Pubdate: Thu, 5 Jun 2008
Source: Victoria Times-Colonist (CN BC)
Copyright: 2008 Times Colonist
Contact: http://www.canada.com/victoriatimescolonist/letters.html
Website: http://www.canada.com/victoriatimescolonist/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/481
Author: Rob Shaw, Bill Cleverley and Cindy E. Harnett, Times Colonist

MAYORS CALL FOR DRUG CRACKDOWN

In Wake of Slaying, Colwood, Langford Leaders Are Eager to Work With
Police

Two West Shore mayors are calling on police to tackle drug problems in
their communities, in the wake of a high-profile killing that has left
a Highlands councillor and his two sons charged with murder.

Colwood's mayor said yesterday he'll ask police to investigate the
local drug scene, and Langford's mayor will suggest the RCMP form a
dedicated West Shore drug squad.

The issue of drug trafficking has been a hot topic in Colwood and
Langford since Keith Taylor's body was dumped outside the West Shore
RCMP station the night of May 30.

Taylor, 33, was a career criminal, with a laundry list of drug,
assault, theft and weapons convictions. Earlier in the evening, he was
at a house on Betula Place, in Colwood, where neighbours say
suspicious vehicles made frequent stops but often stayed only a few
minutes.

The residence is a crime scene, according to the RCMP. Highlands
councillor Ken Brotherston and his sons Kenneth Jr. and Gregory are
charged with first-degree murder and unlawful confinement.

"Obviously, what's happened just recently will prompt me to ask [RCMP]
the question: 'Do you think we have some [drug] issues out here?' "
Colwood Mayor Jody Twa said. "I think you'd have to be naive to think
there isn't. I doubt Colwood is exempt from drugs."

Langford Mayor Stew Young said he does not believe the West Shore's
illegal drug situation is any worse than anywhere else in the capital
region. Nonetheless, he pledges to do something about it. He'll ask
the RCMP to set up a West Shore drug squad.

"They should do nothing else but attack the drug situation that's
happening in the West Shore," Young said.

Young plans to meet with Twa to draft a strategy.

While drug dealing is perhaps most visible in Victoria, distribution
often starts in residential communities, said Sgt. Dave Bown, head of
the Regional Crime Unit.

"The mid-level drug traffickers and high-level traffickers have to
live somewhere and have to store their drugs," Bown said. "They rent
and buy properties outside the downtown core and make deliveries into
the core."

A high-end dealers' home may show no signs of drug activity, he said,
while a low-level dealer might sell out of a rented apartment or house.

In one such example, in March, police raided a house in Langford and
seized $10,000 worth of stolen property and $50,000 worth of drugs,
including crystal meth, cocaine, marijuana and ecstasy pills. Six men
were arrested.

Drugs aren't thriving in big cities alone, said Benedikt Fischer, a
University of Victoria drug researcher and criminologist. Drug markets
in smaller communities and rural areas don't typically have the same
massive quantities and diversity of drugs as in the big cities.
Cocaine, for example, is sometimes a thriving market in affluent
suburbs, he said.

"In small communities the markets are just often more incestuous,
there's fewer people, people know each other, and it's more difficult
to get away from bad reputations or bad relationships," Fischer said.

"Amphetamine and stimulant markets tend to be more volatile and
violent than some of the other markets like sedatives and opiate
markets," he said. "Typically drug-related violence is either about
turf or debt." 
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