang conflict. Gangs also have to get tough to stay in business. Criminal organizations have brand-like reputations based on their toughness and the solidity of their operations, said Galvin. If they don't have a good reputation, big-time distributors may not sell them drugs, he added. Gangs with the toughest reputations fare best, so crime organizations may resort to beating or killing their own members who step out of line to appear disciplined and functional. Somali gangs are particularly hard hit, said Galvin, because they have only penetrated the illicit drug industry within the last three years and more established organizations may not support them as times get tough. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin