Pubdate: Fri, 23 Sep 2011 Source: Prince George Citizen (CN BC) Copyright: 2011 Prince George Citizen Contact: http://www.princegeorgecitizen.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/350 Author: Frank Peebles CRIME DOES PAY BUT WILL IT STAY? A special RCMP task force was given one year to see what would happen if marijuana grow-operations in the Cariboo were given extra attention. That was one year ago. The Cariboo Region Integrated Marihuana Enforcement (CRIME) Task Force was launched in September of 2010 and its future is now cloudy despite scores of arrests, hundreds of thousands of plants seized and millions of dollars worth of illegal commerce for the province's rich organized crime gangs disrupted. The CRIME Task Force was funded by the RCMP's Federal Drug Enforcement Branch in partnership with local detachments between 100 Mile House and Prince George. With the initial year behind it, there are questions over whether funding will continue or the organization will be rearranged. "I have communicated strongly that I would like this program to continue," said B.C.'s Solicitor General and Minister of Public Safety Shirley Bond. "I think the RCMP recognizes the good work that's been done. "We need to continue having a presence in the Cariboo," she added. "It is federal responsibility, we have a very strong partnership with them. This is about public safety and threats to community - from fire risk to organized crime, so I continue to be hopeful to look at the importance of building on the good work that's been started here." RCMP Supt. Rod Booth of North District Headquarters said the detachments in the Cariboo region responded well to the busts and arrests. It is onerous for each town's police station to effectively investigate and prosecute the grow-op epidemic all on their own, he said. "CRIME has been a tremendous initiative," Booth said. "It was a pilot and as a result we have tackled organized crime at the root." He said extending program is being discussed, but a year's worth of data has to be considered, as well as the other regions of the north and province that also have a proliferation of pot plantations funding Lower Mainland gangs. "The Cariboo is the nucleus of the problem and there is a plethora of variables as to why it ended up there most prominently, but it is happening in a number of regions, and in a big way." "The task force has been a success and I have a strong desire to see the funding continue," said Bond. "You can tell by the results that obviously the decision was a good one. Being proactive in the Cariboo region we have seen some significant outcomes." CRIME data was also foundational information when the Provincial Working Group on Marijuana Grow-Operations was formed in July by Bond and several partner agencies. Booth said he did not know when considerations at the federal level would reach a conclusion but he was optimistic in some concrete decisions sometime within the next two months. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.