Pubdate: Tue, 13 Oct 2009 Source: Business In Vancouver (CN BC) Copyright: 2009 BIV Publications Ltd. Contact: http://www.biv.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2458 Author: Glen Korstrom SOLICITOR GENERAL TO TAKE AIM AT GANG PROFITS Victoria set for record year auctioning items seized via the province's proceeds of crime legislation The B.C. government plans to increasingly hit Lower Mainland gang members in the pocketbook, according to B.C.'s solicitor general. "We're going to ramp up civil forfeiture here in B.C. and put more resources into civil forfeiture proceedings," B.C. solicitor general Kash Heed told Business in Vancouver in an exclusive interview. A key target will be marijuana grow-ops. Experts estimate that B.C.'s marijuana trade employs 150,000 people and generates double the roughly $3 billion that BCStats says forestry annually contributes to the provincial economy. In November 2007, Burnaby RCMP became the first B.C. police force to successfully navigate the B.C. Supreme Court process and win the right to seize a residential property because it had been used in an illegal activity. The house was sold using a conventional real estate broker instead of being auctioned off. Eight vehicles have been forfeited so far. Three of them have been sold and four are scheduled to be put on the auction block later this month. The other vehicle is still being processed by the police. Heed envisions an increasing number of the car auctions. All proceeds from sales, he said, will be used to combat gang activity. B.C.'s proceeds of crime legislation, the Civil Forfeiture Act, allows Victoria to appeal to a B.C. Supreme Court judge for the authority to seize homes, cars and other property that criminals have bought with money generated from crime. The program started in June 2006 and by March 31, 2007, it had produced $609,000 in provincial-government revenue. Annual proceeds from seizures jumped 462% to more than $2.8 million the next year. They slumped to $2.1 million in the fiscal year that ended March 31, but are set to grow again. Victoria has generated $1.7 million in proceeds of crime seizures during the first five months of the current fiscal year and is on track to generate $4.2 million by the March 31, 2010, year-end. "We need to take away proceeds that gang members are deriving from their crimes, arrest them, throw them in jail and make sure they stay in jail," Heed said. He stressed that police are not going to penalize landlords who perform proper due diligence yet inadvertently rent their homes to marijuana growers. Nor does B.C.'s top cop want police to use scarce resources to arrest casual marijuana smokers. "We need to make sure that we go after the gang members, organized-crime syndicates and organizations in a very, very aggressive manner," he said. Heed told BIV during an exclusive hour-long interview that he has had plenty of run-ins with organized crime. Before he was elected as the MLA for Vancouver-Fraserview, he spent 30 years in policing, working his way up through the Vancouver Police Department before becoming the first Indo-Canadian police chief in Canada when he took the reins in West Vancouver. Heed said he has been in restaurants where gang members flashed hand gestures at him that indicated they were going to shoot him. Braving that intimidation has become second nature, although he said he is concerned about his family's safety. The 53-year-old is a first-time father of a 20-month-old girl. Heed fidgeted with two BlackBerry devices that were on vibrate mode and revealed that the second prong of his anti-gang strategy is to invest in children. "I really want to stress this," he said. "If we want to get ahead of this problem, we have to invest in kids at an early age." . - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr