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
Labour minister pushes for 'deal at the table' after Canada Post union issues strike notice
Labour Minister Steven MacKinnon says the federal government currently has no plans to intervene in negotiations after the union representing Canada Post workers issued a 72-hour strike notice.
What consumers need to know if Canada Post workers strike ahead of a busy holiday season
Canada's postal workers could walk off the job or the company could lock them out as soon as 12:01 a.m. ET Friday if the union and the company don't reach an agreement. Here are tips for shoppers and businesses.
BREAKING Feds move to end work stoppages at ports, order binding arbitration
Labour Minister Steven MacKinnon says he is intervening to end the work stoppages at ports in both British Columbia and Montreal.
23 arrested after at least 100 shots fired in exchange of gunfire outside Toronto recording studio: police
Police say 23 people are in custody after at least 100 shots were fired in an exchange of gunfire outside a West Queen West recording studio on Monday night.
Campaign staffer resigns after N.S. PCs accused of vote-buying with Tim's gift cards
The Nova Scotia Liberal Party has filed a complaint with Elections Nova Scotia, accusing a Progressive Conservative candidate of trying to buy votes by allegedly handing out gift cards outside of a Tim Hortons.
Ottawa high school principal apologizes for song played during Remembrance Day assembly
The principal of an Ottawa high school is apologizing to students, parents and guardians after an Arabic-language song was played during the school's Remembrance Day service.
The Taliban will attend a UN climate conference for the first time
The Taliban will attend a UN climate conference for the first time since their takeover of Afghanistan in 2021, the country's national environment agency said Sunday.
Federal judge blocks Louisiana law that requires classrooms to display Ten Commandments
A new Louisiana requirement that the Ten Commandments be displayed in every public classroom by Jan. 1 was temporarily blocked Tuesday by a federal judge who said the law is 'unconstitutional on its face.'
Northern Ont. suspect sentenced to house arrest five days before vicious attack on ex-girlfriend
The 18-year-old man accused in a vicious attack on his ex-girlfriend in Cobalt last week was sentenced to house arrest five days before the Nov. 3 assault.