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Prince George Citizen August 22, 2024

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BCNE midway lights up the night .... Pages 24-25

‘The most horrific failure of public policy’ Drugs, crime and Moccasin Flats: A Q&A with the retiring superintendent of the local RCMP TED CLARKE Citizen Staff

On Aug. 8, after five years as the officer in charge of the Prince George RCMP detachment, Shaun Wright called it a career and retired. Since taking on the duties as superintendent, the 50-year-old Saskatoon native has seen some turbulent times while overseeing a city with a crime rate in 2021 that was ranked third-worst in all of British Columbia. The COVID-19 pandemic, public resentment of police, B.C’s legalization of hard drugs, the nationwide rise in violent crime and the effects of the federal Bill C-75 that limit the ability of law enforcement agencies to detain habitual criminals - all have contributed to the difficulty of being in charge of a police detachment with crime-fighting resources stretched thin among a staff of 160 officers. After 28 years serving and protecting

CITIZEN PHOTO BY TED CLARKE

Supt. Shaun Wright has retired after five years heading the Prince George RCMP. In this Q&A, he talks to Citizen reporter Ted Clarke about the challenges modern police officers face.

Canadians in Surrey, Mission and Prince George, Wright and his wife plan to remain PG residents and are looking forward to exploring northern B.C. as tourists without a timeline, free from the stress and pressures that come with being a police officer. Wright sat down with The Citizen on

his second-last day on the job to discuss some of the most pressing issues his replacement as superintendent will have to take on. Prominent on that list is the Patricia Boulevard (Moccasin Flats) encampment, the fentanyl/opioid crisis, the difficulty of laying charges on apprehended

criminals, the province’s three-year experiment with drug decriminalization and how the addition of officer bodycams will change the face of policing in Prince George. PLEASE SEE THE Q&A ON PAGES 16-18


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