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Trial Essay Research Paper Ludwig trial put

Trial Essay, Research Paper


Ludwig trial put cash-strapped RCMP under scrutiny


BOB WEBER


EDMONTON (CP) – Wiebo Ludwig was the defendant, but many times it


seemed the RCMP were the ones on trial.


Eight weeks of testimony at Ludwig’s oilpatch vandalism trial raised


repeated questions about a police force relying on tired, outdated equipment


and in danger of taking bids on its integrity.


But it’s not the first time. The Ludwig trial revealed only the latest example of


a national icon so stretched that it sometimes no longer even tries to get its


man.


The trial sputtered to a close Thursday with allegations of abuse of process


and 10 charges against Ludwig and friend Richard Boonstra abandoned


along the way for lack of evidence.


During the investigation, energy companies victimized by repeated vandalism


in northwestern Alberta grew so frustrated by the slowness of RCMP


response that they helped set up a community group they could use to funnel


money to police.


Defence lawyer Paul Moreau said that biased the police so badly that


Ludwig should be cleared even if the evidence pointed to his guilt.


And when the RCMP did get serious, their covert agent relied on a


30-year-old hidden tape recorder that produced tapes so distorted that they


seriously hindered the prosecution.


It’s all too familiar to Cpl. Mike Funicelli, president of the British Columbia


Mounted Police Association.


“The issue of a shortage of resources, both human and financial, is clearly


documented,” he sighs.


In B.C., the fabled RCMP closed dozens of commercial crime files last fall


because there weren’t resources to investigate them.


Some officers are responding to calls with personal vehicles.


In an effort to raise money, some RCMP vehicles in B.C. bear both the logo


of the force and those of corporate sponsors.


The vehicles are used for community police officers, not enforcement. But


Funicelli calls it “a very, very fine line.


“Whether it’s used for enforcement or not, in my view it’s a clear ethical


breach of the office we hold. We cannot become a private police force for


anybody.


“If I am a sponsor and I place my logo on a car, I may expect preferential


treatment.”


Journalist Paul Palango has written two books on the ailing RCMP and the


developments of the Ludwig trial didn’t surprise him, either.


“The RCMP right across the country are doing this. They’re soliciting funds


from local businesses in various communities to help them, say, with


undercover work or whatever.


“They just don’t have the resources.


“Politicians are complicit in this . . . They’re getting policing on the cheap,


and when you get it on the cheap you get what you pay for.


“You can’t have policing operating as a business. You can’t have police


operating too close to the public or too close to the powerful elements in


that public.”


The federal government tacitly acknowledged the force’s problems this year


when it boosted RCMP funding in the budget by $584 million over three


years.


But the problems aren’t just financial, says Palango.


“It’s a combination of factors – the cutbacks, the bureaucratic inertia and the


promotion system.”


The RCMP polices everything from small Prairie towns to major offences to


international crimes. The different roles have little to do with each other, yet


officers in search of promotion are moved freely between branches.


“They’re being torn in every possible way, so you’re not getting the right


people in the right positions,” Palango says.


Sgt. Bob Bilodeau, former head of the northwestern Alberta detachment


where Ludwig lives, has said both resources and inertia were factors in the


Ludwig investigation.


The first reports of vandalism came in as early as 1996, but he says senior


RCMP officials refused to recognize its potential to escalate.


“Violence

always escalates,” says Bilodeau, now on leave after a


seven-month tour in the former Yugoslavia.


He blames the RCMP for both the problems with the prosecution’s case


and the death of Karman Willis, a 16-year-old girl who was shot on


Ludwig’s Trickle Creek Farm last summer. No one was ever charged in the


shooting.


Last month, during the vandalism trial, Bilodeau wrote a letter to prosecutor


George Combe in which he said the RCMP failed to disclose information


because it drew attention to its inaction.


“From all the available evidence, it only appears that we (the RCMP), in


order to protect our prior inaction in the earliest stages of the global series of


events that surround the matters before the court, dug a hole to cover the


prior inaction.


“It appears that we have continued to dig that same hole, until . . . we


managed to bury a 16-year-old girl in that same hole.”


Whether or not the RCMP bear any blame for Willis’s death, their oilpatch


vandalism investigation may cost the Crown any convictions against Ludwig


and Boonstra on the remaining 27 charges.


Officials of Alberta Energy Company testified that they were growing


increasingly frustrated by the RCMP’s lack of results in investigating


incidents of vandalism.


Although they weren’t mentioned at the trial, some of the early incidents


were quite serious. In one, someone placed a propane cylinder inside a


shack at a sour gas well and fired bullets at it.


Fortunately, the cylinder didn’t explode, which could have released deadly


sour gas over a wide area.


After repeated meetings with the RCMP over such incidents, AEC officials


concluded the problem was lack of resources.


Defence lawyer Paul Moreau has claimed that the money and other


assistance provided by the energy companies allowed them to steer the


police in the direction of Ludwig, a vocal critic of their industry.


Because of that, Moreau says Justice Sterling Sanderman should clear


Ludwig even if the evidence points to his guilt.


During the trial, Sanderman referred to the possibility of an “unholy alliance”


between the RCMP and Alberta Energy Company – although evidence did


show the RCMP rebuffed offers of help from AEC’s security firm.


Sanderman is expected to deliver his ruling on April 19.


Alberta RCMP will wait and see what he says before deciding if they need


to examine their role, said Supt. Dennis Massey.


“The evidence is before the court, it’s in their hands. Let them make their


decision and we’ll go from there.”


But Funicelli shakes his head at the whole mess. He hopes the new funding


will prevent it from happening again, but asks why the situation exists in the


first place.


“If we had that kind of funding going back a few years, we would not have


to compromise our position as we have, I think.”


A quick primer of the case facing Wiebo Ludwig and Richard


Boonstra and highlights of the arguments:


Counselling – Five counts. Crown points to wiretap evidence of Ludwig and


RCMP informant Robert Wraight discussing purchase of dynamite and


Ludwig paying for it. Defence says tape shows purchase was Wraight’s


idea, not Ludwig’s.


Vandalism conspiracy – Nine counts, relating to attacks on two wells.


Crown has suggestive wiretap comments on bombs and timers, defendant’s


arrest near bombed wellsite, explosive residue on Ludwig’s hands, video


and photos of burning wellhead in Ludwig’s possession. Defence says


comments are ambiguous, evidence circumstantial, Wraight’s testimony


unreliable.


Explosives conspiracy – Three counts relating to possession. Crown has


wiretap of defendants discussing purchase, videotape of them picking up


fake dynamite. Defence says purchase was Wraight’s idea, no dynamite


found at Trickle Creek.


Explosives possession – One count. Crown points to pickup of fake


dynamite. Defence suggests RCMP entrapment.


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