Pubdate: Wed, 17 Feb 2010 Source: Victoria Times-Colonist (CN BC) Copyright: 2010 Times Colonist Contact: http://www2.canada.com/victoriatimescolonist/letters.html Website: http://www.timescolonist.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/481 Authors: Katie DeRosa and Joanne Hatherly, with files from Louise Dickson, Times Colonist Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/af.htm (Asset Forfeiture) B.C. ACTS TO SEIZE PROBLEM HOUSE Latest Raid at Victoria Residence Nets Five Arrests, Guns and Ammo The province is trying to seize a house that police describe as a haven for criminal activity. Victoria police say they have been called 180 times in the last seven years to the house at 2547 Prior St. The most recent raid on the house was Thursday, when a tactical team and undercover officers arrested five people and confiscated a sawed-off 12-gauge shot gun, a replica submachine-gun and ammunition, said Victoria police spokesman Sgt. Grant Hamilton. Brian Lynn Morrison, 38, who was staying at the house, was charged with possession of a prohibited or restricted firearm with ammunition, and possession of a firearm contrary to a court order, which stems from a conviction for possessing a dangerous assault rifle. Morrison has been under a lifetime firearms ban since 2003. He pleaded guilty in January 2009 to weapons charges after a YouTube video of him blasting a couch with an AR-15 was shown in court. He was released from prison in August. House owner Robert Earl Marson was also arrested in Thursday's raid. He was released without being charged. The house has been a constant headache for police and neighbours in the area, Hamilton said. Using its Civil Forfeiture Act, the province launched proceedings to seize the house last summer, serving Marson notice on July 30, 2009. Rob Kroeker, executive director of the province's civil forfeiture office, said it's the first time the province has tried to seize a house in Victoria under the forfeiture act. Documents filed Jan. 25 by the province in B.C. Supreme Court allege that since Marson bought the house near the corner of Cook and Bay streets in November 2002, it has served as a haven for thieves, and as a "storefront" for drug trafficking and prostitution. The documents allege Marson purchased the house with the proceeds of those criminal activities. In his handwritten response, dated Aug. 9, Marson denied "each and every allegation." The Civil Forfeiture Act has allowed the province to seize $8 million in property and assets bought with crime money or used for unlawful purposes since it was enacted in 2006. Often used to seize vehicles, cash and jewelry, the act has been used only a few times to seize houses. Two similar seizures concluded recently in Campbell River and in Vancouver, while in 2007, the province used the act to seize the Hells Angels clubhouse in Nanaimo. Under the act, a homeowner doesn't have to have a criminal conviction relating to activity on the property, as long as he or she is facilitating criminal acts, Hamilton said. Yesterday, the two-storey, dark-brown home had its windows boarded up, and the front porch and yard were littered with discarded furniture. It stands out among the character homes on the street, which is lined with cherry blossom trees. Marson was previously fined $100 under a city bylaw for failing to remove rubbish or other material on his property. "It was like a ... drive-through of drugs and prostitution," said next-door neighbour Bill Dean, describing the home at its worst about a year ago. He said about seven neighbours filed victim-impact statements to the court to ensure the matter was not dealt with lightly. "I've got bars on my windows. I don't feel this is a safe place for my kids." Neighbours describe people constantly coming and going from the house, drug activity, break-ins of vehicles and violent assaults. They're particularly concerned about weapons found in the home. Dean and others said seizure of the house might be the only way to remove the problem. "None of us want them to lose their house, but at this point we see no alternative." Kroeker estimates a case like this one could take about 24 to 30 months to work its way through the courts. So far, he said, the province has won all of its forfeiture cases, since none has been challenged. Morrison will appear in court tomorrow on the weapons charges. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake