Ottawa police struggling to stop surging car thefts - Action News
Home WebMail Thursday, November 14, 2024, 02:06 AM | Calgary | 6.0°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Ottawa

Ottawa police struggling to stop surging car thefts

Ottawa police say more than 1,800 vehicles were stolen in Ottawa last year, or an average of five per day. About half were recovered.

Police: 1,854 vehicles lost in 2023 and about half were recovered

A police officer speaks at an indoor news conference as two other officers watch.
Ottawa Police Service Chief Eric Stubbs, centre, and Deputy Chief Patricia Ferguson, right, say tackling the high rate of auto thefts will require help from other jurisdictions. (Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press)

Ottawa police say they've have had their hands full trying to stop a surge in vehicle thefts that shows no sign of slowing down, with the equivalent of five vehicles going missing every day last year.

Of the 1,854 vehicles lost in 2023, Sgt. Catherine Brown said about half were recovered, "which was substantial."

Ottawa police Chief Eric Stubbs suggestedproactive patrols, daylight car chases and multitude of arrests havenot been enough to stem a steady wave of thefts that seemsyet to crest.

"We are finding they are younger people [being apprehended]: they'reage16, 17 to maybe 21, 22," he explained to reporters ahead of Monday's Ottawa Police Services Board meeting.

"They are not the heads of this organized crime. They are just being paid to do a job:come inand steal. Soit's not stopping it."

Stubbs was "very pleased" by the Liberal announcement of a national auto-theft summit next month, saying this is not an Ottawaor Ontario issue, but a Canada-wide problem.

Organized crime exploiting 'loophole,' says councillor

Police say many of the vehicles secreted away from mall parking lots or brazenly taken from neighbourhood driveways make their way across provincial and national borders: rushedto Montreal,loaded into shipping containers and sent to Africa or the Middle East.

Coun. David Hill pushed the force's top brass for a new plan at the board meeting, calling for an"ambitious" approach.

"It really grinds my gears that organized crime has found this loophole to take advantage of jurisdictional boundaries to make a lucrative game of this," he later told CBC.

A city councillor leans on a chair during a meeting, listening to a speaker.
Barrhaven West Coun. David Hill wants Ottawa police to be "more ambitious" in its approach to tackling vehicle thefts. (Arthur White-Crummey/CBC)

Hill said his BarrhavenWest constituents suffer the highest rate of vehicle theft in the city, with some residents reporting having cars stolen twice in the same year.

The way to "squeeze out the gaps" being exploited by cross-border crooks, he says,is to get all levels of government working together.

Staffing struggles stymie results

Disheartening to Hill was the factOttawa police havenot had a dedicated auto-theft unit since 2017, when Deputy Chief Patricia Ferguson said a rise in shootings forced a shift of officers.

"The provincial task forcealso disbandeddue to a decrease in organized auto thefts at that time," she explained.

Instead, the city's police service has relied on shorter-term campaigns.

"Alocal team would be the best option that focuses on auto theft only," she said.

"But with the current staffing levels,forming that team will mean that we are pulling resources from somewhere else and and that's something we struggle with."

Ottawa was not able to secure fundingthrough Ontario's $18-millionPreventing Auto Thefts programthat launched late last year.

Ferguson said the force is working with other jurisdictionsincluding theCanada Border ServicesAgency, which has seconded anofficer to work with Ottawa police for several years.

A plan is also in the works to divertother Ontariofunding to create a position for an intelligence officer, who wouldliaise with provincial teams and feed information to the front line.

CBC finds Toronto man's stolen car in West Africa

1 year ago
Duration 2:00
CBC's David Common informs Len Green that his stolen car has been found in Ghana, 8,500 kilometres from Toronto, where it first went missing a year ago.