Pubdate: Fri, 29 Oct 2004 Source: Fort Saskatchewan Record, The (CN AB) Copyright: 2004 The Fort Saskatchewan Record Contact: http://www.fortsaskatchewanrecord.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/824 Author: Chris Munkedal SPIKE IN PROPERTY CRIME DRUG RELATED Incidents are linked Fort Saskatchewan Record -- A rash of thefts from motor vehicles that caused the property crime rate to increase is linked to drugs, says the acting RCMP detachment commander. Property crimes increased after thefts from motor vehicles more than tripled last month, says Sgt. Sam Hewson. "This is drug related. There's a drug connection." Police statistics, gathered last month, show property crimes went up four per cent from the 2003 September total, but the majority of that increase comes from a 76 per cent spike in theft under $5,000 incidents from motor vehicles. September saw 41 vehicle break-ins compared to 10 in 2003 for that month. Hewson says more than 30 of the incidents are linked. Police have a suspect in custody connected to the recent bout of thefts. The details about the suspect cannot be released at this time because it is an ongoing investigation, says Hewson. He says the vehicle thefts occurred over a three-week time span, then stopped. "We still get them, but the ones that have been very active for the time, have been caught. Most of them are related." Car stereos, and identity theft, which includes driver's licenses, credit cards, are targeted in the incidents, notes Hewson. "When you get a huge jump, like (last month), generally it's a person or a group that's doing that." Hewson says it is not rare to see such a large increase, when dealing with numbers that are small in comparison to other communities. The statistics are constantly changing, which means they are not an exact representation of all crimes, but are an indication of trends, says Hewson. "Quite often people who commit property crimes will do them in a run. You'll see a bunch of [break and enters], and then we find who did it and that's why it stops." Hewson notes suspects go on a binge and steal from vehicles to look for cash, or items they can sell for cash, to support their drug habits. "At the same time they steal identification. If you have your wallet in the car, they'll take that, and use the wallet to say, get a cellphone account, obtain a credit card, purchase items, and use your identification as ID for themselves." Local insurance broker Tony Farnese says he has not seen an increase in claims for broken into and damaged vehicles. "A lot of people don't report this stuff because it's minor. I have not seen a spike in the claims I've been hearing--I haven't noticed anything like that." "But I don't think that's the real issue here," says Farnese. "There is a drug problem out there, and I think, in most cases it's one angry young person who goes out and commits these crimes to support his or her habit, and that's the real tragedy." Hewson says residents can take precautions to help deter the crimes from happening to them. "Lock your vehicle up," he says. "Don't leave valuables in the vehicle." Stereos were the targets in the recent incidents he says. "So, removable face plates--take them out." Hewson notes residents can protect themselves through a strong sense of community. "Know your neighbour. Watch out for each other." - --- MAP posted-by: Josh