Pubdate: Sat, 09 May 2009 Source: Calgary Sun, The (CN AB) Copyright: 2009 The Calgary Sun Contact: http://www.calgarysun.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/67 Author: Rick Bell OUR POLICE CHIEF IS USING FIGHTING WORDS TO OUTLINE A STREET-LEVEL CRIME SWEEP THAT AIMS TO CLEAR THE FEARLESS DRUG AND GUN-TOTING THUGS OUT OF OUR SIGHT Game on. First, Calgary's finest are now bringing the hammer down on street-level scumbags openly dealing drugs in the inner city. Our cops are expected to make a whole slew of arrests and lay a swath of charges, to be announced in the near future, as they vacuum up the vermin before police Chief Rick Hanson beefs up foot patrols May 27, when 62 officers will be walking the beat in and around the downtown in a bid to fight lawbreakers up close and personal. "We're establishing who owns the streets. We're the police, we represent the community, we own the streets. The only thing going to take them back is a different approach," says the city's top cop. "There is a greater recognition of the deterioration of the core as defined by the fear existing with those idiots out there," says the chief. "Now we're going to be at Ground Zero. We are going to be the ones pursuing the problem and not waiting for the community to call us to send a car, to look at an issue two hours later. We've heard what the community has had to say. We've heard what the people coming downtown experience and what has made them uncomfortable. "They're not comfortable with the aggressive panhandling, they're not comfortable with the drug dealers blatantly doing what they do. They're not comfortable with the bullies and there are a lot of violent criminals down here looking for confrontation, looking for people to beat up. "We want to get away from the Vietnam model. Remember Vietnam? They'd have a special operation. They'd fly them in, they'd take back an area after a vicious battle with the Vietcong and they'd leave. Well, we would do an operation, we whack everybody, we arrest them and then we'd go to the next location. Now, we're swooping down, making arrests and in come the beat guys to secure the area." Yes, it is a war and including the 62 uniforms pounding the pavement, in the downtown and from the East Village to 14 St. S.W., the inner-city District 1 of the police service will have a strength of more than 250 -- bike cops, police on patrol for rapid response investigators. If it was on its own, District 1 would be the third-largest municipal police force in Alberta. When you come out of a concert at the Jack Singer, there's a good chance you'll see beat cops. When you're on 17 Ave. S.W., better than even odds, beat cops are around. What an attitude adjustment. For years, this page has dealt with politicians who wouldn't pony up cash for more cops, even though Calgary has fewer police for its population than almost every major city in the country. Then some individuals rose to the highest ranks of the police brass and decided to play politician, spouting namby-pamby nonsense rather than going mano a mano with the gangsters. "Things have changed. It wasn't that long ago we would go to council and they would say, 'Look, we don't want to see cops. We'll call you when we need you,' " says Hanson. "Now we're at the point where they say, 'We want to see you out there, we want to see the visible presence of you guys performing your duties.' We need to get right down to the street level again." Why? What has changed? "Number one is open drug dealing. People have lost their fear of the justice system. It's really aggressive drug trafficking and we're going to aggressively enforce the law. "These people have created victims and we see the victims of organized crime and gangs, the setting up of the drug networks and the dealing of the drugs. What has been created is more addicts than we've ever seen on the streets before," says Hanson. The chief wants the support of the whole justice system and you have to wonder when the light bulb will go on with some of those dimwits. He vows city cops will go after those breaching their bail conditions. And he tells those who never come downtown to not bury their heads in the suburban sand. "Anybody who thinks this is just a downtown issue is just wrong because the impact of what we do will be felt all over," he says pointing out addicts have to go somewhere to get money, whether it's breaking into a car or a house. A plan for dealing with bad actors fleeing criminal hot spots to make new ones will roll out next week. Hanson points out cops will help the addicted and mentally ill needing a hand. "People will holler and scream saying we want to lock up the homeless. We don't want to pick on the homeless. They're victims, too." There is no instant solution. There will be no Mission Accomplished on May 27 but at least the mission is a mission. "Realistically, we expect an exodus of some of these people. We know some came to Calgary to do their street-level drug trafficking because it was viewed as being a fairly safe place to do business," says the chief. "Calgary is not a friendly place any more -- at least not for them." - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart