Pubdate: Sat, 08 Nov 2003 Source: Victoria Times-Colonist (CN BC) Copyright: 2003 Times Colonist Contact: http://www.canada.com/victoria/timescolonist/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/481 CRACK DOWN ON CRIME KINGPINS Former premier is right to call for change in police priorities -- and tougher sentencing Former B.C. premier Mike Harcourt has expressed pretty bluntly what a lot of people in this province feel has to be done to combat organized crime, including drug trafficking. Speaking to the annual Canadian Congress on Criminal Justice in Vancouver, Harcourt said police should be rounding up the "kingpins" of organized crime instead of drug addicts, and the courts should be putting them behind bars for a good long time. He said that as a former criminal defence lawyer and chairman of the Vancouver Police Board when he was mayor, he's convinced police need more resources to apprehend up to 400 "big crooks" who are operating in Vancouver - -- as members of the Hells Angels, Russian and Vietnamese gangs, the Mafia and drug rings. "Get them thrown in jail," Harcourt demanded. "I don't care if you need to build three new prisons on Baffin Island or put them in a high-unemployment part of the province." He also said their assets should be seized, their businesses closed, and they should be treated "like the scumbags they are." Maybe the former premier has watched The Untouchables too many times, but the way criminal gangs seem to be growing -- including those who have reappeared roaming the streets in Victoria -- tends to bring out the Eliot Ness in all of us. In Vancouver, businesses are operating as fronts for drug dealers and money launderers. One pizza outlet was shut down after police found the owner had used trained shoplifters to steal mozzarella cheese for his pizzas from a local Safeway store. The reaction to Harcourt's call to arms, however, has been pretty predictable. Solicitor General Rich Coleman says the provincial justice system is properly balanced to deal with criminal kingpins, and small-time street criminals and addicts. He blames the federal government for not giving law-enforcement authorities enough tools to deal with organized crime - -- specifically, for not prescribing stiffer penalties and changes in legislation to track the proceeds of crime through the tax system. Police, in their turn, blame the courts for not imposing stiffer sentences on crime leaders. All they can do, they say, is pursue the laying of charges and confiscate property where they can. The seemingly casual approach of the courts to sentencing -- for everything from drag racing to drugs -- is apparent to everyone. Residents of our cities and towns are often surprised to learn how quickly criminals who have been sentenced to several years behind bars are back among them. Here in Victoria, Police Chief Paul Battershill called a news conference just last month to warn us that gang members who had been sentenced for their part in assaults are back on our streets again. We have nothing like the problems of Vancouver -- or Edmonton, or Winnipeg -- yet. But we, too, are affected when prison doors swing open too early. As Harcourt said Thursday, the justice system must ensure "life means life" and that 25-year "life" sentences are served. We're not impressed about the "good behaviour" excuse for early parole for people whose bad behaviour put them behind bars in the first place. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh