Pubdate: Mon, 31 Aug 2009 Source: Edmonton Sun (CN AB) Copyright: 2009 Canoe Limited Partnership. Contact: http://www.edmontonsun.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/135 Author: Richard Liebrecht, Staff Writer MAKING THE BAD GUYS SQUIRM It's A Battle Of The Minds As Cops Use Intimidation Tactics While Working The Beat On Stony Plain Road Fighting crime on a notoriously gritty stretch of Stony Plain Road is a battle of the minds, even if the bad guys seem to be fighting unarmed. "It's always about applying that pressure," says Edmonton police Const. Trevor Sutherland. He and partner Const. Bill Countryman are beat cops on the strip flanking 156 Street. Pressure means constantly finding ways to control criminals who can be completely irrational. Most are on drugs and trying to feed their habits, said the officers. "Good people are deterred by punishment ... the people who occasionally do small things like the odd shoplifting. But five per cent of people are responsible for 95% of crime. They're not deterred by punishment and they're fully aware what they're doing is wrong. "It's personality-driven crime ... Any strategy that has its primary basis in logic, in reasonable thinking, is going to fail." So, toss reason out the window, and come for a walk. Sutherland and Countryman leave their nondescript office at 156 Street and Stony Plain Road, but skip the main route for the back lanes. These are the streets people trying to duck attention walk. It's the local supply trail. Within a block, the first colourful client appears -- a guy toting a grocery bag of clothes who admits he just got out of jail. He's back on the strip just hanging out by the 7-Eleven -- and he's familiar to the officers. "I'm born and lived down here all my life, 30 years," he said, trying to explain why he came back to the same area, the same life. The officers are asking him questions -- Why are you sitting here? Who do you know? -- questions designed to make their subjects squirm. "Dealing with us is a pain in the ass. We try to make it that way," said Countryman. Just ask the scruffy-haired old man with the "Petro Can't" hat in front of the Jasper Place Hotel. He admits he's been busted for trafficking before. He's banned from the hotel, but he's loitering out front. "I go to jail all the time because we live here," he retorts. Just don't live where you're banned, say the officers before handing him a ticket worth a couple hundred dollars. "He doesn't pay that," Countryman said afterward. "He's mad because if he doesn't pay there'll be a warrant issued for his arrest -- and that gives us the power of search." It's five days of jail during which the officers don't have to deal with him, and a chance to find out what he's really up to. "We have to make them paranoid. We have to make them think we're always around watching," said Sutherland. They cover their office walls in mug shots of common criminals. They study their relationships, find out how to push their buttons. They follow them, knock on their doors whenever needed. The officers pay close attention to drug houses and troubled apartment blocks so they can have targets evicted, hoping to disrupt their business and move them away. It doesn't make them many fans. Residents of a recently busted drug house left cursing graffiti for the officers before they left -- a couple calling Countryman a fool. "They're a--holes," said a woman the officers picked out as a user. She admits to doing whatever drug she can get her hands on. She lives in an alleged drug house the officers love to target -- by blaring the Magnum PI song over their patrol car public address system at 7 a.m. The officers readily admit to the pestering. "That is a drug house. We want them to not feel comfortable there," said Sutherland. Instead of tolerating the cops, why doesn't the woman just leave the life? "Everybody has their crutch, whether it be God, drugs or bingo," she said. The officers say they'll offer her help with her addictions through a social worker. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr