Pubdate: Wed, 25 Feb 2009 Source: Salmon Arm Observer (CN BC) Copyright: 2009 Salmon Arm Observer Contact: http://www.saobserver.net/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1407 Author: Jeremy Deutsch PUTTING AN END TO GANG WARS It remains one of my last memories of Richmond before I embarked on my career in journalism. A shootout in a quiet park early in 2007, a block from my parents' house, that produced so much gunfire that, at the time, the police said they had never seen so many bullets exchanged in a single clash. As it turns out, that shootout was gang-related, much like the recent daily violence oozing out of the Lower Mainland. If you want to put a stop to the endless gang wars and body count, legalize all drugs. Crack, heroin, pot - legalize all. Pouring millions of dollars into policing and jails hasn't worked and will continue to fail in the future. The reasons are fairly straightforward. The lure of the drug trade (it's estimated the marijuana industry alone in B.C. is worth $7 billion) is just too lucrative for some people to pass up and stopping its use is a losing battle. The threat of prison hasn't done anything to make a dent in the gang warfare. And why would it? Does anyone really believe tougher sentences for gangsters will deter someone who's willing to die? Some suggest more police are needed to investigate and infiltrate the criminal organizations. The City of Vancouver did this in the past, with weak results. Remember its Gang Suppression Task Force? It hasn't slowed the bloodshed. But don't for a second think smaller communities are immune to the kind of violence in the Lower Mainland. Otherwise, Victoria wouldn't have stepped in and formed two gang units for both Kelowna and Prince George. But, even if smaller communities are successful in fending off gangs, they will still terrorize some other part of B.C., ultimately taking lives and taxpayer cash. It's estimated a police investigation into just one shooting can cost up to $1 million. Instead, legalizing - not just decriminalizing - drugs will quickly put an end to the ongoing turf war fueling the violence in the first place. These thugs aren't shooting each other because someone stepped on their shoes. Essentially, let the government become the biggest drug dealer on the block and there's no turf to fight over. The profit government would earn from drug sales, which would be in the billions, can go directly back into rehab, education programs, health care - wherever the money is needed to get those afflicted with drug addiction some help. The money can also go toward programs for at-risk youth, so they can avoid getting caught up in the "gangsta" lifestyle in the first place. Right now, all those profits are going toward the fancy bulletproof cars that seem to turn up at every one of those deadly scenes. Some will argue by legalizing drugs, the government and society is condoning their use. But you can buy a pack of cigarettes at the corner store and we don't hear an overwhelming outcry against the government's efforts to spread the use of tobacco to households across the country. It's a recognition that a certain segment of society wants to get high. We need to go back to the drawing board, think outside the box or get back to square one. Because, at the rate of the current violence, it's becoming cliche to get killed in hail of bullets. - ----------------------------------- Jeremy Deutsch is a reporter with the Kamloops This Week newspaper. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart