Pubdate: Thu, 14 Feb 2008 Source: Annapolis County Spectator; The (CN NS) Copyright: 2008 Transcontinental Nova Scotia Media Group inc. Contact: http://www.novanewsnow.com/rubrique-719-County-of-Annapolis.html Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4699 Author: Heather Killen TASK FORCE CLEANING UP COMMUNITIES Investigation Section Backed By New Act To Shut Down Illegal Activities A new task force aims to make communities safer by outing criminals. Fred Sanford, director of the province's Public Safety Investigation Section, said his five-member task force, comprised of former police officers, investigates reports of illegal activities that compromise the safety of residents in the surrounding neighbourhood. The Department of Justice formed the special task force last year, after the province passed the Safer Communities and Neighbourhoods Act. This law aims to improve community safety by shutting down homes and buildings that are regularly used for illegal activities. Unlike criminal investigations that aim to prosecute offenders, this task force is dedicated to evicting them to safeguard the surrounding neighbourhood. "The key factor in these investigations is public safety, so it applies to any situation where illegal activity is adversely affecting the community," he said. "In cases where someone is afraid to go out at night, or doesn't feel safe in his, or her neighbourhood because of what is happening at that address." The act also holds property owners accountable for threatening or disturbing activities regularly taking place on their property, and it gives the task force members authority to quickly resolve the situation through several avenues that bypass typical criminal investigations, and supersedes landlord-tenant agreements. The act identifies four illegal activitites that adversely affect neighbourhoods: drugs, alcohol, gambling and prostition. Neighbours can report illegal activity by calling a toll-free number and giving a statement to police. Sanford said once the investigating officer has determined that illegal activity is habitually taking place at a residence, police can serve the occupants with an eviction notice that forces them to suspend the illegal activity and move out of the neighbourhood. "We try to resolve the complaints out of court, so it's a shorter wait time," he said. "Usually it's within two-to-three weeks of getting the call." The eviction notice is posted on the premises and orders the property owner to take action to stop the problem, bars the tenants from continuing the illegal activity, and evicts them. The cases are generally easy to resolve, as it's in the landlords'interest to cooperate with the investigation, according to Sanford. The cases are built around a combination of the investigating officer and neighbours' observations of open drug use and activity. This type of investigation is particularly effective in rural areas, where illegal activity quickly stands out, and most everyone can quickly spot irregular traffic. Other signs that could indicate illegal activity include unusual traffic, frequent late-night visitors, and blacked-out windows, or drawn curtains. Investigators gather witness affadavits and guarantee their identities will remain confidential. Witnesses never appear in court, he added. All these cases are cooperative investigations jointly conducted with the local police and any appropriate evidence is passed on, so the investigations frequently culminate in separate criminal charges. In regular criminal investigations, the offenders are charged and then released back into the community to carry on business as usual. But because the police are able to post an eviction notice on the property and remove the offenders from the neighbourhood, the illegal activity immediately ceases. The task force has received more than 130 complaints to date, and has conducted more than 30 investigations across the province. The unit has about 35 open cases. In December, police posted an eviction notice on a house in Cornwallis that was known as being involved in illegal drug activity. Sanford said while the task force is still relatively new, it hasn't seen much residual affect on the neighbouring communities with the evicted dealers just setting up shop somewhere else. "So far it seems that evicting them causes enough of an interuption in their lives that it suspends the other activities," he said. "As time time goes on this could change, but so far it has been quite successful." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek