Pubdate: Fri, 14 Jan 2011 Source: Alaska Highway News (CN BC) Copyright: 2011 Glacier Interactive Media Contact: http://www.alaskahighwaynews.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/716 Author: Ryan Lux Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) CATCHING THE COKE Fort St. John RCMP clamped down on the city's illicit drug trade in 2010, increasing the number of cocaine related arrests by 53 per cent, Inspector Pat Egan reported to council Monday, Jan. 10. Police also slightly increased the number of marijuana related arrests in Fort St. John. Egan made the numbers public as part of the local detachment's annual year-end report to council. He cautioned that annual statistics are prone to fluctuation and they go through ebbs and flows over the years. However he pointed out that dramatic increases or decreases compared to the previous year can be attributed to specific incidents or trends. The significant increase in cocaine related arrests doesn't necessarily signify an increase in Fort St. John's cocaine trade. Rather, Egan said, the jump in arrests is the result of a concerted local effort by police to target the trade of the illicit substance. At the beginning of 2010 mayor and council mandated the local police force to focus its attention on the city's drug trade. Council had made the request in response to community concerns surrounding the proliferation of the local drug trade. To tackle the issue, police reinforced the work of the Fort St. John Drug Section with several undercover operations, which received funding from both the city and the province. The city's most recent undercover drug bust occurred last week, when police arrested 15 individuals in connection with street level trafficking. Undercover officers targeted local drug dealers over the course of the four-month long investigation. As a result of the project, police charged 13 men and two women with a total of 40 offences. The vast majority of the charges were directly involved with trafficking cocaine. Cst. Gary Gray sought the help of the community to increase police ability to target local drug traffickers. "Everyone in Fort St. John knows someone who's life has been affected by drugs," said Gray, "We would like to thank the public for providing us with information that we can use as a starting point in our investigations." The day after Fort St. John police announced their 15 arrests, Canadian Border Services officers snatched $3.5 million worth of cocaine, some of which police speculated was bound for Fort St. John. Police arrested a man and a woman from Washington State after finding the equivalent of 83,000 doses of cocaine in their minivan. RCMP Cpl. Craig Douglass, Prince George media relations officer, said although there's no way to know for sure, it's quite possible the intent was to split up and distribute the cocaine among communities like Prince George, Fort St. John and Fort McMurray. Given the recent police actions, Fort St. John's Insp. Egan said there will be an immediate impact on the availability of cocaine in the community. However, he said, he doubts that will last long. "History tells us that the problems are likely to reemerge continually," explained Egan, "It doesn't take long for another group to move in and fill the hole, it's like shoveling water." Director of Criminology at Simon Fraser University, Robert Gordon agreed. "Just because you eliminate the supply, doesn't mean that you get rid of the demand," explained Gordon. He said that northeastern B.C. and northern Alberta are significant drug markets because of the high levels of disposable incomes in those areas. "You have a lot of young people living there earning large amounts of money - but in doing so find themselves short of sex, drugs and rock and roll and they're willing to pay for them all," said Gordon. According to Gordon, drug seizures drive up local prices and encourage new drug dealers and suppliers to fill the void. It is also well documented that eliminating established drug dealers with a monopoly on a local drug market increases violence as replacements vie for superiority. "The problem is, do you turn a blind eye to spare a community that kind of violence and condone an activity just because the alternative is intolerable? Frankly I don't think the situation is resolvable under the present circumstance," said Gordon. However, he said, the chances of North America changing its approach to drug reform has never been closer for three reasons. First of all, U.S. President Barack Obama appointed a vocal drug reformer and former Seattle police chief to the post of national drug czar. Secondly, the drug war along the U.S.-Mexican border has reached a fever pitch that requires radical action. And lastly the near success of California's proposition 19 which sought to legalize marijuana reflects changing social attitudes towards drug policy. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom