Pubdate: Wed, 10 Jun 2009 Source: Telegraph-Journal (Saint John, CN NK) Copyright: 2009 Brunswick News Inc. Contact: http://telegraphjournal.canadaeast.com/onsite.php?page=contact Website: http://telegraphjournal.canadaeast.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2878 Author: Bruce Bartlett POLICE PROBE COSTS RISING DRAMATICALLY: DEPUTY CHIEF SAINT JOHN - The complexity and costs of police investigations have risen dramatically over the past 30 years, Deputy Chief Darrell Scribner of the Saint John Police Force told the police commission Tuesday night. The costs are driven by changes brought about by the Charter of Rights and Freedoms as well as court-directed disclosure rules that now require police to copy every piece of evidence and make it available to defence lawyers, Scribner said. "Every little piece that we touch needs to be replicated and turned over to the defence," he said. "We spend hours and hours and hours burning out photocopiers in order to do this." The force tried to cut costs by providing documents on computer discs. "Unfortunately not everyone is electronically savvy and we were ordered to go back to the old system, so it means reams and reams of boxes and tapes. Whatever we are working on needs to be replicated for each person representing an accused," he said.Drugs are behind a lot of crime because people who become addicted steal to pay for their next fix. In Saint John the biggest problems are with prescription painkillers that are sold illegally and usually injected by the user. As an example, Scribner detailed the costs of the investigation into the November 2005 arson of the north end community police office, which was related to a drug investigation. It took six months and involved a number of local officers, plus one undercover officer from outside the community, for a total of $197,000. Overtime amounted to another $21,000. The costs of getting all the regulatory and documentary evidence to apply for a wiretap cost $21,000. Rent was $3,000. The force had to pay Aliant $10,000 and Rogers $11,000 for access to the tapped lines. In the end the investigation costs totaled $267,000, he said. And that didn't take into account the costs of using police cars, preparing disclosure, or getting overtime for officers called to court on their days off, he said. In a recent joint investigation with another police force, city police ended up monitoring 30 phone lines because the targets kept switching phones. For two months the costs of accessing the lines was $70,000. Then the costs of hiring people to listen to the tapes and type out the conversations added up to $142,000. Once a case goes to court and a conviction is obtained, there is always the possibility of an appeal. "We have to do it all over again, that whole court piece has to be done again. The only thing that is different is that about year-and-a-half has passed and you are scrambling for the notes you used the first time," he said. The need to handle large volumes of evidence, apply the latest investigative techniques and keep records is a major factor behind the need for a new police station, Chief Bill Reid said. "We are not up to current standards in a lot of these areas," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Doug