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Pubdate: Sat, 01 Jan 2005 Source: Tri-City News (CN BC) Copyright: 2005, Tri-City News Contact: http://www.tricitynews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1239 Author: Janis Cleugh POT, ROAD DEATHS KEPT POLICE BUSY Road safety, marijuana grow operations and shootings dominated headlines in the Tri-Cities this year. Despite police issuing pleas to pedestrians to cross in crosswalks and wear brightly-coloured clothing, nine pedestrians died while crossing roads - a record high - including a Riverside secondary school student who was struck and killed while crossing Como Lake Avenue in Coquitlam. Her death prompted city council to make changes to traffic flows in the area. Pot farms got tackled by Coquitlam RCMP's new Marijuana Enforcement Team, formed in mid-September; to date, MET has dismantled 30 grow-ops in Coquitlam and PoCo. The operations were largely run by Vietnamese drug rings, police said, many of them in expensive Westwood Plateau homes. In March, Mayor Jon Kingsbury urged Coquitlam residents to "get to know your neighbour" during a meeting organized by the Westwood Plateau Community Association in an attempt to reduce the number of pot farms. Port Moody Police continued with their drive to dismantle grow ops, many in upscale Heritage Mountain homes. Guns were also prominent in 2004, with more shootings than in previous years. In December alone, police responded to a drive-by shooting in PoMo, a shooting in Citadel Heights in PoCo, a 17-year-old boy shot in a drug-related trade in PoCo, and two Coquitlam Mounties being shot at by an alleged toy store robber after a chase across the Port Mann bridge into Surrey. Police also were also involved in a dramatic shoot-out on Lougheed Highway in PoCo in August after a man tried to kidnap his ex-girlfriend and shot at her on Heritage Mountain Boulevard. He was killed after an exchange of bullets with cops. A gun also was used in the murder of a Coquitlam woman in August when her ex-husband allegedly shot her to death at her Smith Avenue home. The preliminary hearing for Miroslav Neumann, 62, continues next month. In another violent attack, a man's throat was cut by another patron during a fight at the Cat and Fiddle Pub in PoCo. Michael Donald, 40, has been charged with attempted murder, aggravated assault and assault in connection with the incident. In a case that hangs over the community, PoCo's Robert Pickton stands charged with 15 counts of first-degree murder in connection with the missing women's case, though there have been delays in the court case because of the investigations. Meanwhile, his trial date is expected to be set next year. Pickton has been at North Fraser Pre-trial Centre in PoCo since being arrested in 2002. In court news, a charge of assault with a weapon against a Coquitlam Mountie was stayed after a provincial court judge ruled his right to have a trial within a reasonable time was breached; Cpl. Russell Hannibal now faces eight internal charges under the RCMP Act. - --- MAP posted-by: Elizabeth Wehrman