Libby speaking out against harmful regulatory changes

Libby speaking out against harmful regulatory changes

It's hard to picture Claire Jones in bed with organized crime. The curvy sex worker, who has been plying her prodigious assets for seven years now, could one day face five years in jail if she works with other “girls'' at her luxury downtown condo. And she does, at least sometimes. New regulations announced earlier this month by Justice Minister Rob Nicholson, regulations aimed at strengthening “the ability of law enforcement to fight organized crime,'' put her at risk….Ironically, as reports over the past few weeks have revealed, police forces bungled the Pickton case. Sex workers who had evidence that might have prevented more deaths were discounted, just because they were deemed not credible as witnesses. “I actually don't think the government cares about sex workers; to them it's just ‘oh they're going after organized crime,''' says NDP MP Libby Davies, in whose Vancouver east riding serial killer Robert Pickton picked off his victims. “The whole underpinning of the missing women is that they weren't ever seen as people, they were seen as disposable garbage by everybody.''


Society has failed these women

Society has failed these women

NDP MP Libby Davies doesn’t think Premier Gordon Campbell’s former role as chair of the Vancouver police board puts him in a conflict of interest on the issue of whether to hold a public inquiry on the missing women. Davies sat on Vancouver city council during Campbell’s stint as mayor and police board chair from 1986 to 1993, around the time that women began disappearing from the Downtown Eastside. “It doesn’t put him in a conflict of interest,” the Vancouver East MP told the Straight by phone. “He’s the premier. He’s in a different role. A lot more information has come forward since when he was mayor. Back in those days, originally the call was for a special task force, and that was turned down many, many times when I was on council and such. But no, I don’t think he’s in a conflict. He’s the premier and he’s got to uphold the public interest.”


Fighting the HST

Fighting the HST

Ignatieff said Tuesday he supports the harmonized sales tax because of its economic benefits, but he said B.C. residents also have a right to rally against it. But federal New Democrat MP Libby Davies said Ignatieff didn't vote against the HST bill that the Conservative government rammed through last year. She said the NDP repeatedly challenged the procedural tactics that were being used. "It's very disingenuous for Ignatieff to come to B.C. and portray himself as a friend of the people of B.C. because of the way the HST was handled when he didn't do anything," Davies said.




Public Inquiry Only Acceptable Course of Action

Public Inquiry Only Acceptable Course of Action

Libby Davies renews her call for inquiry into murdered and missing women

Vancouver- Libby Davies (MP Vancouver East) renewed her call today for a public inquiry into the murdered and missing women of the Downtown Eastside.

“The families and friends of the murdered and missing women deserve answers as to why the disappearance of their daughters, sisters, mothers and friends were overlooked for so long. A public inquiry is the only acceptable course of action,” said Davies.

In light of stunning new informationmade public by the media on the internal 2006 report from the Vancouver Police Department, Davies is urging the provincial and federal governments, and the RCMP, to undertake a full public inquiry into law enforcement actions around the over 60 murdered and missing women of Vancouver.

Davies first called for an inquiry in 2001. She renewed her call for an inquiry in an August 2010 letter to Premier Campbell and Public Safety Minister Vic Towes.

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