Close X
Thursday, December 12, 2024
ADVT 
National

Edmonton Police To Create Own Counter-terrorism Unit To Work With RCMP

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Apr, 2015 09:09 PM
    EDMONTON — The police force in Alberta's capital city is setting up its own counter-terrorism unit.
     
    Edmonton police Chief Rod Knecht says he's going to bring in officers from other departments such as intelligence analysis and community outreach, but won't say how many officers the new group will include.
     
    "It's going to be a situation of consolidating those resources, leveraging them and getting them focused on a single mandate," Knecht told reporters Tuesday.
     
    Some city police already work with the RCMP as part of its Integrated National Security Enforcement Team (INSET) in Alberta. The RCMP has the same teams in Vancouver, Toronto, Ottawa and Montreal to investigate terror threats.
     
    Knecht doesn't believe Edmonton is a breeding ground for radicalization, but said the city has seen an increase in terror-related cases.
     
    Last month, Mounties charged a 17-year-old boy from the Edmonton area with terror-related offences for allegedly planning to travel outside Canada to fight with Islamic State militants.
     
    Several young Canadians have already travelled to the Middle East to fight for the Islamic State in Iraq. A national security report said last year that more than 130 individuals were abroad and suspected of terror-related activities.
     
    The Canadian Somali Congress of Western Canada wrote to Prime Minister Stephen Harper last fall warning that young people in Alberta were being recruited to join the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant.
     
    Knecht said terror investigations are piling up in Edmonton and other jurisdictions across the country.
     
    "Everybody's busy: the RCMP is busy. CSIS is busy,. We're busy. But we're working together and dealing with the priorities as they surface."
     
    He said his new unit will "complement" the RCMP and hopefully work out of the same building as INSET officers.
     
    A spokeswoman with Calgary police says the service doesn't have a named counter-terrorism unit but it does have three officers who work solely on terrorism cases, in addition to officers assigned to INSET.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ontario Police Ordered To Pay $345K After Not Keeping Identity Of Informant Confidential

    Ontario Police Ordered To Pay $345K After Not Keeping Identity Of Informant Confidential
    TORONTO — A judge has ordered an Ontario police force to pay $345,000 to a woman who was found to have been repeatedly harassed after an officer released her identity as a confidential informant.

    Ontario Police Ordered To Pay $345K After Not Keeping Identity Of Informant Confidential

    Ultimate Road Trip: Edmonton Hockey Fan On Quest To See 30 Games In 30 Nights

    Ultimate Road Trip: Edmonton Hockey Fan On Quest To See 30 Games In 30 Nights
    Edmonton hockey fanatic Rob Suggitt is on an ultimate sports road trip — 30 games in all 30 National Hockey League arenas over 30 consecutive nights.

    Ultimate Road Trip: Edmonton Hockey Fan On Quest To See 30 Games In 30 Nights

    Bureaucrats To Use Honour System When It Comes To Archiving Instant Messages

    Bureaucrats To Use Honour System When It Comes To Archiving Instant Messages
    OTTAWA — While controversy swirls around Hillary Clinton for deleting tens of thousands of emails in a personal account she used while serving as U.S. secretary of state, the Canadian government has based its own approach to officials' private text messages on the honour system.

    Bureaucrats To Use Honour System When It Comes To Archiving Instant Messages

    Mackay To Review The Case Of Convicted Quebec Judge Asking For New Trial

    MONTREAL — Federal Justice Minister Peter MacKay says he'll carefully examine a request to review the case of the only Canadian judge ever convicted of first-degree murder.

    Mackay To Review The Case Of Convicted Quebec Judge Asking For New Trial

    U.S. Border Patrol Agent Fatally Shoots Man Near Town On U.S.-Canada Border

    U.S. Border Patrol Agent Fatally Shoots Man Near Town On U.S.-Canada Border
    SUMAS, Wash. — A U.S. Border Patrol agent fatally shot a man Tuesday afternoon near Sumas, Washington, near the border with British Columbia.

    U.S. Border Patrol Agent Fatally Shoots Man Near Town On U.S.-Canada Border

    New Rules For Tailings Ponds Based On Findings From Mount Polley Collapse

    New Rules For Tailings Ponds Based On Findings From Mount Polley Collapse
    VANCOUVER — The disastrous collapse of the Mount Polley mine tailings pond in B.C.'s Interior last year has spurred new provincial environmental requirements for similar operations.

    New Rules For Tailings Ponds Based On Findings From Mount Polley Collapse