Pubdate: Sun, 24 Feb 2008 Source: North Shore News (CN BC) Copyright: 2008 North Shore News Contact: http://www.nsnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/311 Author: James Weldon SMART POLICING IS MORE EFFICIENT POLICING The third in a series on policing the North Shore. See the issues of Feb. 10 and 17 for stories on regional policing and North Shore policing costs. FOR an upstanding member of the community, Sue Tupper knows an awful lot of drug addicts. The North Vancouver RCMP corporal spends much of her day talking with them, helping them where she can, and -- when necessary -- watching them steal to support their habit. As a member of the detachment's Crime Reduction Unit, it's Tupper's job to track North Vancouver's chronic offenders -- many of whom are motivated by addiction -- in an effort to stop their activities. The unit's strategy is part of a larger trend within North Shore law enforcement toward stopping crime before it happens. The seven-member North Vancouver team was formed in April 2006 to implement the new strategy. The unit uses data from an in-house crime analyst to seek patterns in criminal behaviour. They work out where the activity is clustering -- whether it be around individuals or locations -- and try to predict where it will happen next. "It's based on intelligence," said Tupper. "We know it's having a good effect." If someone is identified as a likely offender, the team will track that person to catch them red-handed. Often the process will start right after a known offender's release from jail for a previous crime, said Tupper. "What we've been doing has worked," she said. "We've been staying on track with that." The approach differs substantially from traditional policing in that it is proactive rather than reactive, said Tupper. Police working regular duty simply don't have the time to do the kind of surveillance the unit must engage in; they might at any moment be called to a traffic incident or a break-in or some other routine duty. Members of the unit, by contrast, are assigned almost exclusively to their project, meaning they can home in on a given target for as long as they need to without fear of distraction. "A general duty member has many jobs to do," said Tupper. "Our team gets to focus." And it's not all about enforcement, said Tupper. In many cases, the unit has gotten to know the subjects of their efforts. Repeat offenders are often addicted to drugs, committing their crimes in order to support the habit. Where circumstance allows, the members turn their efforts to helping those individuals rather than simply arresting them. That may mean connecting them with a service in the community, driving them to a drug treatment facility, even just lending them an ear when they need it. "We're very familiar with the drug users of North Vancouver," said Tupper. "Often these people don't have any kind of support system whatsoever." While the corporal has confidence in the unit's approach, quantifying its success is extremely difficult, she said. "A lot of the crimes go unnoticed or unreported," said Tupper. Ending a spree of unnoticed shoplifting, for example, or uncovering offences that would otherwise have gone undiscovered might not result in a dip in the recorded crime rate, she said. But the corporal points to anecdotal evidence to support her case. The unit has had great success busting chronic thieves, she said, and they've arrested dozens of people involved in dial-a-dope schemes. Sometimes their efforts even lead to the disruption of larger scale crime. Tupper cited the example of an incident in February 2007 in which a routine call by the unit led to a major fraud bust. Members of the team were visiting the residents of a well-known drug house in North Vancouver when they noticed people talking to the driver of a car outside. The car was linked to a shoplifting incident of the day before. When the officers approached the vehicle, it took off. The unit tracked the driver to an apartment in Burnaby, where they discovered a different car -- this one stolen -- parked outside. An arrest and a raid on the home uncovered close to $200,000 in counterfeit bills as well as drugs, guns and more than 100 stolen ID cards. By keeping tabs on the small-time offenders, the unit had reeled in a much bigger fish, said Tupper. "That's what you find," she said. "It's all related." In West Vancouver, a similar idea has been taking shape. The WVPD has had a Target Team -- a squad roughly analogous to the CRU -- for many years, but as of Feb. 20, the entire department has adopted a new proactive policing strategy called CompStat, based on a system developed in New York in the mid-1990s. Similarly to the strategies of the CRU and Target Team, CompStat makes use of statistics to focus resources where offences are most likely to happen in an effort to curb crime. But the new system takes into account a broader range of factors and it holds officers accountable for addressing identified problems. "It's a more holistic approach to the problem," said Chief Const. Kash Heed, who has been a driving force behind the initiative. The system looks at geographical distribution of incidents, time of day, crimes by category, patterns of victimization, even vehicle pursuits and officer complaints. The numbers are compiled and analyzed every 28 days. At the end of each period, key staff meet to go over the figures, then hatch a plan for the upcoming month to address any emerging trends. "If burglaries are showing an increase, we will look at how we're going to approach that," said Heed. That may mean targeting a chronic offender, saturating an area with police, implementing a crime prevention program, or some other tactic. Pieces of the CompStat system have been coming online since he took the reins, and already those portions have seen results, he said. Similarly to North Vancouver, numbers to demonstrate the program's success are hard to come by. But in West Vancouver's case, that's because the system hasn't been in place long enough to generate them, said Heed. He did offer anecdotal evidence, however. Heed gave the example of a recent spate of break-and-enters in British Properties. In accordance with the new system, the department analyzed the pattern and piled officers into the area at times when the crimes were most likely to happen. Through their investigation, a description emerged of a van associated with the spree, and soon enough one of the members spotted it. With help from the Vancouver police, the van was found and the suspects arrested. The spate of break-ins has stopped. As the program gets up and running, its success will be more easily quantified, said Heed. Each period, those in charge will review the goals set out in the previous month to see if identified problems have been addressed. If they have not, those who were supposed to address them will be held to account. Heed is confident the numbers will demonstrate its effectiveness. The system is the way of the future, said Heed. "You've got to police smarter." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek