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Montreal

With vehicle thefts spiking, authorities in Montreal try to crack down on shipments overseas

Investigators with the Canada Border Services Agency and Montreal seized dozens of SUVs and trucks at the port earlier this week, as part of a concerted effort to crack down on a rise in stolen vehicles.

Law enforcement has seized 252 vehicles from the port so far in 2023, including 53 earlier this week

pickup truck being towed out of a container
A pickup truck is seen being removed from a shipping container in this photo provided by Montreal police. The background has been blurred at the request of police to avoid being able to identify the location. (Service de Police de la Ville de Montral)

Early Monday morning, a team of investigators descended on the Port of Montreal, seizing dozens of stolen vehicles mostly new high-end SUVs and pickup trucks from containersbound for overseas.

In all, they recovered 53 vehicles with an estimated value of $2.6 million.

It was the latest in a series of raids made by law enforcement in recent months as they try to crack down on a rise in the export of stolen cars.

Montreal police Cmndr. Yannick Desmarais, who is responsible for the force's motor vehicle thefts division, said the increase in stolen vehicles since the pandemic is "disturbing" and shows no signs of slowing down.

Roughly 9,500 vehicles were stolen in Montreal last year, up considerably from years prior.

Thefts have occurred at roughly the same pace so far in 2023, with about 800 vehicles stolen per month for the first three months.

More than 300 vehicles were stolen in the first nine days of April, Desmarais said.

Experts have attributed the rise in car thefts to a shortageof new vehicles as well as vehicle parts, such as semiconductors.

Desmarais pointed out the problem extends far beyond Montreal, with a rise in thefts reported in Ontarioand beyond.

"It's a problem across Canada," he said.

But Montreal has emerged as a hub for the export of stolen vehicles: many cars stolen from elsewhere in Canada disappear afterbeing shipped out of the city.

Last month, authorities recovered 24 luxury vehiclesstolenfrom the Toronto area in Morocco. They had been shipped out of the Montreal portand were headed to Dubai. They werevalued at anestimated $2.1 million.

Since the start of the year, 252 stolen vehicles have been seized at the port more than 75 per cent of them from Ontario, according to Montreal police.

Experts have previously told CBC News that stolen Canadian cars are often shipped through Italy to the Middle East andAfrica.

Arecent investigationby CBC'sMarketplacefound vehicles stolen from Ontario and Quebec werebeing openly advertised and sold in West African countries, including Nigeria and Ghana.

Thousands of containers daily

For his part, Desmarais said he's confident workers at the port itself aren't the problem.He said the sheer volume of goods and the size of the port makes oversight a difficult task.

It spans 30 kilometres and handles more than 1.5 million containers a year.

No arrests have been made in the connection with the latest raid. Desmarais said the investigation is ongoing.

Containers at the port
The Port of Montreal's location makes it a hub for the illegal export of stolen vehicles to Africa and the Middle East. (Charles Contant/CBC)

Daniel Dagenais, vice-president ofthe Port of Montreal, said the role of the port itself in preventing the export of stolen vehicles is limited.

He said the port is equipped with cameras,fully secured with fences and monitored 24 hours a day.

But he said 2,000 trucks bring in containers every day the vast majority of them filled with legitimate goods being prepared for export.

"It's difficult for us to determine what should be coming to the port and what should not," he said.

Links to firearms

The Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) is responsible for detecting stolen vehicles and other contraband. The CBSA led the most recent raid at the port.

Spokesperson Jacqueline Roby said the agency has been working closely with local police and conducting both "targeted and random" searches of containers.

Roby said containers are "subject to non-intrusive inspections usingdetection technologiessuch as X-ray and gamma-ray machines."

police officer writes something on an SUV
A police officer documents stolen vehicles seized by authorities Monday, April 10, at the Port of Montreal. (Service de Police de la Ville de Montral)

quit Association, a group representing insurance companies, also took part in the raid.

Jacques Lamontagne, a former Montreal police officer who now works for quit, said vehicle thefts are mostly the work of criminal networks who rely on street gangs to steal the vehicles. Unlike in the past, when vehicles were quickly chopped for parts, the trend is to deliver them intactto new markets.

"There are more and more whole stolen vehicles that have been exported for five or six years," Lamontagne told Radio-Canada.

Desmarais said police have made a concerted effort to try to crack down on car thefts, given that they are known to help fund organized crime groups that also bring in illegal firearms.

He urged vehicle owners particularly those with a new vehicle to make sure they have an anti-theft system, such as a tracking system or on-board diagnostic protection (OBD).

"We have to make it harder for them to be stolen," he said.