Close X
Monday, November 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

Vancouver Police Say New Program Could Stop Crime Before It Happens

The Canadian Press, 21 Jul, 2017 03:03 PM
  • Vancouver Police Say New Program Could Stop Crime Before It Happens
VANCOUVER — The Vancouver Police Department says it will be the first in Canada to start using a new crime-prediction model that could stop crimes before they happen.
 
 
The department says the computerized model allows officers to forecast the location of property crime and take measures to prevent it.
 
 
Full-time use of the new program follows a six-month pilot study last year that police say contributed to a substantial decrease in residential break-ins.
 
 
The department says in a news release that the program identifies areas where residential or commercial break-ins are anticipated, sets up 100- and 500-metre zones around the targeted sites and sends officers to the zones for a visible presence to deter thieves.
 
 
The program is built on an interactive mapping tool developed by the police department in 2015 that enhanced public awareness of police activity in the city.
 
 
A version of the program retroactively plots the location of crimes on a map to provide a general idea of crime trends to the public.
 
 
Vancouver's Chief Constable Adam Palmer says the department is always looking for ways to reduce property crimes.
 
 
"This new predictive technology gives our front line officers one more tool to use to supplement our traditional policing methods," he says in the release.

MORE National ARTICLES

Driver Dies After Collision On Boundary Road In Vancouver, Passenger Injured

Driver Dies After Collision On Boundary Road In Vancouver, Passenger Injured
Vancouver Police are investigating a single vehicle collision on Boundary Road that has claimed the life of the driver, and the passenger has been rushed to hospital with life-threatening injuries.

Driver Dies After Collision On Boundary Road In Vancouver, Passenger Injured

Firefighters Battle Blaze In Industrial Area Of Richmond, B.C.

The RCMP says it is assisting the fire department in Richmond, B.C., with a structure fire on Mitchell Island that is affecting traffic on a major bridge that connects the community to Vancouver.

Firefighters Battle Blaze In Industrial Area Of Richmond, B.C.

B.C. Woman Says Drug Users Hold Solution To Growing Overdose Crisis

B.C. Woman Says Drug Users Hold Solution To Growing Overdose Crisis
Karen Ward, a board member of the Vancouver Area Network of Drug Users, was among about 20 drug users who joined doctors, including the provincial health officer, and the chief coroner at the all-day meeting Friday

B.C. Woman Says Drug Users Hold Solution To Growing Overdose Crisis

NDTV Raids: India Doesn't Require Lesson On Freedom Of Press From New York Times Says CBI

NDTV Raids: India Doesn't Require Lesson On Freedom Of Press From New York Times Says CBI
The CBI has responded strongly to a New York Times editorial on the NDTV raids, calling it “one-sided” and asserting India does not require “any lesson” on freedom of the press from the US daily.

NDTV Raids: India Doesn't Require Lesson On Freedom Of Press From New York Times Says CBI

Two Minors Charged With Sexual Assault After Incident At Whitecaps Facility In Burnaby, B.C

Two Minors Charged With Sexual Assault After Incident At Whitecaps Facility In Burnaby, B.C
BURNABY, B.C. — The Vancouver Whitecaps say two minors have been charged with sexual assault after an incident at the team's training facility in Burnaby, B.C., last week.

Two Minors Charged With Sexual Assault After Incident At Whitecaps Facility In Burnaby, B.C

Everything You Wanted To Know About Victoria's New Indo-Canadian Police Chief DEL MANAK

Everything You Wanted To Know About Victoria's New Indo-Canadian Police Chief DEL MANAK
Del Manak replaces Frank Elsner, who resigned after investigation into inappropriate messages

Everything You Wanted To Know About Victoria's New Indo-Canadian Police Chief DEL MANAK