Almost 1K arrests made using new Alberta law enforcement data system
Alberta law enforcement agencies have joined forces to identify and take down the province's top offenders.
Details on a new data system were announced Friday. It's an RCMP-led initiative that allows different police agencies in Alberta to share information on offenders with each other.
"The reality is that criminals don't care about borders," said RCMP Supt. Mike McCauley.
"They operate across jurisdictions, harming communities throughout the province."
The new system has helped officers identify Alberta's top 10,000 offenders – and arrest almost 1,000 of them in a two-week period.
"That's a pretty strong number," McCauley said. "It would probably be around 1,200 in a full month normally. So, it's pretty substantial."
Charges include serious crimes like theft, robbery, drug trafficking, sexual offences and attempted murder.
Almost all the offenders identified are repeat offenders, McCauley said.
"In each individual community, their crimes wouldn't have marked them as priority offenders for that detachment," McCauley said. "However, when we combined our data, we realized that they were in the top 1,000 offenders in the province."
In the Edmonton area alone, McCauley said the data helped execute 250 warrants and arrest 108 people – including four who were in the top 100 offenders.
"Forty-five offenders had two warrants each, with a total of 226 charges between the 90 warrants," he said. "Nine offenders had three warrants each for a total of 76 charges … So we are talking about people that are causing a great deal of harm to our communities."
A similar operation is set to take place soon in Calgary and southern Alberta.
Participating officers can't work on the initiative year-round, so plans are to have one or two large-scale operations each year.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
NEW AI modelling predicts these foods will be hit hardest by inflation next year
The new year won’t bring a resolution to rising food costs, according to a new report that predicts prices to rise as much as five per cent in 2025.
DEVELOPING Motive unclear as New York police hunt for masked killer who shot health insurance CEO
Investigators are searching for clues that could help them identify the masked gunman who killed the leader of one of the largest U.S. health insurance companies on a Manhattan sidewalk, then disappeared into Central Park.
'Name what things are': Recognizing 'femicide' 35 years after the Montreal massacre
Ahead of the 35th anniversary of the Montreal Massacre, Annie Ross, a mechanical engineering professor at Polytechnique Montreal, said she often thinks of those who lived through the tragedy but still suffer silently.
Canada Post stores continue to operate during strike — but why?
As many postal workers continue to strike across the country, some Canadians have been puzzled by the fact some Canada Post offices and retail outlets remain open.
Toddler fatally shot after his 7-year-old brother finds a gun in the family's truck
A two-year-old boy was fatally shot when his seven-year-old brother found a gun in the glovebox of the family's truck in Southern California, authorities said.
Mother sues Mattel over 'Wicked' dolls linked to adult film website
Mattel was sued this week by a South Carolina mother for mistakenly putting a link to an adult film site on the packaging for its dolls tied to the movie 'Wicked.'
NEW Health Canada recalls more than 300 sexual enhancement products in four provinces
Health Canada has recalled hundreds of different sexual enhancements products from stores in Ontario, Quebec, Alberta and B.C.
Federal minister Harjit Sajjan to attend Taylor Swift concert with taxpayer-funded ticket
Harjit Sajjan, the federal minister responsible for the Pacific Economic Development Agency of Canada, will be going to the Eras Tour on taxpayer dollars.
French government toppled in historic no-confidence vote
French opposition lawmakers brought the government down on Wednesday, throwing the European Union's second-biggest economic power deeper into a political crisis that threatens its capacity to legislate and rein in a massive budget deficit.