HTTP/1.0 200 OK Content-Type: text/html BC Crime-fighting Budget Gets Boost Of $122-Million
Pubdate: Tue, 25 Jan 2005
Source: Globe and Mail (Canada)
Copyright: 2005, The Globe and Mail Company
Contact:  http://www.globeandmail.ca/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/168
Author: Mark Hume
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada)

B.C. CRIME-FIGHTING BUDGET GETS BOOST OF $122-MILLION

Liberals Accused Of Pre-Election Posturing

VANCOUVER -- With an election just four months away, the Liberal government 
of British Columbia has approved a program that will invest an additional 
$122-million in policing, corrections and the courts.

It is the biggest injection of new funding directed at fighting crime in 
the province in more than 20 years, Solicitor-General Rich Coleman said 
yesterday after Premier Gordon Campbell announced the initiative.

The money will be allocated over three years. Police and corrections are to 
receive $30-million this year, with $5-million allocated for the courts. 
Over the next two years, another $66-million has been designated for 
police, and $21-million is slotted for the courts.

Mr. Coleman said the money will add 215 RCMP officers throughout the 
province, including 80 who will be stationed in rural communities and 32 
who will be assigned to native communities. "It means rural communities 
will see an increase in policing for the first time in probably a decade," 
Mr. Coleman said.

He added the explosive growth of marijuana-growing operations in British 
Columbia, which has earned the province the unenviable title of "Colombia 
North," was a big incentive for the government.

"This is the cash flow of organized crime," Mr. Coleman said of the 
marijuana trade, in which "B.C. bud" is shipped across the U.S. border for 
cocaine, other drugs, guns and money.

A study released in 2002 showed the number of marijuana grow-ops in British 
Columbia had increased 222 per cent between 1997 and 2000 and had jumped by 
more than 1,000 per cent in some areas. Those figures are being updated in 
a study, now near completion, that is expected to confirm a continued rapid 
growth.

Mr. Campbell said that in addition to putting more police on the streets, 
the initiative will allow the formation of special prosecutorial teams and 
there will be new legislation aimed at organized crime.

Mr. Campbell said he could not discuss the legislation in detail before it 
is introduced, but Mr. Coleman said it will apply a "reverse onus" on 
assets believed to have been bought by proceeds of crime.

For example, a convicted dealer could be required to prove that his house 
and other assets were not paid for with drug money, he said.

Mr. Campbell rejected the proposition that the crime-fighting initiative is 
an early election promise. He said the action is not part of any campaign 
and was announced now "because we have a strong economy," which allows the 
government to fund programs that have long been on its agenda.

NDP House Leader Joy MacPhail accused the Premier of attempting to boost 
the government's pre-election profile, after overseeing programs that 
reduced community funding and closed courthouses.

"They cut many programs for police . . . they cut our correctional services 
. . . and now all of a sudden, weeks before an election, he becomes a 
believer that more needs to be done," Ms. MacPhail said.

She said the Liberals had done nothing to fight crime for years and are now 
just posturing for the election. "It's all smoke and mirrors."
- ---
MAP posted-by: Beth