Warning: mysql_fetch_assoc() expects parameter 1 to be resource, boolean given in D:\Websites\rave.ca\website\include\functions\visitors.php on line 5

Warning: Cannot modify header information - headers already sent by (output started at D:\Websites\rave.ca\website\include\functions\visitors.php:5) in D:\Websites\rave.ca\website\index.php on line 546

Warning: Cannot modify header information - headers already sent by (output started at D:\Websites\rave.ca\website\include\functions\visitors.php:5) in D:\Websites\rave.ca\website\index.php on line 547

Warning: Cannot modify header information - headers already sent by (output started at D:\Websites\rave.ca\website\include\functions\visitors.php:5) in D:\Websites\rave.ca\website\index.php on line 548
CN BC: Chief Sends A Warning To Sam Sullivan - Rave.ca
Rave Radio: Offline (0/0)
Email: Password:
Anonymous
New Account
Forgot Password
News (Media Awareness Project) - CN BC: Chief Sends A Warning To Sam Sullivan
Title:CN BC: Chief Sends A Warning To Sam Sullivan
Published On:2005-12-01
Source:Georgia Straight, The (CN BC)
Fetched On:2008-01-14 22:30:18
CHIEF SENDS A WARNING TO SAM SULLIVAN

How many people in Vancouver have ever given money to a panhandler,
knowing that these funds will probably be used to buy drugs? How many
nondrug users have ever been in the presence of others, perhaps
family members, as they consumed illegal drugs?

That number is probably in the tens of thousands. Yet Vancouver
police Chief Jamie Graham has decided that only one of those
residents, mayor-elect Sam Sullivan, deserves to be reviewed by the
RCMP for giving someone money to buy drugs and watching them consume
them in his presence.

Here's how the story has been told so far. As a city councillor
several years ago, Sullivan said was he curious to learn more about
drug addiction. He has made no secret that he thinks addicts have a
disability and that their condition should be viewed as an illness.

Sullivan admitted that on some occasions, he gave money to addicts,
including a sex-trade worker, so they could buy drugs and alleviate
the symptoms of their illness. Sullivan said that he once observed an
addict buy drugs and then watched him smoke crack in his van.

Sullivan's opponents at Vision Vancouver, many of whom belong to the
provincial NDP, tried to make a huge issue of this in the recent
muni?cipal election, particularly within the Chinese-speaking
community. There were suggestions that Sullivan wasn't fit for the
mayor's office because he gave someone money that was used to buy
drugs. There were dark hints that Sullivan had been involved in a
major scandal because he watched one of those addicts consume drugs.

This didn't register with the Vancouver electorate, who tired of the
war on drugs many years ago. But the message obviously resonated with
Chief Graham--a former RCMP officer who has a warm relationship with
another former RCMP officer, Mayor Larry Campbell.

On November 29, Graham told reporters that he was so alarmed by
Sullivan's actions that he contacted the Mounties. Graham did it
during an election campaign. RCMP spokesperson Sgt. John Ward let the
reporters know that officers were looking into it. The incoming mayor
of Vancouver is being scrutinized for giving money to addicts, who
bought drugs. Quelle scandale.

How convenient for Graham. As mayor, Sullivan chairs the police board
and, in effect, becomes one of Graham's bosses. By siccing the
Mounties on Sullivan, Graham has sent an early warning that Sullivan
had better not get too uppity and start messing with police budget requests.

The RCMP review is also convenient for Vision Vancouver Coun. Raymond
Louie, who is often cited as a potential challenger for the mayor's
office in 2008. Mayor Campbell, chair of the police board, has been
one of Louie's biggest supporters. Louie and the three other Vision
Vancouver councillors will reap political benefits with the
law-and-order crowd as long as this story remains in the news.

The Vision Vancouver caucus has a choice. The four members--Louie,
Tim Stevenson, George Chow, and Heather Deal--can stand on the
sidelines and watch the spectacle. Or they can demonstrate some
political maturity and criticize the RCMP for wasting police
resources on a frivolous matter when there are surely more important
policing priorities. If Vision Vancouver councillors choose the
latter course, they'll demonstrate to the public that they're finally
moving out of the shadow of their party's real founder, former drug
cop Larry Campbell.
Member Comments
No member comments available...