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News (Media Awareness Project) - CN BC: Mayor Relieved As Drug Probe Ends
Title:CN BC: Mayor Relieved As Drug Probe Ends
Published On:2006-06-02
Source:Vancouver Sun (CN BC)
Fetched On:2008-08-18 10:28:24
MAYOR RELIEVED AS DRUG PROBE ENDS

No Criminal Charges Will Be Laid In Connection With Incidents Involving Addicts

Mayor Sam Sullivan hopes the controversy over his earlier decisions
to pay for illegal drug purchases is over now that the RCMP has
decided against pressing charges.

"I am glad the cloud that has hung over me for the last many months
has now left," Sullivan said Thursday.

The RCMP announced in a brief press statement that there would be no
criminal charges stemming from its investigation into Sullivan's actions.

The mayor, speaking from Ottawa on a conference call, said his move
to give money to the drug addicts was motivated by "true concern for
their plight.

"I don't believe what I did was wrong," he said, "but I can tell you
I wouldn't do it again."

He said he believes "what I did was not the right way to help people
with drug addictions."

Media reports about Sullivan giving money to drug users caused him
problems during the civic election. His rivals criticized him for his actions.

The controversy prompted Vancouver police Chief Jamie Graham to ask
the RCMP to investigate his activities.

Sullivan's interactions with two drug users were detailed in previous
Vancouver Sun stories. His decision to provide heroin to a
20-year-old woman working as a prostitute in his neighbourhood, then
Collingwood, was described in a feature story in 2000.

In September 2005, just after Sullivan was chosen as the mayoral
candidate for the Non-Partisan Association, a Vancouver Sun story
detailed how he bought crack in 2001 for Downtown Eastside resident
Shawn Millar and let him smoke it in his van.

Sullivan said he has always been honest about his connection with the
two illegal drug users.

While he regrets the two incidents, Sullivan still strongly believes
Canada's drug laws have to change.

He said his relationship with the two people with drug addictions has
"made me even more convinced that I must do whatever I can to change
public policy so that additional people with addictions won't have to suffer."

In April, Sullivan said drugs or drug substitutes should be provided
for addicts in an effort to protect victimized women in the Downtown
Eastside and deal with Vancouver's social-disorder problems by the
2010 Olympics.

Sullivan has been consulting with experts and community groups to
explore ways of initiating a drug-maintenance program.

Asked what he learned during his meetings with the two addicts,
Sullivan said: "I learned that no one wants to be a person with a
drug addiction. They lead very desperate lives and there is so much
harm that is done to people with addictions and so much harm that is
done to the communities they live in.

"And I believe we need a different approach."

Sullivan said the controversy has had no effect on his recent
meetings with Prime Minister Stephen Harper and federal cabinet ministers.
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