Close X
Tuesday, November 26, 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

Members Of Surrey Creep Catchers Face Assault Charges: RCMP

Members Of Surrey Creep Catchers Face Assault Charges: RCMP
Police say Ryan LaForge is charged with one count of assault and one count of uttering threats related to an alleged incident on April 3

Members Of Surrey Creep Catchers Face Assault Charges: RCMP

Justin Trudeau To Ask Pope To Apologize Over Residential Schools

Justin Trudeau To Ask Pope To Apologize Over Residential Schools
OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is expected to ask Pope Francis to issue a formal apology for the role of the Catholic Church in the residential school system.

Justin Trudeau To Ask Pope To Apologize Over Residential Schools

Halifax Police Rescue Dogs From Sweltering Car, Give Owner Steep Fine

Halifax Police Rescue Dogs From Sweltering Car, Give Owner Steep Fine
HALIFAX — It was Halifax police who let the dogs out — and then fined their owner almost $1,750 for allegedly leaving them in a sweltering car.

Halifax Police Rescue Dogs From Sweltering Car, Give Owner Steep Fine

Ontario Teacher Who Had Sexual Encounters With Students Sentenced To Two Years

Ontario Teacher Who Had Sexual Encounters With Students Sentenced To Two Years
Jaclyn McLaren pleaded guilty on March 7 to two counts of sexual exploitation, two counts of luring, possession of child pornography and making explicit material available to people under 18 and people under 16.

Ontario Teacher Who Had Sexual Encounters With Students Sentenced To Two Years

Nanaimo Police Recover Body Believed To Be Missing Teen, Now Treating Case As Homicide

NANAIMO, B.C. — Police say they have recovered what they believe is the body of a 16-year-old girl who was reported missing almost two months ago in Nanaimo, B.C.

Nanaimo Police Recover Body Believed To Be Missing Teen, Now Treating Case As Homicide

Vancouver Developer Fined, Banned From Trading After Investor Loses $1 Million

Vancouver Developer Fined, Banned From Trading After Investor Loses $1 Million
VANCOUVER — The B.C. Securities Commission has ordered a real estate developer to pay a fine of $125,000 after a hearing concluded he defrauded a client for part of a $1-million investment in a project that failed.

Vancouver Developer Fined, Banned From Trading After Investor Loses $1 Million