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News (Media Awareness Project) - CN BC: Drugs Could Be Crime Story Of 2011
Title:CN BC: Drugs Could Be Crime Story Of 2011
Published On:2011-12-17
Source:Prince George Citizen (CN BC)
Fetched On:2011-12-19 06:01:48
DRUGS COULD BE CRIME STORY OF 2011

With the damning story in Maclean's magazine this week highlighting
Prince George's high rates in some categories of crime during 2010,
the Prince George RCMP researched how the statistics look for 2011 as
a preview of next year's possible results in the magazine.

Almost all categories of crime have gone down, but drug offenses held
steady. In 2006 there were 409 drug cases in Prince George, it hit a
peak of 588 last year, and in 2011 it is expected to finish up
somewhere around the 538 mark.

According to Prince George RCMP spokesperson CraigDouglass, this
week's marijuana grow-op busted on Upper Mud River Road is an example
of why the public should actually enjoy seeing high numbers in the
drug category at least for a little while yet. "We are behind those
high numbers," he said. "The criminals were always there doing those
crimes at the same rate, but the numbers have gone up because we have
put a huge emphasis on that kind of crime, doing kick-ins of
crackshacks and going after grow-ops."

UNBC professor Jonathan Swainger researches criminal history, with a
special focus on Northern B.C., and agreed that "this is the kind of
stat that actually shows the police doing better work, not more criminals."

Murder, aggravated assault and the like come to police attention in a
sudden flash but, Swainger explained, drug crimes are so secretive
that they happen almost exclusively by old fashioned police work, with
healthy doses of public tips to point them in the right direction.

Prince George RCMP have had a lot of help in that department. In the
past two years, for reasons connected to the high rate of criminal
activity in the region, the RCMP and provincial government have
invested heavily in extra police attention based out of Prince George.
Most of it is centred on the drug trade monopolized by gangs.

The work done on a regional basis by RCMP North District, the Cariboo
Region Integrated Marijuana Enforcement (CRIME) Task Force, the
Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit's plainclothes anti-gang
team, and the occasional visit by their uniformed enforcement squad
has all been added into the mix of work being done by the city's
municipal detachment.

More than 20 grow-ops have been targeted by North District and CRIME,
in 2011, just in the Prince George region.

Douglass said another stat that was not a big part of the Maclean's
magazine calculations but is high on the local public's mind is
downtown crime. There, too, the case numbers have gone way up. Most of
them are charges of people breaching their court conditions.

"We went from approximately 200 files to about 700 files, just for
breaches in the downtown," said Douglass. "Those same people were
always there breaching, so the crime rate did not go up, what happened
was we put a focus there, and by doing that work better, we caused the
number of files to increase a lot."
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