Close X
Saturday, September 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Police In New Brunswick Searching For Stolen Trailer Filled With Frozen Lobster

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Jul, 2016 01:36 PM
    CARAQUET, N.B. — Police in New Brunswick are asking the public to be on the lookout for a stolen trailer loaded with frozen lobster.
     
    Caraquet RCMP say video surveillance from a processing plant in Grand Anse shows a dark-coloured Volvo transport truck taking off with the tractor trailer Friday night. The unmarked trailer is 16 metres long and has Nova Scotia licence plates.
     
    "I don't know if they thought they were going to have a big barbecue for Canada Day weekend," Cpl. Jayson Hansen said in an interview. "There had to be some degree of planning, but it's hard to know how much."
     
    Hansen is warning seafood lovers to steer clear of deals that seem too good to be true, saying possession of any stolen good is a crime.
     
    "If someone is selling lobster out of a truck at low market value, it should be a hint that they should be suspicious," he said.
     
    He says police are not disclosing the value of the pilfered lobsters because it might encourage illegal sales, but that the amount is more than $5,000.
     
    The incident is the latest in a series of crustacean capers in the Maritimes.
     
    According to police in Newfoundland and Labrador, nearly 50 kilograms of lobster were taken from a fishery in Lourdes in May.
     
    In Nova Scotia, RCMP say 48 crates of live lobster, more than 2,100 kilograms, were stolen from an outdoor pound at a business on Cape Sable Island in January.
     
    The theft followed a similar incident late last year, when 14 crates of lobster were stolen from a secure compound on Morris Island near Yarmouth.
     
    "Any valuable commodity is a target for thieves, whether it's beer, garden implements or something else," Hansen said. "Lobster is a high value item and it's conveniently packed in boxes."
     
    Hansen says police are intent on catching the lobster-nappers, but he can't speak to how well the trailer's contents will be preserved. 
     
    "It's probably not something that's going to be returned to the market," he said. "It's not going to sit in an evidence locker."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Two More Warrants For Drug Ring Operating From Chilliwack To Fort St. John, B.C.

    Two More Warrants For Drug Ring Operating From Chilliwack To Fort St. John, B.C.
    21-year old Le Hoang-Duy Vo and 27-year old Andrew Vithna Va each face a charge of possession for the purpose of trafficking. 

    Two More Warrants For Drug Ring Operating From Chilliwack To Fort St. John, B.C.

    32 Year Old Suspect Arrested For Property Theft In Kamloops City

    32 Year Old Suspect Arrested For Property Theft In Kamloops City
    At 5 am on May 25th Kamloops RCMP received numerous reports of a suspicious male carrying items near the riverbank behind Clifford Avenue on the North Shore.

    32 Year Old Suspect Arrested For Property Theft In Kamloops City

    Elderly Women Kicked, Punched, In Separate Random Attacks In Vancouver

    Elderly Women Kicked, Punched, In Separate Random Attacks In Vancouver
    An 84-year-old woman suffered a broke elbow and remains in hospital after being kicked to the ground while sitting on her walker just before noon.

    Elderly Women Kicked, Punched, In Separate Random Attacks In Vancouver

    Elderly Elephant That Vancouver Woman Stood By Dies In Tokyo Zoo At 69

    TOKYO — An elephant that set off a petition drive inspired by a Vancouver blogger to move her out of her concrete pen in a small zoo in Japan died Thursday at age 69.

    Elderly Elephant That Vancouver Woman Stood By Dies In Tokyo Zoo At 69

    Photo Of Halifax Cop Chatting With Panhandler Gets Much Love On Social Media

    Photo Of Halifax Cop Chatting With Panhandler Gets Much Love On Social Media
    The photo shows a uniformed officer sitting casually on the sidewalk with his legs outstretched, chatting with a panhandler on Spring Garden Road.

    Photo Of Halifax Cop Chatting With Panhandler Gets Much Love On Social Media

    Canadian Hurricane Forecasters Predict More Normal Storm Season In Atlantic

    Canadian Hurricane Forecasters Predict More Normal Storm Season In Atlantic
    HALIFAX — The Canadian Hurricane Centre says the 2016 hurricane season will see more normal storm activity as the effects of El Nino begin to dwindle.

    Canadian Hurricane Forecasters Predict More Normal Storm Season In Atlantic