Okanagan MP pushing for harsher punishment for looters - Action News
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British Columbia

Okanagan MP pushing for harsher punishment for looters

Dan Albas, Conservative Member of Parliament for Central Okanagan-Similkameen-Nicola, wants the Criminal Code amended so punishments will be increased for looters who steal from homes left empty when people are forced to evacuate during a natural disaster or emergency.

Dan Albas wants the Criminal Code amended to punish thieves who rob evacuees

An RCMP officer stands on the road in the Williams Lake area during the 2017 wildfires. Area MP Dan Albas wants lawmakers to be able to more forcefully crack down on thieves during states of emergency. (CBC)

A member of parliament from British Columbia wants Ottawa to amend the Criminal Code to crack down on thieves who target homes during emergency evacuations.

Dan Albas, Conservative MP for Central Okanagan-Similkameen-Nicola, has putforward a private members bill that wouldcreate harsher penalties for people charged with looting if the robbery was committed during a state of emergency or after an evacuation order has been issued.

Albas said not only would the change come down harder on criminals, it would also give people peace of mind when they must evacuate their homes.

"They can know when an evacuation order has been given that the criminal justice system has their back," said Albas.

Flames rage around Williams Lake during the 2017 wildfires. (Supplied/Kaitlyn Dorion)

Zerotolerance

He said it will also let officials focus on public safety, rather than trying to convince people to evacuate who are afraid of leaving their homes vulnerable to thieves.

In Albas' constituency, residents have been affected at various times by both wildfires and flooding. During the 2017 wildfires, a number of homes in Williams Lake and 100 Mile House were ransacked by thieves after thousands of residents were forced to evacuate their residences.

The RCMP arrested more than 10 people for looting.

Albas wants to keep that from happening again.

He said officials should anticipate dangerous weather events and disasters becoming "more regular and more severe" and that amending the Criminal Code sends thethe signal that "if people are going to be looting, there are serious consequences."

Albas hopes a change in law will show potential looters that preying on people during emergencies will be dealt with more severely than burglaries.

"We should use the Criminal Code in a way to say we will, as a society, not tolerate this at the same level," said Albas.