Pubdate: Tue, 14 Jul 2009 Source: Chatham Daily News, The (CN ON) Copyright: 2009 OSPREY Media Group Inc. Contact: http://www.chathamdailynews.ca Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1627 Author: Ellwood Shreve, Staff Writer CRIME PROCEEDS PAID TO POLICE A $17,559 grant to the Chatham-Kent Police Service will help catch drug dealers, but it is also designed to send a message. Ontario Attorney General Chris Bentley announced the local funding through the Civil Remedies for Illicit Activities program, during a news conference at police headquarters yesterday. The aim is to help police in their efforts to prevent illegal drug and weapons trafficking by investing money seized through the proceeds of crime into increased enforcement. CKPS Chief Dennis Poole said, "the funding will primarily be used for Project Interceptor, an effort we'll be putting forward over the next number months targeting drug dealers importing and moving illegal drugs in Chatham." He added the bulk of the money will be used to upgrade the training of two police dogs in drug detection. Bentley said the law allows the tools of crime and property obtained through crime to be seized and forfeited to the Crown. "Then we can turn over those proceeds to police forces to enhance their crime fighting capacity or to the victims of crime to compensate them for criminal activity," he said. Bentley said to date $40 million in property along with $10 million has been forfeited under the Civil Remedies Act. He said the grant to the CKPS is just the beginning, noting the Supreme Court of Canada, only a few months ago, confirmed the forfeiture and seizure of property and money under the Civil Remedies Act is constitutional. "The message out there for criminals is, very clearly, if you commit the crime, you're not only going to do the time, but you're going to lose the property, you're going to lose the profit," Bentley said. Chatham-Kent police collected evidence to have a Taylor Avenue apartment building -- described as a known drug house -- seized under Civil Remedies Act in August 2007. And last week more than $40,000 seized by CKPS during a a September 2008 drug bust was forfeited to the government by a 25-year-old Merlin man recently convicted of a drug charge, because it was deemed to be the proceeds of crime. Now that the Supreme Court ruling has come down, Poole said the provincial government is trying to ramp up seizing more proceeds of crime. "Much of our focus will also centre on the seizure of assets . . . cash, vehicles and technology that enables drug dealers to do their business," he said. "We hope to take the profit motive out of the illegal drug trade and hit drug dealers in the pocketbook as well as send them to jail," added Poole. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr