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Toronto police chief calls 2018 'a year like no other' as fatalities set record

Toronto police Chief Mark Saunders says 2018 was "incredibly busy" for the department because so many people lost their lives, but he expects 2019 to be different.

Mark Saunders says police must improve relations with all communities to bring homicide numbers down

Toronto police Chief Mark Saunders delivered a year-end media briefing at Toronto police headquarters on Thursday. (Christopher Katsarov/Canadian Press)

Toronto police Chief Mark Saunders says 2018 was "incredibly busy" for the department because so many people lost their lives, but he expects 2019 to be different.

Speaking to reporters at police headquarters on Thursday morning, Saunders said the past year was "unique" because of the van attack in April and the Danforth shooting in July. The two mass casualty events helped to push the homicide rate to a record level, he said.

"This is a year like no other year," Saunders said duringa year-end news conference. "This was a unique year. I'm certainly not looking for another year like that in the foreseeable future."

There have been 96homicides in Toronto this year. The previous record for the most in a single year was 89 set in 1991.

"I'm not looking at an upward trend. I think this was a unique year where there was a lot of loss of life. I do believe that next year will be a different year."

Toronto Police Chief Mark Saunders speaks to reporters in Toronto after a van mounted a sidewalk, striking pedestrians on one of the city's busiest streets. Ten people were killed and 16 injured in the van attack. (Nathan Denette/Canadian Press)

Saunders said the year was challenging not only because of high-profile events that led to complex investigations, including the arrest of alleged serial killer Bruce McArthur, but also because of the demands of dailypolicing across the city.

This past year, he noted, there have been more shootings andgun seizures, particularly of handguns,than in mostprevious years. He said there has been an increase in major crime indicators.

The force, however, is hiring more police officers, special constables, auxiliaries and communicationcall-takers, and those additional people should make a difference, he said.

He said the force also hopes to improve its relationship with all communities in Toronto.

'No magic pill solution' to gun violence, chief says

"When we look at gunplay, there is no magic-pill solution," he said.

There have been 96 homicides in Toronto so far this year. The previous record for the most homicides in a single year was 89 set in 1991. (Christopher Katsarov/Canadian Press)

"We have to develop stronger community relationships with all segments of our community if we are going to get it right."

Bringing the homicide numbers down means rebuilding trust and restoring accountability, he said.

What is needed is "smarter policing" to prevent young men from picking up guns, analysis of the root causes of gun violence, and working in partnership with communities, he said.

"Developing the relationship piece is what's critical," he said."Every day, we'reseeing more guns. That's one aspect that has to be looked at. The second piece is what's motivating people to use a gun to resolve issues."

The vast majority of crimes are called into the police, he said. "If the community doesn't call, we can't solve crimes," he added. "Getting intelligence to deal with local issues, I think, is the way we need to go in order to get this right."

A total of 514 handguns were seized in 2018, he said. That was 222 more than in 2017 and 172 more than in 2016.

Most of the gun violence in Toronto is related to street gangs, and most people getting shot areliving high-risk lifestyles and are associated with street gangs, he said.

"You will never see an urban city that will have zero shootings and zero homicides," he said.

Gun violence, along with modernization of the force, will continueto be a majorpriorityfor the police next year,he said.

There were many 'lessons learned' from the Bruce McArthur investigation, Mark Saunders says. McArthur has been charged eight counts of first-degree murder. Police have declined to release his mug shot. (Bruce McArthur/Facebook)

As for the Bruce McArthurinvestigation, Saunders said there were "a lot of lessons learned" from the case, and that led to the establishmentof a missing persons unit.

"We knew that something stunk," he said.

Police added "high-level resources" to the investigation before McArthur was finally arrested, he said.

The trial ofalleged serial killer Bruce McArthur is scheduled tobegin on Jan. 6, 2020. He currently stands accused of eightcounts of first-degree murder.

Police service continues to modernize

In a brief overview of the year, Saunders said the force implemented a number of changes this year as it continuedto modernize.

It consolidatedunits, introducednew shift schedules, changedhow it responds to calls for help such as for gas station thefts and parking complaints, deployed kits with Naxolone(a drug that temporarily reverses an opioid overdose) to many front-line officers, and expandedaneighbourhood officer pilot program.

Public perceptions of safety changed after the van attack in April and the Danforth shooting in July, Toronto's police chief says. (Patrick Morrell/CBC)

Saunders also praised the individual "outstanding" work of officers across the city.

"They rescued people from drowning in an elevator. They've prevented suicides. They rescued people and pets from freezing water. They brought shoes to homeless people. They supported families by purchasing groceries. They walked into gunfights, knife fights, saved livesand continue to arrest when necessary."

Public 'stung' by 2 mass casualty events

But he saidgun violence continues to bea challenge, because the number of the guns coming into the city, and the police cannot "arrest our way out"of the problem.

He noted that the public perception of safety has changed in Toronto because of the van attack on Yonge Street in North York on April 23 and the Danforth shooting on July 22, butstressed that the city, as a large urban centre, continues to be safe.

"The general public really felt stung by the two mass casualties, back to back," he said.