Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Toronto Homicides Reach Record High Not Seen Since 1991

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Nov, 2018 01:12 PM
    Toronto's latest shooting marked a grim milestone for Canada's most populous city on Wednesday as it brought the number of homicides this year to a record high not seen for nearly three decades.
     
     
    Police said gunshots fired in the city's west end early Wednesday led to the 89th documented homicide of 2018, matching the all-time high for killings recorded in a calendar year that was set in 1991.
     
     
    Acting Insp. Hank Idsinga, current head of the force's homicide unit, acknowledged that Toronto seems to be on pace to eclipse the previous record as it wrestles with a spike in gun-related deaths and said police share public concern about the figures.
     
     
    "The goal is to have no homicides, and the goal is to have 100 per cent solve rate if we do have homicides," Idsinga told The Canadian Press. "It's an ongoing battle."
     
     
    Population growth, some unusual incidents and solve rates, however, have to be taken into account, he said.
     
     
    Idsinga noted that while the homicide rate has remained relatively static in the years since 1991, it has been greatly outstripped by population growth. The city boasted 2.3 million residents in 1991, compared to a population of 2.7 million as of the 2016 census.
     
     
    Both 1991 and 2018, Idsinga added, were somewhat unusual for featuring a number of multiple homicides.
     
     
    In 1991, the city saw a series of multiple fatalities in and around its Chinatown neighbourhood, Idsinga said, attributing some of the slayings to conflicts between Asian gangs.
     
     
    Gang warfare appears to have played a role so far in 2018 too, Idsinga said, though two other multiple homicides have done more to drive up the numbers.
     
     
    Ten people were killed on a single afternoon in April when a man allegedly drove a rental van down a crowded stretch of Yonge Street in the city's north end. Alek Minassian is now facing 10 first-degree murder charges in that case.
     
     
    In July, police said Faisal Hussain opened fire in the bustling Danforth neighbourhood, killing two people and injuring 13 others before he shot himself and was found dead.
     
     
    While methods used in homicide cases vary, Idsinga said the manner in which people are killed has little to do with how the force approaches its investigations.
     
     
    "There's still 89 victims of murder," he said. "There's still 89 cases that have to be investigated. If we start breaking them up into events as opposed to cases, we'd probably be changing the numbers going back decades."
     
     
    The city's 89th homicide was the latest in what Idsinga described as a noticeable increase in deadly shootings this year.
     
    Police were called to the city's west end after receiving reports of gunshots. Det. Sgt. Mike Carbone said they found 22-year-old Youhannes Brhanu with multiple gunshot wounds in the driver's seat of a vehicle. Brhanu was taken to hospital where he was pronounced dead.
     
     
    Carbone appealed for witnesses to the crime, saying between 10 and 20 shots appeared to have been fired from four guns.
     
     
    Police data tracking fatal gunfire over the past five years shows there have been 46 firearm-related homicides so far in 2018, the highest on record during that time period. Data showed 35 deadly shootings on record last year, 34 the year before, and a low of 20 in 2013.
     
     
    Figures in Toronto are in keeping with national data Statistics Canada released earlier this year. The agency found gun crime has increased steadily over the past four years with rates in some areas climbing by as much as 47 per cent.
     
     
    Idsinga said the addition of 200 officers on night shifts has helped address gun violence in the city, noting the homicide solve rate — a fluid figure that changes day to day — currently stands at around 70 per cent.
     
     
    He said police have also been receiving more tips and overall co-operation from the public.
     
     
    "People in the city are generally pretty fed up with it, and they're picking up the phone and calling us," he said.
     
     
    He encouraged residents to continue doing so and urged them to view the city they live in as a safe place, noting other urban centres of comparable size often register hundreds of homicides in a given year.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    WWF Says Global Wildlife Populations Declined 60 Per Cent, Demands Action

    WWF Says Global Wildlife Populations Declined 60 Per Cent, Demands Action
    TORONTO — Canadian wildlife are not exempt from a "global biodiversity crisis" that is devastating worldwide animal populations, according to a stark new report by the World Wildlife Fund.

    WWF Says Global Wildlife Populations Declined 60 Per Cent, Demands Action

    Incumbent B.C. Mayor Wins Election Decided By Pulling A Name Out Of A Box

    PEACHLAND, B.C. — The winner of the mayor's race in Peachland, B.C., has been decided by a pulling a name from a box because the top two candidates remained tied after a judicial recount on Monday.

    Incumbent B.C. Mayor Wins Election Decided By Pulling A Name Out Of A Box

    Alberta Appeal Court Upholds Sentence Of Man For Kidnapping, Cutting Off Thumb

    Alberta Appeal Court Upholds Sentence Of Man For Kidnapping, Cutting Off Thumb
    EDMONTON — Alberta's highest court has upheld a 12-year sentence for a man who cut off his victim's thumb during an abduction.

    Alberta Appeal Court Upholds Sentence Of Man For Kidnapping, Cutting Off Thumb

    Children Of Canadians Need Rescue From Syria, Group Tells Federal Government

    Children Of Canadians Need Rescue From Syria, Group Tells Federal Government
    OTTAWA — A group representing Canadians being detained in Syria is urging the federal government to work for the release of several Canadian infants and children under the age of six held there.

    Children Of Canadians Need Rescue From Syria, Group Tells Federal Government

    Abstaining From Pot Improves Memory, Ability To Learn In Young Users: Study

    Abstaining From Pot Improves Memory, Ability To Learn In Young Users: Study
    TORONTO — Researchers say a month of abstaining from cannabis leads to improved memory in adolescents and young adults who are regular users of weed.

    Abstaining From Pot Improves Memory, Ability To Learn In Young Users: Study

    Government Ushers In Pay Equity Legislation For Federally Regulated Workers

    Government Ushers In Pay Equity Legislation For Federally Regulated Workers
    In 2017, Canadian women earned 88.5 cents for every dollar a man earned, as measured in hourly wages for full-time workers, according to government figures.

    Government Ushers In Pay Equity Legislation For Federally Regulated Workers