HTTP/1.0 200 OK Content-Type: text/html Number Of Criminal Groups Growing
Pubdate: Sat, 17 Mar 2007
Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC)
Copyright: 2007 The Vancouver Sun
Contact:  http://www.canada.com/vancouver/vancouversun/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477
Author: Kim Bolan, Vancouver Sun

NUMBER OF CRIMINAL GROUPS GROWING

The number of organized crime groups in B.C. grew for the third year 
in a row in 2006 -- to 124, up from 108 identified the previous year, 
says a 2006 RCMP report obtained by The Vancouver Sun.

The 2006 Integrated Threat Assessment on Organized Crime says that 
police successfully disbanded 19 of the groups operating in 2005, but 
another 35 organized crime groups started up.

"The increase was also manifested in the number of mid-to-low-level 
criminal organizations identified, the growth in which accounted for 
nearly all the annual change overall," the report says.

The graph in the report looks alarming, starting in 2003 with just 52 
groups and rising in each of the last three years. But the report 
also says better record-keeping and analysis of crime groups accounts 
for some of the increase.

In terms of successes, five crime groups were disrupted last year 
through "successful enforcement."

Ten groups disbanded or disappeared from police radar and are no 
longer considered a criminal threat. The rest were rolled into larger 
crime groups, the report says.

"An additional ten groups saw a decline in assessed threat due to 
enforcement actions against the group or its associates," the report 
says. "Thus law enforcement actions yielded positive results in terms 
of disruption against 15 of 108 organized crime groups -- that is 14 
per cent -- over the past year."

And as last year, independent crime groups and outlaw motorcycle 
gangs -- particularly the Hells Angels -- are at the top of the pack 
in terms of sophistication and criminal involvement.

"The remaining profile of organized crime in the province is 
comprised of Asian-based organized crime, Indo-Canadian organized 
crime, Eastern European and various other smaller categories."

Most of the new groups formed were trying to cash in on the lucrative 
drug trade, particularly marijuana and crystal meth.

"In light of the continuing trend in synthetic drug production and 
trafficking and as regards to the well-known situation regarding 
marijuana cultivation, it is not surprising that the typical core 
activity of the independent and OMG-associated criminal organizations 
newly added in 2006 is that of drug-trafficking and drug production, 
with most of these groups scoring in the middle range of known 
criminal organizations in the province," the report says.

Whole sections of the 400-plus page document were blanked out for 
security reasons.

Of the so-called independent groups, a number of them work in concert 
with biker gangs, the report says, while others are "truly independent."

The researchers noted that pot cultivation appears to have plateaued, 
"remaining comfortably the biggest single criminal revenue generator 
in B.C./Yukon and a sizeable industry in the region in its own right. 
Reported grow operations are levelling off, but the average number of 
plants is consistently increasing," the report says.

"Methamphetamine and other synthetic drugs continue to expand as an 
enforcement challenge and a social problem."
- ---
MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman