Pubdate: Wed, 17 Nov 2010 Source: Calgary Herald (CN AB) Copyright: 2010 Canwest Publishing Inc. Contact: http://www2.canada.com/calgaryherald/letters.html Website: http://www.calgaryherald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/66 Author: Karen Kleiss, Calgary Herald CRIME CASH FUNNELLED TO WOMEN'S SHELTERS The provincial government has frozen criminal assets worth more than $19 million, seizing Lululemon bags stuffed with drug money, selling bullet-riddled cars, confiscating slick watches from cadavers and selling an Airdrie Quonset used to run a fight club. Now, for the first time, the province is funnelling $150,000 of that tally into new programs to help victims of crime. Justice Minister Alison Redford announced Tuesday the Alberta Council of Women's Shelters will get the first grant to launch a pilot program to help victims of domestic violence in rural areas. "We are taking the proceeds of crime and using it for the public good," Redford said after making the announcement in Edmonton. "This money has come from our Civil Forfeiture Fund . . . a fund that was established over the last two years and is developed out of property that has been seized from criminals who are committing criminal acts," said Redford. Redford was key in pushing the legislature to adopt the controversial Victims Restitution and Compensation Payment Act in 2008. The act allows police to seize property if they suspect it is being used for illicit purposes, regardless if anyone is charged with a criminal offence. Government lawyers take the case to civil court, which only deals with property used to commit crimes and not with the alleged crime itself. Since nobody's liberty is at stake, the standard of proof is much lower and prosecutors need only satisfy a judge the assets are more than likely the proceeds of crime. Critics said the new law violates civil rights and makes an end-run around long-standing protections embodied in criminal law. The constitutional validity of a similar Ontario law was challenged at the Supreme Court of Canada, where the government won. As a result, Alberta's Civil Forfeiture Office has grown from three lawyers to roughly 12, and director Karl Wilberg says at least two hundred cases are currently in various stages. The lawyers have a 95 per cent success rate, he said, and for every dollar of taxpayers' money spent to maintain the office, the lawyers win $1.50 in court. "We've had some rather astonishing finds in the course of this program," he said. "We've taken a . . . fight club, someone had a ring set up in their Quonset, and underneath the ring is an (alleged marijuana grow operation)." Police also allegedly seized axes and spears like those used in the Middle Ages. "We've had a lot of suitcases full of money, Lululemon bags," he said, along with $80,000 used in a foiled contract killing. "There was a pile of money, and we've got it." Other items include: - - 87 vehicles, many used in dial-a-doper operations and one used for human trafficking; - - seven residential homes used for marijuana grow operations; - - 68 bundles of "bulk cash" worth more than $1 million; Most of the $19 million is still tied up in legal proceedings, but Redford said the province expects to announce more grants in the coming three months. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D