Pubdate: Sun, 10 Jul 2011 Source: Victoria Times-Colonist (CN BC) Copyright: 2011 Times Colonist Contact: http://www2.canada.com/victoriatimescolonist/letters.html Website: http://www.timescolonist.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/481 Author: Katie Derosa SHARING INTELLIGENCE: A BID TO TRACK THE DRUG TRADE Teams target gangsters at Victoria hot spots Gangsters from the Lower Mainland who set down roots in Greater Victoria are being closely watched by local police, whose intelligence is being shared with the province's gang task force to target the drug trade. "We certainly know we have gang members that are known from the Lower Mainland that are living in Victoria, and we need to know why they are here and what they are doing here," said Victoria police Insp. Jamie Pearce, moments before the Vancouver-based Integrated Gang Task Force hit the streets in downtown Victoria last weekend. The task force went into action the Saturday after Canada Day, looking for gang members spending their long weekend in the capital. It was the third year the task force had paid Victoria a visit over the holiday, the busiest day of the year for local authorities. The task force also spent a night in Campbell River and Nanaimo, known for Hells Angels and other biker gangs. Pearce said the shooting death of 20-year-old University of Victoria student Philbert Truong on July 19, 2008, outside the former Red Jacket nightclub on View Street, is a deadly example of the violence caused by gangs in Greater Victoria. Truong was an innocent victim caught in the middle of a petty dispute between his friend, Thuan Le, and a self-described Red Scorpion gang member, Somphavanh (Ricky) Chanthabouala, then 22. Chanthabouala, the mastermind of the shooting, was convicted of first-degree murder and sentenced to life in prison with no chance of parole for 25 years. His co-accused, Mark Arrieta, 16 at the time, was convicted in July 2009 of second-degree murder and two counts of attempted murder. He was sentenced as an adult to life in prison, with no chance of parole for seven years. "That was directly related to a Vancouver gang that had moved to Victoria," said Pearce. The Red Scorpions are considered one of the most violent gangs in B.C. Police shut down a dial-a-dope operation that was eventually linked to Chanthabouala, Arrieta and six others who were arrested. "So we were already aware that gangs do not have borders and they operate in our area just like any other area," Pearce said. Victoria police partnered with the Victoria Bar and Cabaret Association to set up the Bar Watch program at 14 bars and nightclubs downtown. The bars now have software that scan people's IDs to identify troublemakers. If someone is kicked out of one bar, the information is logged so that they cannot get into the next place they visit, if that bar is in Bar Watch. A troublemaker can also be banned from participating bars for a up to a year. The TreoScope technology has come under fire from B.C.'s Privacy Commissioner, who objected to the storing of personal information. The company agreed to store information of patrons who don't cause problems for only 24 hours. Bar Watch also gives police the power to remove anyone with a history of violence or known criminal associations from the bar. That is why the gang task force's uniform section spends a lot of time in bars checking IDs, trying to weed out the bad guys. "Our objective is to identify them in public places, licensed establishments and remove them," said Supt. Tom McCluskie, who heads the gang task force. "We've had a lot of shootings over the years in public establishments [in Metro Vancouver] and it's our feeling that, as a citizen, as a family, you should be able to go to a restaurant and enjoy a meal without the concern of gangsters coming in and retaliating on other gangsters." While the task force focuses on Metro Vancouver, its officers travel across B.C., sending the message that gangsters cannot hide in small communities. "We're in high demand across the province, but unfortunately we can't be everywhere," McCluskie said. Sgt. Keiron McDonnell, one of the Vancouver police officers on the Integrated Gang Task Force's uniform section, said no community wants to admit it has a gang problem. "I put it this way. Victoria doesn't have a gang problem. The province of B.C. has a gang problem and Victoria is in it." - --- MAP posted-by: Matt