February 27, 2005

The Circle Lies Unbroken: drugs . . . gangs . . . money . . . financing for terrorism and more criminality . . . and then more of the same

Outaouais link to busted drug ring Andrew Seymour, Ottawa Sun, February 24, 2005

Why would cocaine emerge from the Outaouais district? Does it come in by plane? If by truck, from what direction? I could see it emanating from somewhere near the coast . . . but Outaouais is the area across the Ottawa River from Ottawa -- close to the seat of power.

Police have dismantled a Quebec City drug network with ties to the Hells Angels that was allegedly being supplied with cocaine from the Outaouais. About 450 officers from four police departments, including the RCMP and Quebec provincial police, yesterday arrested about 30 people during approximately 40 raids on homes, cottages and businesses in 20 municipalities across Quebec. [. . . . ]


Search: probationary member, operating in, for a price, ecstasy, meth, speed, $50 million, Hells





Grow ops across Canada: I have learned there are probably 50,000 -- but if manpower is too stunted to do something about all of them, there is the potential for income of $1-million a year from just one house in which there is a grow-op. With legalization, why, think of the businesses Canadians can develop . . .

Apparently, even national parks can be sources for the 10,000 hard core gang members along with about 8000 street gang toughs in just Toronto. They are able to realize $25-billion and have at least 10,000 hard core members plus street gang member sof which there are about 8000 in Toronto alone

If the criminality is so high and burgeoning, why does our government not do something major about it? I suggest it would cost too much, given the size of the problem so they have downloaded it onto the citizens -- those same citizens who have been and are being virtually disarmed while crooks don't bother about such niceties as registration. The citizens are now on their own. They are the victims.

To do something about this situation government(s) would have to:


* provide sufficient manpower to police departments to rout out the criminals and their enterprises -- and prepare the paperwork which is extraordinarily onerous in big cases -- but ever prevalent in even small cases -- for

"the alleged" must be protected against just about everything law enforcement might do -- unlike the rest of us whose representatives must now give sufficient time to inhabitants in premises they wish to search to answer the door; police must not break doors down, even when, in hindsight we know a grow op or drugs were found -- now, the grow-op farmers and other drug businessmen and suppliers may have the time available to get rid of the evidence.


* stop catering to voting blocs who do not want to accept the truth and prefer to cry "racism" rather than co-operate in cleaning up their own communities -- applicable to federal or municipal political considerations and communities

* engage other security services who would follow the links and the networks and devote copious amounts of time to dotting the i's and crossing the t's in the paperwork -- which expands because criminals, particularly gangs, have copious amounts of proceeds of crime $$$ to hire lawyers to fight -- and it has turned out to be a lucrative career move for those in the legal field who manage to survive unscathed, whether from their clients or police personnel

* then the justice system would have to provide judges and well-briefed prosecutors who, in turn, would need research assistants for the mounds of paperwork the bureaucracy demands particularly in large cases--but also in small -- expensive and time consuming

* build, equip and staff large prisons and actually punish criminals -- omitting the get away with just about anything approach which includes: house arrest, counselling, soft sentencing guidelines--the healing / sentencing circles and puff-ball sentences for currently protected groups, the "criminal as a victim of society' approach (with its proliferation of the 'caring professions and professionals' who need 'victims of society' to stay in business), the approach which treats all criminals as though they could be healed with the application of enough love, respect and caring--though they chose their criminal lifestyles -- all these and the rest of our justice system -- oh, yes, and in hiring the various services must practice diversity, not rely on merit.

Equal outcomes are so much more difficult to achieve than are equal opportunities -- to get them just right -- to assuage voting blocs.


The result?

* The police are stymied -- they are handcuffed and have no whistleblower protection--and won't have with the latest legislation proposed -- they are punished if they attempt to let Canadians know the situation

* The police have inadequate resources -- just read some of the entries on this site and check out the current budget

* Their numbers are being decimated by retirement--often early--and coming on the heels of despair, for, when the best try to do their jobs and let the populace know the extent of the problem, they are punished; it is a career-ending move -- The best investigators left as soon as they could. Why would any of these people stick their necks out? -- when they know their government doesn't care and does not want this information to get out -- and the media find it easier to comply by going along. People don't want to jeapardize their pensions after laying their lives on the line for 25-30 years

Think of how the Auditor General is discredited at every opportunity. Think of ex-civil servants, ex-RCMP Cpl. Read, ex-foreign service officer Brian McAdam, ex-BDC head, Laurent (?) Beaudoin, and countless others who have tried to blow the whistle on various aspects of the network of criminality--the corruption of government, the reserve system perpetuated by a government which throws $$$ at problems without much accountability, a reserve system which breeds myriad problems, the criminal gangs such as the triads, Hells Angels, etc., the IRB / immigration / refugee system, the political power applied to the BDC in the service of those politically connected . . . . . . and more.


Internationally Caanda is known as a haven for crooks and terrorists.




A digression is in order here.

"He actually spoke to me [Inspector Bill Majcher] about the merits and benefits of bringing my criminal enterprise to Canada versus staying in the United States, where there are real consequences to criminal conduct," [quotation from article just below]


Lawyer guilty of money-laundering -- Police say conviction in 2002 sting shows growing sophistication of organized crime Paul Waldiem February 23, 2005

A Toronto lawyer was found guilty of money laundering yesterday in a case the RCMP say demonstrates the growing sophistication of organized crime.

Simon Rosenfeld was one of about 55 Canadian and U.S. citizens arrested in 2002 as part of a sweeping RCMP-FBI sting called Bermuda Short, which exposed a raft of stock-market manipulation and money-laundering scams. [. . . . ]



Search: 55 Canadian and U.S. citizens, stock-market manipulation, money-laundering scams, Colombian cocaine cartel, organized crime organizations, Hells Angels.

Check the Criminal Intelligence Service Canada - 2004 report and select "print version" which will lead to the Adobe Acrobat Reader .pdf file version which you may download

Talk to some who know; listen to tales of paper shuffling and bureaucracy -- busy work to go along with government talk, consultation, and the magic words "it is under investigation" -- all designed to keep the problem on the back burner--from boiling over into Canadians' rage -- and the officers are sworn to silence.

Perfect!

The morals of alley cats operate in the service of re-election, self-advancement and riches -- think:

* sponsorship
* Shawinigate
* Beaudoin affair -- JC presiding
* HRDC
* gun registry -- Remember, the government has squandered over a billion dollars ($1-BILLION) on the gun registry but can't find the money for an RCMP lab in Alberta; they have overseen the closure of 9 RCMP detachments in Quebec alone, despite cries from the citizens and Opposition MP's not to do this.

Do you honestly think members of our government are surprised?
That the leaders and most members knew nothing? Being out of the loop, perhaps on the back benches, is either a badge to be desired and evidence of high moral character or evidence of a finely-honed, self-protective stupidity -- illustrative of, with apologies to Hannah Arendt,

"the banality of ignorance of evil"


A book that might be of interest on the RCMP, The Last Guardians by Paul Palango, a Canadian Author, Published: November 1998, ISBN: 0771069065 ยท Published by McClelland & Stewart Inc

Undoubtedly, there are other sources.

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