Source: Halifax Daily News (Canada) Contact: Website: http://www.hfxnews.southam.ca/ Pubdate: Tuesday, August 18, 1998 Author: Brian Flinn -- The Daily News HALIFAX SHOULD PROFIT FROM BUSTS - COUNCILLOR Province Urged To Share Proceeds-of-crime Account With Municipalities To Help Fund Policing If crime pays, Halifax Regional Municipality should get a share, says Albro Lake Councillor Clint Schofield. Schofield, a member of the city's police commission, said he wants the province to share its proceeds-of-crime account with municipalities, because they pay for law enforcement. The extra money could be used to beef-up policing in areas such as his north-end Dartmouth district, which has been battling prostitution and drugs in recent years. Ontario shares cash "You need extra policing to do that," he said. Schofield said Ontario municipalities get a share of that province's crime money, and Nova Scotia should consider following that lead. He wants to find out more about how other provinces share the money when he represents Halifax at the annual meeting of Canadian police commissions in Edmonton later this week. The size of the crime fund depends on what busts have been made recently, but Schofield said there can be a lot of money and material seized. "If they have a big drug bust they sell the boats and everything else," he said. Justice Department spokeswoman Michele McKinnon said the province is negotiating a new deal with the federal government to share proceeds of crime. Federal guidelines agree "That's exactly what's being looked at right now," she said. The details have not been worked out, so it's not clear yet who will get how much. But federal guidelines say some money should go toward crime prevention and law enforcement, she said. One factor that will probably influence any sharing arrangement is location, she said. For example, if a boat is seized under the narcotics act, "it would probably depend on where the offence occurred." - --- Checked-by: Ghamal de la Guardia