Pubdate: Sat, 23 Sep 2000 Source: Toronto Star (CN ON) Copyright: 2000 The Toronto Star Contact: One Yonge St., Toronto ON, M5E 1E6 Fax: (416) 869-4322 Website: http://www.thestar.com/ Forum: http://www.thestar.com/editorial/disc_board/ Page: K7 Section: Letters Author: James Dubro, Toronto Letter Of The Week NO SEX, DRUGS OR GANGS Re Biker gangs, Sept. 17. I wish to commend Trevor Ferguson for his perceptive take on the organized crime crisis in Montreal. What we have seen going on in Montreal over the past few years is a major, bloody battle for control of lucrative illegal substances. There is, however, one significant ingredient to the mix that he has overlooked in his excellent analysis and that is the desire by a large segment of the population for the services and/or products of organized crime that are illegal or inordinately expensive. Everyone who uses marijuana, ecstasy, steroids or a prostitute is contributing to the organized crime problem in Canada today. Organized crime would be powerless if it were not for the huge sums of money paid by its many clients for these illegal services and products. Having spent almost three decades researching and writing about organized crime in Canada, I now feel the time has come to look seriously at decriminalizing some of the drugs that have fuelled the enormous growth of organized crime in the past decade. Until we address the problem of drug use by many members of society we will get nowhere in the fight against organized crime. Outlawing the gangs by name accomplishes nothing except to take a fundamental right away from us - the right to freedom of association. In the case of the biker gangs, simply arresting members of various gangs that have names would just be giving a marketing advantage to other organized crime groups - such as the Vietnamese gangs, the triads, the Russian mobs, the native organized crime groups, and the Jamaican gangs - in the providing of illegal drugs and other services. The desire for a quick fix after the tragic shooting of journalist Michel Auger (a friend and colleague) - suspending the Constitution and outlawing membership in certain gangs - ignores and grossly simplifies the complex reality of organized crime as it exists in Canada today. The police already have the necessary laws to go after the mobs for the crimes they are committing. The draconian anti-gang laws brought in after the 11-year-old boy was killed by bikers in Montreal allows for the confiscation of the assets (without a trial) and the doubling of prison time for members of organized crime gangs. We should not resort to anti-democratic measures in a well-intentioned but ill-conceived attempt to stop the gangs. If we all stopped using the services and products of organized crime, the gangs would be vastly reduced in power and money. But there will always be organized crime in our society as long as people want what the law says they cannot have. James Dubro Toronto - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake