News (Media Awareness Project) - CN BC: Column: War On Drugs Conference Open To Select Few |
Title: | CN BC: Column: War On Drugs Conference Open To Select Few |
Published On: | 2002-05-08 |
Source: | Vancouver Courier (CN BC) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-23 08:19:29 |
WAR ON DRUGS CONFERENCE OPEN TO SELECT FEW
The agenda item Friday morning at the drug conference in the Vancouver
Convention and Exhibition Centre was: "The media: Friend or foe?"
The event was sponsored by IDEAS, the International Drug Education and
Awareness Society, a group of fundamentalist crusaders in the War on Drugs.
IDEAS is run by the deep pockets of Bob and Lynda Bentall, along with two
Vancouver cops, Al Arsenault and Toby Hinton, members of the film-making
Odd Squad.
Odd squad cops on the VPD payroll were to provide the conference with
"staff support and logistics." According to a technical agenda CBC radio
picked up, Odd Squad cop Chris Graham would chauffeur conference guests in
a "nice unmarked police car."
On Thursday, Vancouver cop Gerry Wickstead regaled the conference with a
whole wall of confidential criminal records he copied off CPIC, the
Canadian Police Information Computer, with the names blacked out.
The Bentalls and what seems to be this rogue group of Vancouver cops are
being aided and abetted by the Drug Free America Foundation, one of the
most shrill supporters of the disastrous War On Drugs.
The conference is an unapologetic attack on the current policy to stop the
war on drugs and reduce the harm of addiction, advanced by Mayor Philip
Owen, all three levels of government and the Vancouver police.
Lynda Bentall said: "This is not a conference that intends to explore all
sides of the question." Attendance was by invitation only. Media, as it
turns out, was carefully screened.
When I arrived, there were two security guards at the door checking
convention credentials. I had none, so they sent for conference staffer
Carolyn Rogers, a slight blond woman with her left arm in a sling.
She looked at my business card and recalled that we spoke earlier. I told
her I asked Bob Bentall for credentials a couple of days ago. She fumbled
through a small box of material and announced that nothing was there.
I couldn't get in, she said, without Bob Bentall's approval. I asked to
speak to Bob. She hustled off through the stainless steel doors of the
conference hall-to fetch him, I thought.
She returned to say: "Mr. Bentall said he can't let you in. Sorry, the room
is full."
I had already noticed, each time the doors opened, that there was enough
empty space in the joint to have a full-size conga line move through.
"Never mind," I said. I stayed in the public corridor and listened through
the crack in a second set of doors a few feet away. As I began to take
notes, the speaker was talking about how to get your message out to the media.
That's when Bob Bentall turned up at my side, 70-something, stooped, grey
haired and wearing a black suit. I knew it was him from the credentials tag
hanging from his neck. He knew it was me even without credentials.
"Come on Allen," he said, addressing me in a familiar fashion but clearly
telling me to buzz off. I asked about his unusual media policy, taking
notes. He stumbled a bit and explained that it was a "private affair" and
he could decide which media he allowed in.
"Well," I pointed out, as a group of tourists wandered by, "I'm not in, I'm
out in the hallway."
Then he said: "Do you want me to get you removed?" I paused in my
notetaking to say: "Sure go ahead." But he didn't, so I stayed. He posted a
person on the other side of the door to block the crack.
Meanwhile, news of the use of confidential CPIC documents and "nice
unmarked police cars" has had police board members firing e-mails to each
other for days. Owen is not amused. Neither is police chief Terry Blythe.
Questions are being asked about cops working with the private sector to
undermine public policy.
I suspect when answers are finally given, I'll be allowed in the room.
The agenda item Friday morning at the drug conference in the Vancouver
Convention and Exhibition Centre was: "The media: Friend or foe?"
The event was sponsored by IDEAS, the International Drug Education and
Awareness Society, a group of fundamentalist crusaders in the War on Drugs.
IDEAS is run by the deep pockets of Bob and Lynda Bentall, along with two
Vancouver cops, Al Arsenault and Toby Hinton, members of the film-making
Odd Squad.
Odd squad cops on the VPD payroll were to provide the conference with
"staff support and logistics." According to a technical agenda CBC radio
picked up, Odd Squad cop Chris Graham would chauffeur conference guests in
a "nice unmarked police car."
On Thursday, Vancouver cop Gerry Wickstead regaled the conference with a
whole wall of confidential criminal records he copied off CPIC, the
Canadian Police Information Computer, with the names blacked out.
The Bentalls and what seems to be this rogue group of Vancouver cops are
being aided and abetted by the Drug Free America Foundation, one of the
most shrill supporters of the disastrous War On Drugs.
The conference is an unapologetic attack on the current policy to stop the
war on drugs and reduce the harm of addiction, advanced by Mayor Philip
Owen, all three levels of government and the Vancouver police.
Lynda Bentall said: "This is not a conference that intends to explore all
sides of the question." Attendance was by invitation only. Media, as it
turns out, was carefully screened.
When I arrived, there were two security guards at the door checking
convention credentials. I had none, so they sent for conference staffer
Carolyn Rogers, a slight blond woman with her left arm in a sling.
She looked at my business card and recalled that we spoke earlier. I told
her I asked Bob Bentall for credentials a couple of days ago. She fumbled
through a small box of material and announced that nothing was there.
I couldn't get in, she said, without Bob Bentall's approval. I asked to
speak to Bob. She hustled off through the stainless steel doors of the
conference hall-to fetch him, I thought.
She returned to say: "Mr. Bentall said he can't let you in. Sorry, the room
is full."
I had already noticed, each time the doors opened, that there was enough
empty space in the joint to have a full-size conga line move through.
"Never mind," I said. I stayed in the public corridor and listened through
the crack in a second set of doors a few feet away. As I began to take
notes, the speaker was talking about how to get your message out to the media.
That's when Bob Bentall turned up at my side, 70-something, stooped, grey
haired and wearing a black suit. I knew it was him from the credentials tag
hanging from his neck. He knew it was me even without credentials.
"Come on Allen," he said, addressing me in a familiar fashion but clearly
telling me to buzz off. I asked about his unusual media policy, taking
notes. He stumbled a bit and explained that it was a "private affair" and
he could decide which media he allowed in.
"Well," I pointed out, as a group of tourists wandered by, "I'm not in, I'm
out in the hallway."
Then he said: "Do you want me to get you removed?" I paused in my
notetaking to say: "Sure go ahead." But he didn't, so I stayed. He posted a
person on the other side of the door to block the crack.
Meanwhile, news of the use of confidential CPIC documents and "nice
unmarked police cars" has had police board members firing e-mails to each
other for days. Owen is not amused. Neither is police chief Terry Blythe.
Questions are being asked about cops working with the private sector to
undermine public policy.
I suspect when answers are finally given, I'll be allowed in the room.
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