Pubdate: Fri, 24 Apr 1998 Source: London Free Press (Canada) Contact: http://www.canoe.ca/LondonFreePress/home.html Author: John Herbert -- Free Press Reporter and news services SEIZING ASSETS KEY IN BIKER BATTLE London's top cop hopes Ottawa is serious about bringing bikers "to their knees." Police Chief Julian Fantino said he's optimistic Solicitor General Andy Scott will come on board today in a meeting in Ottawa with the Canadian Association of Chiefs of Police (CACP), who have had a strategy of their own in place for several years to fight organized crime and biker gangs. Fantino hopes Scott will tell a group of Canada's top police chiefs, prosecutors and criminal justice officials that police agencies should be able to keep the seized assets of criminals. Fantino is chairperson of the CACP's national strategy committee on outlaw motorcycle gangs. "Our intent is to unite the forces of law and order in this country to target the activities of outlaw motorcycle gangs. . . . They are a very serious threat and economic liability to our country. Using the laws of the land, our intent is to disrupt and dismantle their criminal activities.'' Fantino believes the drug activities of biker gangs have a major impact on day-to-day crime in cities. For instance, small-time dealers and drug users have to find money. Consequently, bank robberies, street muggings, break-ins and variety store and gas bar holdups are often drug-related. The chiefs in Ontario have recently formed an a yet-to-be-announced provincial special squad to battle biker crime. The unit, supported by Solicitor General Bob Runciman, consists of members loaned by major forces in Ontario, including London, Fantino says. The CACP believes the only way to bring bikers to their knees is to seize their assets -- houses, boats, cars and bank accounts. "Take their profits away,'' Fantino said. "That's how to put them out of business." He said municipal police forces, which are required to justify to taxpayers every dollar they spend, must play "catch-up." "It comes down to resources. It comes down to a critical need for us to be able to dedicate people and support for long-term, involved and technical investigations." There is currently a formula in place between the federal and provincial governments for the disposition of "proceeds of crime'' but it isn't clear where all the money goes. Some of it, Fantino said, comes back to municipal forces to be used for such work as crime prevention, but much of it winds up in "the black hole" in Ottawa. A spokesperson for Canada's street cops said he doubts the federal government has the "political will" to seriously combat biker gangs. "We're not interested in what this government says," said Scott Newark, executive director of the 15,000-member Canadian Police Association. "We have made some very constructive and do-able (suggestions) and we have run into a wall of indifference." Newark said his member police officers don't put much faith in Scott's vow to bring bikers to "their knees." He said he'll be at today's meeting, but doubts it will be very successful because the feds have yet to respond to repeated demands by police to get tougher with the gangs. He said the federal government has rejected demands by police to deport criminal immigrants and to adopt a U.S-style law to make membership in a biker gang an offence. Scott said today's meeting will examine ways to strengthen criminal intelligence, information sharing and develop a new offensive to deal with technological advances made by biker gangs. The government may also propose new legislative action to fight organized crime, such as a new measures to combat money laundering, he added. Earlier this week in Cornwall, Fantino pressed his concerns over lax laws and immigration policies to a conference involving Canadian and American law-enforcement officials that focused on smuggling and organized crime. "There has to be a very concerted effort to disrupt and dismantle the activities of organized crime," Fantino said. "That includes everyone, not just the police." Other countries crack down on organized crime, while crooks -- both foreign-born and domestic -- crank up their operations in Canada, he said. "Canada has been regarded as a good place to do business for organized crime because of some of our lax or relaxed laws, including the immigration issues." Copyright (c) 1998 The London Free Press a division of Sun Media Corporation