HTTP/1.0 200 OK Content-Type: text/html Tips For Crime Stoppers
Pubdate: Fri, 29 Mar 2002
Source: Ottawa Citizen (CN ON)
Webpage: 
www.canada.com/ottawa/ottawacitizen/editorials/story.asp?id={64718666-98C0-4726-B0D7-827F02EE6874}
Copyright: 2002 The Ottawa Citizen
Contact:  http://www.canada.com/ottawa/ottawacitizen/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/326

TIPS FOR CRIME STOPPERS

It's been more than 25 years since a group of concerned citizens in 
Albuquerque, New Mexico launched the world's first Crime Stoppers program 
to help police solve local crimes. Today, Crime Stoppers International 
boasts more than 1,100 programs worldwide, including the one in Ottawa.

Crime Stoppers publishes or broadcasts details of a crime and offers cash 
rewards for tips that lead to solving it. These collaborative efforts of 
the community, the media and the police have helped solve more than 866,000 
cases since 1976 and recovered $8 billion of property and narcotics.

That's an impressive record by any measure, but now it's at risk because of 
the ill-advised actions of Waterloo regional police, who thought they could 
feed false information to their local program in 1998 to bolster a police 
informant's credibility with other criminals.

That deception finally was revealed last week during an extortion trial in 
Kitchener.

The ruse may have helped the informant's credibility, but it's had the 
opposite effect on Crime Stoppers. Media in the Kitchener-Waterloo area 
have refused to run further Crime Stoppers reports until they are sure they 
won't be duped by the police.

But the repercussions of the Waterloo deception reach far beyond southern 
Ontario.

Crime Stoppers has been successful in large part because the public trusted 
it to portray accurately unresolved crimes and to handle with discretion 
any tips those reports elicit. Such trust can take years to establish, but 
can be destroyed in an instant, as the Waterloo program and others across 
Canada have found to their dismay.

In January, a Crime Stoppers ad in Victoria, B.C. incorrectly identified a 
woman as a suspect caught cashing cheques stolen from an 84-year-old 
woman's mailbox. The only problem was that the clock on the bank 
surveillance camera was 12 minutes off that day, leading the bank to give 
police the wrong photo of the fraud suspect.

As devastating as this was for the woman who was wrongfully accused, it was 
an honest mistake that could be corrected with a better VCR clock.

The vice-president of the Ontario Association of Crime Stoppers, Fred 
Hicks, admits the Waterloo deception has been "devastating" to the 
association's work. Other Crime Stoppers programs are having to move 
quickly to maintain confidence in their activities.

Even here in Ottawa, where there is no evidence that police have ever 
planted false information in a Crime Stoppers report, Police Chief Vince 
Bevan felt it necessary to issue written instructions to all his officers 
this week ordering them not to spread disinformation through Crime 
Stoppers. He also assured local Crime Stoppers officials that his force has 
not lied and will not lie to the program.

Such an assurance of honesty was the right thing to do in the wake of the 
Waterloo revelations, but it should never have been necessary. Even with 
Chief Bevan's actions and those of other police chiefs across Ontario, it 
will take some time to fully restore public and media confidence in Crime 
Stoppers reports.

That's a shame, because the program has demonstrated how successful it can 
be in helping to build better communities through its collaborative efforts 
to tackle unresolved crimes.

For now, however, Crime Stoppers finds itself on probation. With good 
behaviour, it will overcome its current troubles, but any more misdeeds 
could find it condemned in the court of public opinion.
- ---
MAP posted-by: Beth