Close X
Thursday, September 26, 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

    Victims Angry After Convicted Pedophile Gordon Stuckless Sentenced To 6.5 Years

    Victims Angry After Convicted Pedophile Gordon Stuckless Sentenced To 6.5 Years
    TORONTO — A Toronto courtroom erupted in shouts of anger Thursday when a man who has pleaded guilty to 100 charges for the crimes he committed against 18 young boys decades ago was sentenced to six and a half years in prison.

    Victims Angry After Convicted Pedophile Gordon Stuckless Sentenced To 6.5 Years

    Searchers Scour Remote Area Of B.C.'s Sunshine Coast For Missing Young Man

    Searchers Scour Remote Area Of B.C.'s Sunshine Coast For Missing Young Man
    Sunshine Coast RCMP Const. Harrison Mohr says the young man fell into the rapids early Wednesday afternoon.

    Searchers Scour Remote Area Of B.C.'s Sunshine Coast For Missing Young Man

    B.C. Justice Branch Says Nurses, Pharmacists Ok To Help In Assisted Dying

    B.C. Justice Branch Says Nurses, Pharmacists Ok To Help In Assisted Dying
    VANCOUVER — When Dr. Ellen Wiebe performed her first assisted death of a new legal era on Tuesday, she did it without the help of a nurse.

    B.C. Justice Branch Says Nurses, Pharmacists Ok To Help In Assisted Dying

    Nova Scotia Doctor Charged With Trafficking Oxycodone Pleads Not Guilty

    Nova Scotia Doctor Charged With Trafficking Oxycodone Pleads Not Guilty
    Lawyer Stan MacDonald says he entered the pleas on behalf of his client Wednesday in Bridgewater provincial court.

    Nova Scotia Doctor Charged With Trafficking Oxycodone Pleads Not Guilty

    Winnipeg Cancer Patient Says Parking Meters Getting In The Way Of Treatments

    Winnipeg Cancer Patient Says Parking Meters Getting In The Way Of Treatments
    Collin Kennedy says has been battling a form of leukemia for 17 years, all the while paying for parking.

    Winnipeg Cancer Patient Says Parking Meters Getting In The Way Of Treatments

    Former RCMP Officer Breaks Down Remembering Starved Diabetic Boy

    Former RCMP Officer Breaks Down Remembering Starved Diabetic Boy
      Emil Radita, 59, and his wife Rodica Radita, 53, have pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder in the death of 15-year-old Alexandru, who weighed less than 37 pounds when he died in Calgary in 2013.

    Former RCMP Officer Breaks Down Remembering Starved Diabetic Boy