Pubdate: Thu, 11 Oct 2007
Source: Burnaby Newsleader (CN BC)
Copyright: 2007 Burnaby Newsleader
Contact:  http://www.burnabynewsleader.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1315
Author: Jeff Nagel, Black Press
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Marijuana - Canada)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?241 (Methamphetamine - Canada)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/af.htm (Asset Forfeiture)

TOUGHER SENTENCES NEEDED SAY SPEAKERS AT REGIONAL CRIME FORUM

Nickel Tax on Alcoholic Drinks Suggested

Judges continue to hand out far too lenient sentences to chronic 
repeat offenders, a regional forum on crime and drugs heard recently.

While reforms are under way - largely led by civic governments and 
police forces - the justice system's flaccid response to drug-fuelled 
crime remains a major weak link in solving the problem, said several 
experts gathered by Metro Vancouver.

Daryl Plecas, a criminologist at the University College of the Fraser 
Valley, said major gains would be made if even just the "super 
prolific" offenders with more than 30 prior convictions got longer jail terms.

Police have watched local crime rates plummet when even a few key 
repeat offenders are taken off the streets.

Plecas said 46 per cent of prolific offenders will be reconvicted 
before their sentence ends.

He said longer terms would put the onus on the offender to 
demonstrate why they should be granted earlier or partial release.

"It's intolerable and something has to be done," said Dave Park, 
retired chief economist of the Vancouver Board of Trade. "Society is 
no longer prepared to tolerate the level of criminality being put upon us."

But getting longer sentences remains a challenge.

Judges are shackled by case law and past precedents, panelists said. 
Going against that means their ruling will likely be appealed and overturned.

Urgent interventions are also often hamstrung by the laws or the 
Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

SFU criminology professor Ray Corrado gave the example of a 
13-year-old prostitute on the streets who is drug addicted and being pimped.

"You can't arrest that kid," he said, adding the current legal 
framework bars putting her in secure detention, even though everyone 
knows the girl is in "severe danger."

Tom Hetherington, addiction services manager for Pacific Community 
Resources Society, argued more jail time will make the problem worse.

"If that was the case, the United States would be one of the safest 
places in the world," he said.

Corrado said that strategy can work but "comes at a huge cost."

Vancouver's pilot community court, to launch in the new year, is 
hoped to deliver real change in how drug-addicted chronic offenders 
are handled by the justice system.

But panelists agreed successes will hinge on how well the provincial 
government does in setting up wraparound services that would help 
offenders get drug treatment, counselling, employment and housing assistance.

"Maybe that will be a prototype for similar initiatives in other 
parts of the region," Park said.

Several forum participants said far too little has been done so far 
to ramp up drug treatment programs and Hetherington suggested B.C. 
impose a five-cent tax on alcoholic drinks to help pay for them.

The forum also heard youth aren't the main source of trouble with crime.

"The fact is youth are responsible for an infinitesimally small 
amount of crime," said Plecas, who said the average age of a 
convicted criminal in B.C. is over 30.

On the drug front, youth are increasingly giving the cold shoulder to 
dangerous drugs like methamphetamines.

"They have seen the consequences of long-term methamphetamine use and 
they are backing away from it," Hetherington said.

Preventing kids from turning into chronic drug-addicted offenders, 
Corrado suggested, begins not even in school but in their mothers' wombs.

Many are victims of Fetal Alcohol Syndrome, he said, while others are 
autistic or suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder stemming from abuse.

"When we look at these kids' files, it's shocking," Corrado said.

Thirty per cent of youth in prison are aboriginals, but make up just 
two per cent of the population.

Intensive treatment of at-risk families would go far to help, he suggested.

Hetherington favours regulated sale of drugs to long-term chronic 
users as a way to deal with it as a health problem while eliminating 
most of the profit for criminals.

Plecas said he's been a long-term prohibitionist "until recently" but 
is now beginning to re-think the merits of partial decriminalization of drugs.

He said Surrey's success in shutting down marijuana grow-ops using 
electrical inspections has had "spectacular" results.

More must be done on fronts like civil forfeitures to ensure crime 
doesn't pay, he added.

"Start hitting people in their pocket," Plecas urged, adding 
organized crime in particular needs more attention.

"We're just fooling around with them so far," Plecas said. "We must 
hit them in every conceivable way." 
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake