Pubdate: Fri, 21 Aug 2009 Source: Kamloops Daily News (CN BC) Copyright: 2009 Kamloops Daily News Contact: http://www.kamloopsnews.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/679 Author: Jason Hewlett Neighbours Vow To Take Their Street Back 'It's right here, in your face,' residents say of drug dealing on downtown block Kamloops - Threats to life and property have residents of a downtown street on the verge of taking the law into their own hands against drug dealers who have moved into the neighbourhood. "I will not tolerate crack being sold on my property where my four kids live," resident Kerri Gold said Thursday. What angers homeowners on the 600 block of St. Paul Street is that the drug trade is carried out in clear view of the city's RCMP detachment, with little response from police. But RCMP maintain investigators are well aware of the problem and will take action. Gold and boyfriend Christopher Daigle have spent the last three months watching drug deals outside their home and in the alley behind it. The couple has chased drug users and prostitutes out of their backyard on several occasions. One time Gold was so furious she trained a garden hose on an addict who was smoking up. She said the problem didn't exist until renters moved into a home on Battle Street earlier this summer. Then all number of sketchy people appeared day and night. On an average day, Gold counts 100 people purchasing drugs in the neighbourhood. Residents have even decoded the system of how the drugs are sold. Gold said dealers whistle to let buyers know where to make their purchase. Two whistles mean meet in the alley behind the 7-Eleven on Seymour Street, one long whistle indicates the parking lot, and three whistles say the alley between Battle and St. Paul. "There's a couple of other whistles that I haven't figured out yet," said Gold. Gold's neighbour, Brenda, who would not give her last name, said the exchange of drugs and money is discreet, with the buyer and seller simply walking by each other. "If you hear a whistle and look in the direction of the whistling, you see a deal," she said. If either party notices, your life is threatened. And it doesn't matter if other people are around to hear it, said Brenda. "It's right there, in your face, and it isn't safe," she said. Numerous complaints have been made to the RCMP, but the culprits usually move on by the time police arrive. Gold said one officer who did respond chastised her for spraying the druggie with her hose. "He told me I could be charged with assault. I thought doing drugs was illegal," she said. Daigle said enough threats have been made against his family that he stays up at night to watch out for trouble. "It's just getting sick," said Daigle. RCMP Sgt. Scott Wilson said the detachment's drug section is aware of the problem and working toward a solution. The worst thing residents can do is take the law into their own hands. Wilson said confronting people under the influence of drugs is dangerous. "The best thing to do is phone the police. We do not encourage property owners to aggressively deal with people on their property," he said. "You don't know who they are or what they've got. You don't know if they have a weapon." Gold said the renters on Battle Street were evicted Wednesday and officers did hourly patrols through the neighbourhood that night. It was the first quiet evening in weeks. St. Paul Street resident Shelaigh Garson is holding a neighbourhood meeting Sunday for residents who want to work on a solution. She said an RCMP officer has promised to attend. "We don't know what else to do," said Garson. Anyone who witnesses drug activity is asked to phone Kamloops RCMP at 250-828-3000 or Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-TIPS. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom