Pubdate: Fri, 20 Feb 2009 Source: Peace Arch News (CN BC) Copyright: 2009 Peace Arch News Contact: http://www.peacearchnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1333 Author: Frank Bucholtz Note: Frank Bucholtz writes Fridays for the Peace Arch News. He is the editor of the Langley Times. Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) CAUGHT IN THE CROSSFIRE The level of fear about being caught in the crossfire between gang rivals has gone up several notches. This follows Monday's shootings in Surrey - one of which killed a 23-year-old White Rock mother who was driving along 148 Street. Her four-year-old son was in the car with her. Thankfully, he was not injured. A second incident in Whalley saw a man shot while he was in a Range Rover - the same kind of vehicle that 21-year-old Raphael Baldini was sitting in when he was shot and killed in the Guildford Town Centre parking lot on Feb. 3. In the Whalley incident, the injured man was apparently an innocent victim. The exact connection of the woman killed Monday to gangs isn't known, but early reports indicate that while she may have known some gang members, she had no direct involvement. Confirmation that some innocent people are being shot makes many people angry and fearful. They have every right to be able to go about their day-to-day business without fear of being shot. This is not a place where one should expect that. Canada is one of the safest countries in the world. Most people are law-abiding. Most people in this country do not own guns, and the vast majority who do don't transport them on the streets of Surrey, seeking to shoot someone else. What can be done? That's the question plaguing police, court and government officials. There are laws on the books which could help remove some gang members from the streets. Bail provisions could be tightened. There could be more of a crackdown in importation of handguns, although that would do nothing to discourage those who already have weapons. The fact is, the Canadian justice system is singularly ill-equipped to deal with an outbreak of this type. The entire system is built around the premise that someone charged with a crime is presumed to be innocent. That means those charged with an offence (or many offences) can and do take full advantage of the system - particularly when crime is a way of life for them. Some voices are calling for a legalization of marijuana to stop the gangland killings, as many criminals are involved in trafficking in this relatively benign drug. This is a red herring. Gangs are involved in far more than marijuana distribution. They traffic in many hard drugs, and deal in weapons. They will take on any line of business that brings in wads of tax-free money. Innocent people are not likely to be caught in the crossfire, but it will be hard to convince many of them of that fact. They have legitimate fears, and they want to see the situation change. While more police and a co-ordinated effort with the courts and prosecutors may well take more gangsters off the streets for now, the big problem remains. Young people will continue to think they are immortal - even when a close friend of theirs dies. For now, we need to report any suspicions to police - either through regular channels or Crimestoppers, which allows for anonymity. This community belongs to all of us, and it is going to take a co-ordinated effort to get at least some peace and order back again. In the long run, there must be much more intervention by parents, teachers and all those with an influence on children. We must make it clear to them that gang activity is given the black mark it so richly deserves. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom