Pubdate: Thu, 05 Feb 2009 Source: Province, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2009 Canwest Publishing Inc. Contact: http://www.canada.com/theprovince/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/theprovince/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/476 Author: Susan Lazaruk Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) VIOLENCE WILL ESCALATE: EXPERTS Crime Fueled By Soaring Price Of Cocaine The explosion of violence -- fueled by the soaring price of cocaine -- that rocked Metro Vancouver this week will likely escalate, gang experts predict. "You usually get a half-dozen events of this kind," said Robert Gordon, director of Simon Fraser University's criminology centre. Sgt. Shinder Kirk of the Integrated Gang Task Force said the violence tends to erupt in waves. "We know the violence occurs in cycles," said Kirk. "We also know that this violence can occur at any time." Three people -- all known to police -- were shot dead early this week in Surrey and Coquitlam. Police said the three shootings -- of Raphael Baldini, 21, and a 21-year-old Port Coquitlam woman on Tuesday and James Ward Erickson, 25, on Monday -- aren't related. There have been a further five incidents involving deaths and shootings since last January. Experts agree the violence is pushed by the drug trade, but they speculate it doesn't necessarily involve organized criminals, such as biker and Asian gangs. Instead, they say, smaller upstarts with loose and scattered networks are behind the shootings. "Basically, you have small units of thugs who give themselves a moniker and try to make money off drugs," said a Lower Mainland police anti-gang-squad officer. "They do business and have links in Edmonton and Calgary. They are small, have a variety of connections and are difficult to infiltrate. Some come together for one criminal transaction," said the source who did not want his name revealed. "It's disorganized crime." He said these groups are trigger-happy and volatile and their resentments can usually be traced back to a ripoff or unpaid debts. "These guys don't hold grudges for long," he said. "They don't have the patience and retaliate fast." He said the soaring price of cocaine -- $50,000 a kilogram in Vancouver, more than double last year's $22,000 -- is behind the violence. Kirk noted that in B.C. there are organized crime groups at the top and street-level criminals at the bottom, with mid-level groups that haven't been around long in between. Those groups will co-operate vertically with the other two levels and even with each other, he said. "But disputes can develop as quickly as the alliances," he said. "They're allies one minute, then enemies the next." Meanwhile, Gordon said, the cops' approach to the gangs has been inadequate because of fragmented police forces. And he said the B.C. government and the solicitor-general's office is at fault for not taking the problem seriously by developing a province-wide policy to deal with it. The police and policy response "is less organized than organized crime," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin