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Originally Posted by Dengler Avenue
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Any government that's in power for over a decade is going to have some scandals come out. So far its been relatively mild, a Liberal speaker finding that the legislature (not the Liberals) were taking money to the tune of a couple million does not corruption make. But the report into the past may find that past speakers allowed it to happen, who knows.
Having crime occur while their in power isn't corruption either. As has been pointed out to defend the NDP from the recent money laundering investigations that failed, the Federal government is in charge of stopping money laundering
https://laws-lois.justice.gc.ca/eng/acts/P-24.501/.
So far I haven't seen any obvious signs of corruption that impinge on the reputation of the party itself showing that it or its members took money to influence their decisions. Remember that disliking their policies is not corruption and I hate how easily that word is used. You may dislike policies but to accuse people of being criminal or corrupt you need a lot more to go on. To my knowledge everyone with a brain knew our current regulations/rules and that crime happens.
And to make things clear, given the police resources are hand, I'd choose to focus resources towards violent crime in the government's shoes too. BC lags behind the country at laying charges, a strong indicator that our police forces/justice system are overworked. Between murders and money launderers I'd choose to focus on the former, wouldn't you?
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B.C.’s crime clearance rate — the percentage of crimes in which charges are laid — for all offences was a shockingly low 27.6 per cent, well below the national rate of 41.4. (The violent crime clearance rate was 57.8 per cent, up from 55.9 per cent in 2015, but below the Canada average of 75.3 per cent. The B.C. property crime clearance rate was a lousy 13.5 per cent, again well under the national rate of 21.2 per cent.)
The good news is that overall crime is down in the province. But the numbers show that B.C. police by a pretty wide margin are not solving crimes as well as their colleagues in other provinces. Improving B.C.’s clearance rate ought to be a top priority for police moving forward.
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https://theprovince.com/opinion/colu...-c-crime-stats