Guns and gangs cash to curb street violence, police hope - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 12:14 AM | Calgary | -11.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Ottawa

Guns and gangs cash to curb street violence, police hope

Ottawa police are hoping new funding from the upper levels of government will help curb gun and gang violence in the city by keeping the worst offenders off the streets.

$54M federal fund to help Crown attorneys develop 'intensive' bail strategy

Ottawa police will have access to four attorneys who will advise them in cases involving gun and gang violence. (Matthew Kupfer/CBC)

Ottawa police are hoping new funding from the upper levels of government will help curb gun and gang violence in the city by keeping the worst offenders off the streets.

On Monday, the federal government announced it's giving Ontario $54 million over the next three yearsto combat illegal weapons and gang activity in cities, money earmarked street-level anti-ganginitiatives, intelligence-gathering in the province's jails and specialized prosecutors.

In eastern Ontario, some of that funding will be used to hire four assistant Crown attorneys who will be tasked with providing legal advice to local police services fighting gang violence.

The attorneys will be expected todevelop an "intensive"bail strategy for firearm and gang-specific cases, the province said.

Bail recommendations

Ottawa police Insp. Carl Cartright said having attorneys who are well-versed in gunand gang-related casesarticulatingbail recommendations to the courts will be helpful to police.

"We do have incidents where at times we arrest individuals for violent weapon offences, do not expect them to be released and they do get released," he said. "We respect the courts, but that is an ongoing conversation."

Cartright said the main concern is with repeat offenders who are grantedbail.

"It's a very, very fine-line balancing act," he said.

Cartright said partner organizations will benefit from the funding, too.

"Those organizations that sit with us at the table, whether it's Crime Prevention Ottawa, whether it's the John Howard Society, they would have access to this funding also to support their own initiatives."

Exit strategies

It's not clear yet how much moneywill be available directly to the Ottawa Police Service.Cartright said the funding will likely go towardrehabilitation and exit strategies for youth involved in gangs.

"If you're going to remove them, you better have everything in place for the rehabilitation to put these members back in society," Cartright said.

The province is also putting money toward supporting survivors of human trafficking, creating a bail team for gun-related offences in the Greater Toronto Area and establishing a GTA/Greater Golden Horseshoe gun and gang fund.