Pubdate: Mon, 09 Jul 2007
Source: Edmonton Sun (CN AB)
Copyright: 2007 Canoe Limited Partnership.
Contact:  http://www.edmontonsun.com
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/135
Author: Andrew Hanon

DRIVING OUT DRUG DEALERS

Edmonton police Det. Maurice Brodeur lets out a long sigh, followed 
by a low chuckle.

"We're so busy," he says. "The public's response has been amazing. 
It's exhausting, but exhilarating."

Like Dr. Frankenstein, Brodeur has created a monster of sorts. But 
unlike Mary Shelley's iconic creature, the good folks of Edmonton 
have embraced Dr. Brodeur's beast, which has been unleashed on drug 
dealers across the city.

Since Brodeur's Report A Drug House program was formally launched in 
June, it's received tips on a staggering 250 suspected drug dens.

"So far, we've looked into 125 of them," he says. "We're getting to 
the rest as quickly as we can."

He's asking the public for a little patience while everyone involved 
in the program - cops and civilian volunteers - find their feet, 
especially in light of the avalanche of reports they've received.

Brodeur hasn't even been able to come up for air long enough to put 
together any stats. He can't say for certain how many of the 125 tips 
they've checked out have turned out to be bona fide, or how many drug 
houses have been shut down.

While Brodeur was a constable on the south side, he became an expert 
in harassing dealers out of neighbourhoods.

His methods are outside standard police practices, but there's no 
denying their staggering effectiveness. In one nine-month period, he 
single-handedly shut down an average of 12 crack shacks a month.

Police brass were watching Brodeur, and they clearly liked what they 
saw. In May, he trained fellow cops from the city and around northern 
Alberta in his techniques and the program was formally launched last month.

There are now cops in every division working in the program and an 
army of volunteers responding to phone calls and entering data into 
the police computer system.

Brodeur doesn't worry himself with arrest statistics. His goal, he 
explains, is to claim back neighbourhoods for average, law-abiding 
citizens. If charges are laid, fantastic, but what matters is that 
drug dealers' lives are made so unbearable that they pack up and get 
out of Dodge.

He uses whatever legal means necessary, working with landlords, 
health and fire inspectors and even animal control officials - 
anything to disrupt a drug dealer's ability to do business.

Brodeur has asked other cops to park their cruisers outside drug 
houses and do their paperwork.

PITBULL REPUTATION

He makes sure that people in drug houses get fined for barking dogs, 
noisy parties and snow on their sidewalks.

His pitbull reputation grew so big on the south side that in some 
cases all he had to do was leave his business card in a drug house's 
door jamb and within a few days the dealer moved out.

Ironically, while some see his methods as revolutionary, Brodeur 
calls it "old-school policing."

It's about getting to know neighbourhoods and working with citizens 
to solve their problems.

The key, he says, is keeping citizens up to speed on what's going on.

"They have to hear back from us," he says. "They have to know what 
we're doing to help them get their neighbourhood back."

As Brodeur told the cops he was training, the drug trade is the 
gasoline that fuels crime.

When a drug dealer sets up shop in a neighbourhood, there is always a 
massive spike in thefts and burglaries in the surrounding homes by 
addicts desperately trying to feed their habits.

You can report a suspected drug house by calling 426-8229 or by going 
to the tips page on the Edmonton Police Service website 
(www.police.edmonton.ab.ca).
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom