Pubdate: Thu, 26 Feb 2009 Source: Aldergrove Star (CN BC) Copyright: 2009 Central Fraser Valley Star Publishing Ltd. Contact: http://www.aldergrovestar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/989 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) COPS TAKE ON CROOKS IN ALDERGROVE Langley's top cop says criminals in the Aldergrove community are being lined up like ducks in a carnival shooting gallery. While Langley RCMP Superintendent Janice Armstrong didn't use those exact words, she says the groundwork has been done to identify the criminal element in this area and a new Aldergrove "core enforcement team" of specially-hired officers will soon target the crooks. "Criminals are kind of lazy," Armstrong observed in her presentation to Aldergrove residents at Thursday evening's Business Link meeting. Typically, car thieves won't walk more than a few blocks when they steal a car or drop off a car after using it, said Armstrong. This has enabled RCMP to identify the area of Aldergrove in which these car thieves reside, and the next step will be to arrest and charge them. The core enforcement team positions for Aldergrove are currently posted at RCMP headquarters and the competition closes shortly. The two officers who are selected for the job will then follow up on the work investigators, including the two community safety officers, have done. "They will be strictly enforcement, working in tandem with the community safety officers," said Armstrong. "They will target prolific offenders, drug dealers" and the like. This initiative, which is already underway in Langley City, was just one of the subjects Armstrong covered in her in-depth presentation to the audience at the Business Link meeting, which included Mayor Rick Green. She also introduced the new Aldergrove Community Policing Office coordinator, Jan Drapeau, to the audience. Drapeau, a former dispatcher and 911 operator, has just taken over the job following former coordinator Kim Pedersen's move to the Langley RCMP Victim Services unit. Drapeau, a proud Aldergrove resident, said, "I'm very excited and hope to do lots of things with our volunteers to focus on problem areas here." Armstrong said the Aldergrove policing zone - between 276 and 232 Streets and the US border to Hwy. 1 - is the largest in Langley and the geographic size does present its own challenges. However, she said the crime rate in this zone is not out of line with the other four zones, and in fact has been declining, due to several reasons. One of the reasons has been a multi-pronged approach by police, which includes the probation checks that have resulted in "lots of success breaching" reprobates for not abiding probation curfews. Another new initiative is the Langley RCMP website (www.langley.rcmp.ca) which allows the public to view policing statistics, news releases, crime maps and the current most wanted list and photos of those with outstanding warrants against them. "We want you to look at them and if you see them in your area, call us right away," said Armstrong. Armstrong is also hopeful that the "public safety team" which inspects suspicious residences to weed out marijuana grow-ops will soon be reinstated. "We're working to get that back up and running. We started it in Aldergrove and inspected over 200 homes, and in 98 per cent of them we found evidence of a grow-op," said Armstrong. Grow-ops frequently have organized crime or gang connections, which translates into a public safety hazard. One of last month's "gang shootings" was in the Aldergrove area, when a "grow-rip" involved a man being shot at a grow-op on Huntingdon Road near Aldergrove Lake Park. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom