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Pubdate: Wed, 13 Dec 2006
Source: Yukon News (CN YK)
Contact:   http://www.yukon-news.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1125
Author: Leighann Chalykoff

THE CAPITAL'S DRUGS ARE HISTORY: OWNER

The drug dealers were here, but they're gone now, said Capital Hotel 
co-owner Maurice Byblow, while sitting in its bar on Monday afternoon.

The only problem is, when the dealers left in August, they took more 
than half of Byblow's business with them.

"My business has been severely hurt by their absence, but I'm not 
concerned because I prefer the different crowd and the different image."

Byblow has co-owned the Main Street bar for nine years. His partners 
in the venture include Energy, Mines and Resources Minister Archie 
Lang, Deborah Fulmer and Ken Eby. All four sit as directors of the 
Whitehorse Cattle Co. Ltd., a holding company that owns the Capital Hotel.

Byblow has fond memories of the Capital at its best, which he says 
was about five years ago.

"The place was full and the music was loud and people were dancing 
and everybody was having a good time," he said.

"I'm sure there were still drugs present, but you didn't see them; 
they were discreet."

Then sometime in the last two or three years, an outside group 
infiltrated the Whitehorse drug trade and took over.

"They were organized; they put resident dealers in bars," said Byblow.

"There was one person here virtually on a shift rotation doing his 
thing, but you could never nail it."

Last Wednesday, The News reported on the Capital's history of drug 
use and drug trafficking.

The information was uncovered through a probe of the territory's 
liquor laws and how those laws are enforced at local bars.

The News found that in 2003 undercover RCMP officers purchased 
8-balls of cocaine at the bar during a sting operation, which nabbed 
three dealers operating out of the Capital.

"The Capital Hotel was clearly one of the places rightly targeted 
during that operation," reads a ruling by deputy territorial court 
judge Cunliffe Barnett.

Then, RCMP officers on a walkthrough found an individual "selling 
cocaine in (the) back area of bar" on June 23, 2004, according to 
documents obtained by The News through ATIPP.

On September 14, 2003, liquor inspectors found "a problem with a 
patron doing drugs at a table by the south end of the bar."

And on December 21 there were "two males standing on the back step 
smoking marijuana," according to those same documents.

Then in July 2006, a group of 50 concerned citizens gathered outside 
the Capital Hotel and forced a known drug dealer to leave the premises.

After that vigilante action, Byblow posted red signs in his bar 
proclaiming it a DFZ: a drug-free zone.

But the Capital's documented history of drug trafficking was going on 
for at least three years before that.

Why did it take Byblow so long to start cleaning things up?

"I think everybody was saying everything they could, but it was 
falling on deaf ears.

"You could ask a drug dealer to leave, but then a new one would fly 
in from Toronto and be walking your floor the next day."

So what's changed today?

"I said they couldn't come in."

About 18 months ago, Byblow spent $10,000 installing surveillance 
cameras in the bar's front rooms, walk-in cooler and back hallways.

The 16 cameras are hooked up to a closed-circuit TV in the building's 
basement, where every move made in the bar can be watched, said Byblow.

There are cameras everywhere, except inside the bathrooms.

So that's where the dealers went.

"People come in, they buy a drink, saunter off into the bathroom - no 
cameras in the bathroom, what have you got for evidence?" he explained.

So Byblow spent the time studying patterns and identifying dealers, he said.

If there's any suspicious activity, he ousts them from the bar.

And, so far, he hasn't had any problems.

"I've been fortunate in that respect, for the people I've been able 
to identify and deal with, I think they respected my position. I 
think they accepted that I was serious and they had no desire to 
argue with me."

The Capital's staff has also changed 100 per cent in the past year, 
said Byblow.

"Now I'm back hands-on."

And although he says the bar has cured its drug problem, the Yukon's 
addiction continues.

"I think we have a very serious problem and the problem is an excess 
and abundance of drug dealing, trafficking and using in this town 
that's not been adequately addressed.

"The unfortunate thing is that it's not improving, in my view," said Byblow.

"I've improved things here because I've asked them to leave."
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