Pubdate: Tue, 27 Jan 2009 Source: Airdrie City View (CN AB) Copyright: 2009 Airdrie City View Ltd. Contact: http://airdriecityview.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3202 Author: Blake Richards, (Wild Rose MP) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?199 (Mandatory Minimum Sentencing) ACTION NEEDED IN FIGHT AGAINST GANGS After having recently toured the maximum security prison in Edmonton, I am more convinced than ever that the worst threat to public safety is the growing gang problem here in Canada. In my role on the House of Commons Standing Committee on Public Safety and National Security, I will be touring a number of prisons in the coming weeks, including penitentiaries at Bowden and Drumheller. I also plan to do ride-alongs with local RCMP in Wild Rose and with Calgary City Police, and will be meeting with anti-gang units to determine the full scope of the issues they're dealing with. One thing that is abundantly clear to me, from recent reports in the media, meeting with local police officers and Alberta's Solicitor General, and having toured the Edmonton Max, is that we have a huge and growing problem with gangs and the violence they subject our society to. There have been innocent bystanders caught in the crossfire and injured or killed as rival gang members shoot each other up on the streets of Calgary. And, I fear that these deadly games will make their way out to the communities we call home in Wild Rose. Furthermore, in touring the maximum security institution in Edmonton, it is clear that even within our prisons there are enormous challenges dealing with the gang problem - gang members use their time in prison as an opportunity to recruit and train future gang members; drug smuggling and the black market is rampant, with anything and everything being used as currency; and prisoners take advantage of their far too generous personal property privileges to create ways to communicate with the outside so they can continue to run their gang activities from inside the prisons. Gangs and organized crime and the violence it brings cannot and must not be tolerated. The first step is dealing with the drug trade which fuels gang activity. This includes stiffer mandatory sentences for crimes such as drug trafficking and running large grow operations or crystal meth labs. It also includes educating youth about the dangers of illegal drugs, and increasing funding for initiatives such as the Youth Gang Prevention Fund. Beyond combating the drug trade, we must put a stop to the revolving door system that we call justice in this country. Serious violent offences must meet with serious penalties. Criminal sentences must fit the crime and be a true deterrent to criminal behaviour. The protection of the public must be first and foremost in the minds of legislators, and everyone involved in our justice system. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin