Calgary drug house visited by police 115 times last year shut down by Alberta Sheriffs - Action News
Home WebMail Thursday, November 14, 2024, 02:36 AM | Calgary | 6.0°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Calgary

Calgary drug house visited by police 115 times last year shut down by Alberta Sheriffs

A Calgary drug house has been shut down after police were called 115 times last year for incidents that included a man shot in the face and a machete attack on a woman.

Incidents included a man shot in the face and a machete attack on a woman

Alberta Sheriffs obtained a court order against the owner of this house at 5504 Centre Street N., closing the property for 90 days, citing repeated incidents of drug-related criminal activities. (Google Maps)

The owners of a house in northeast Calgary that police were called to 115 times last year alone have been slapped with a court order mandating that it be boarded up for three months.

The Alberta Sheriffs' Safer Communities and Neighbourhoods (SCAN) unit obtained a court order on Thursday giving it the authority to change the locks and put up a fence around the property at 5504 Centre Street North, the province said in a release.

Police responded to many incidentsat the house in Thorncliffe-Greenviewlast year, including reports of robbery, breaking and entering, possession of a controlled substanceand theft of a motor vehicle.

SCAN has fielded more than 30 complaints the largest number ithas ever received and letters from people in the community detailing criminal activity associated with this property.

"Recently at this location, a woman sustained a wound to her thigh after being attacked with a machete, and a male suffered serious injuries after taking a bullet to his face," the province said in a release.

Alberta Health Services has also issued several orders declaring the property unfit for human habitation, most recently on Jan. 21.

Nobody is allowed on the property without permission from the sheriffs until the closure ends on June 2.

During the 90-day closure, sheriffs can give the owner and a realtor access for the purpose of showing it to potential buyers.

If the owner does not sell the property, the court order gives authorities the option of applying to court for a five-year ban on renting the house and a five-year community safety order.

"This is precisely the sort of situation that the SCAN unit was created to fix: a location where criminal activity and violence has become a seemingly everyday occurrence," Justice Minister Kaycee Madu said in the release.

"Law-abiding Albertans should not have to tolerate such a level of chaos and danger in their communities."