Close X
Friday, November 8, 2024
ADVT 
National

Arrests are 'futile' to curb crime: B.C. minister

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Oct, 2022 01:56 PM
  • Arrests are 'futile' to curb crime: B.C. minister

VICTORIA - British Columbia's attorney general says the government has no plans to arrest its way out of the province's crime issues because it won't work.

Murray Rankin says fighting crime by arresting more people is "futile," and the government is instead considering a range of options to keep people safe.

Opposition Liberal Leader Kevin Falcon told the legislature that the government has continued a "catch-and-release" policy where repeat offenders are quickly freed from custody despite being accused of violent crimes.

He points to the government's own commissioned prolific offender report that cites increasing incidents of violent crime in communities throughout the province.

Falcon says the government has the power to direct Crown prosecutors to detain more people accused of violent crimes, but it has not taken that measure.

The government said last month it would begin implementing some of the two dozen recommendations in the report that concluded repeat offenders and random crime is causing "incredible distress" in communities.

Rankin says he is travelling to Ottawa in the coming days to meet with federal Justice Minister David Lametti to address the issue.

MORE National ARTICLES

Canada's military should be better equipped: Joly

Canada's military should be better equipped: Joly
Speaking at the University of Toronto's Munk School of Global Affairs and Public Policy, Joly said there are new challenges on the world stage after Russian President Vladimir Putin decided to start a war against Ukraine.     

Canada's military should be better equipped: Joly

B.C. wildfire service to increase prevention work

B.C. wildfire service to increase prevention work
B.C.'s budget released last month allocated $145 million over three years for Emergency Management BC and the BC Wildfire Service to kick-start the province's transition to a more "proactive approach" to wildfire preparedness and response.

B.C. wildfire service to increase prevention work

A man allegedly pushed a stranger down a flight of stairs at a downtown SkyTrain station

A man allegedly pushed a stranger down a flight of stairs at a downtown SkyTrain station
One of the suspects followed the victim to the SkyTrain entrance and pushed him down a flight of stairs. As the victim was laying on the ground, the suspect allegedly kicked the victim before a passersby intervened. The suspect fled the area before police arrived.    

A man allegedly pushed a stranger down a flight of stairs at a downtown SkyTrain station

Poll suggests wide worries about inflation

Poll suggests wide worries about inflation
Four-fifths of respondents to the Leger poll had started or planned to buy cheaper items at the grocery store to save on food bills, and cut back on how much food they throw out to stretch every dollar.

Poll suggests wide worries about inflation

Hate crimes up 37 per cent in 2020: StatCan

Hate crimes up 37 per cent in 2020: StatCan
New data from Statistics Canada show the number of hate crimes reported to police across the country went up 37 per cent in the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic compared with the previous year. The agency says 2,669 hate crimes were reported in 2020 — the highest number since comparable data became available in 2009.

Hate crimes up 37 per cent in 2020: StatCan

NACI favours Pfizer over Moderna vaccine for kids

NACI favours Pfizer over Moderna vaccine for kids
The National Advisory Committee on Immunization has released new guidelines that favour giving kids a Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine over the newly approved Moderna version. Health Canada approved Moderna's pediatric COVID-19 vaccine for kids ages six to 11 on Thursday.

NACI favours Pfizer over Moderna vaccine for kids