Pubdate: Wed, 01 Dec 2010 Source: North Shore News (CN BC) Copyright: 2010 North Shore News Contact: http://www.nsnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/311 Author: Jane Seyd JUDGE GETS TOUGH WITH DIAL-A-DOPE DEALER A provincial court judge has sent a dial-a-dope crack dealer to jail for six months, saying traffickers need to get the message there will be consequences for their actions. Judge Carol Baird Ellan sent the get-tough message to Gordon Adam Thompson, 32, of Burnaby who was nabbed in November 2009 after West Vancouver police set up a sting operation. Thompson was caught selling cocaine out of a vehicle after West Vancouver officers called a phone number twice in one week to arrange the drug deals. Thompson sold the officers $40 of drugs each time. When he was arrested following the second deal, police seized three grams of crack divided into 11 packages and seven grams of powder cocaine divided into 14 packages from his car. In court, Thompson's defence lawyer John Stowe asked for a sentence to be served in the community, saying Thompson has a steady work history and is not an addict, but sold the drugs when he was unemployed and had fallen on hard times. But the judge wasn't convinced, commenting that using a vehicle to sell crack "makes that substance readily available to people who might not otherwise travel to the kinds of places that they could otherwise acquire it, such as the Downtown Eastside." She added a stronger message needs to be sent to drug dealers. "The issue to my mind at this point in this community is the prolific nature of these crimes which we see on almost a daily basis in these courts," said Baird Ellan. "The sentences being imposed are not achieving deterrence and people who are disposed to engage in these kinds of schemes to supplement their incomes are apparently not receiving the message that these are serious crimes that prey on the buyers and endanger the safety of the community. "It seems that offenders are under the impression that they can conduct this kind of activity until they get caught and then expect a sentence that is not particularly disruptive to their lifestyle. "In my view a more consistent message is required." - --- MAP posted-by: Matt