Pubdate: Thu, 02 Oct 2008 Source: Calgary Sun, The (CN AB) Copyright: 2008 The Calgary Sun Contact: http://www.calgarysun.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/67 Author: Rick Bell AS PUSH COMES TO SHOVE, COPS AND POLITICIANS RUN FOR COVER. A bunch of baddies are busted and quickly released, sans outrage. Sleep tight Yessir, we get it now. When the circus comes to town, the city cop brass won't say stink if their mouth is full of it. When nobody is around and all the chatter is pie-in-the-sky, they and the pretend tough politicians are all mad about how bad guys get caught and are then released. But when we have a real case of all kinds of bad guys arrested and back on the street, including full-blown gangsters, you don't need to have the B.S. detector on very high to catch the butt-covering gibberish. How many times has city police Chief Rick Hanson slammed the revolving door of what pretends to be a criminal justice system and yet, yesterday, one of his top guys won't say boo since ... golly gee, golly whiz ... there's a prosecutor in the back of the room, looking stylish and wearing a puff in his pocket. Some tough guys. The misplacing of backbones begins when the cops invite the press to their HQ and they lay out the drugs and the guns and the ammo and tell us about their big bust, tons of criminal charges, 34 people charged, the investigation of four shootings wrapped up. According to the cops, 12 of those charged are biggies but ... guess what ... eight are already back out on the street. You don't say. As for the lesser 22 baddies, a whole 20 are legally not behind bars. The other two didn't wait for a judge. They're on the loose. We're talking people legally on the street with attempted murder beefs, gun charges, drug charges, failure to comply with orders of the court, including bans on possessing guns they possess. We're talking individuals facing 19 offences, 18 offences, 14 offences, 11 offences and on they go. And what does Insp. Shaun Gissing have to say, on behalf of the Calgary Police Service? It ain't pretty. "Well, it's always a concern when we find a violent individual, lay a charge and ultimately for some reason they're released," says the inspector. "We are very careful to attempt to detain people who we feel are going to be a problem on our streets and, if that's not possible, for a variety of reasons, we ensure we have strict conditions upon their release." Here we go. Keep shovelling. The inspector drones on about "very careful partnering with the prosecutor's office on what form of release these people would go out on and a very close joint consultation on the release of each individual." It is really tough to listen to this drivel. "Each case is different. It is not possible for me to give a blanket statement. Each one is looked at carefully and our partnership with the prosecutor's office allows us to carefully dictate the circumstances of how individuals are dealt with." Enough. This columnist asks a simple question. Wouldn't it have been better if those charged were behind bars and then you really could dictate the conditions as the police chief says he wants? By then, Insp. Gissing is clearly not happy. He resorts to offering up a little lesson from Law 101. "Each individual is subject to a trial and, at the end of his trial, if he's found guilty he may be subject to time behind bars, as you say." Not exactly Dirty Harry. The inspector does remind us they have some people behind bars. Yahoo. And then, read this line carefully. "I suppose I would be concerned we may lose an individual to flight." Talk about making folks feel snug in their jammies. The inspector tells us he believes these people are not small players in gangland, causing problems in our city and shooting people while carrying out personal vendettas. He figures they came from Ottawa because they felt they could deal drugs here more freely. But it's all right if some of those charged are on the street and that includes from the Top 12 list: Jibril Adam, Hassan Nur, Hassan Hassan, Feyesel Mussa, Egal Adam, Yasin Ahmed Mohamed, Mustafa Ahmed and Devron Brown. The politicians, meanwhile, talk loudly and carry no stick. They tell you what they think you want to hear. Alison (Catch and Release) Redford, Alberta's justice boss, vowed prosecutors would get tough, but the hug-a-thug wimps obviously got to her. Stephen Harper talks about his crime-fighting credentials through more than one change of a sweater vest. But what do Ottawa's no-bite legal beagles do while the boss is off doing important stuff, like sucking up to Quebec? Liberal, Tory, same old story. Meanwhile, Premier Ed is in B.C. asking them how they deal with drug dealers in Vancouver. Answer? They don't. Ed, where are you going to go next, San Francisco? The mayor and the police chief still want more cops, no doubt to babysit all the pukes. And will yesterday's arrests reduce gun play? The inspector hopes so. I wouldn't advise anyone holding their breath. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin