Pubdate: Wed, 31 Jan 2007 Source: Lindsay Daily Post (CN ON) Copyright: 2007 Lindsay Daily Post Contact: http://www.thepost.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2333 Author: Jason Bain, Daily Post Reporter CHARGES UP 24 PER CENT IN 2006 Traffic, Drug Enforcement Accounts for Spike: Chief LINDSAY-OPS TWP. -- The number of criminal charges in Lindsay and the former Ops Township jumped by about 24 per cent last year - a good thing, according to the local chief of municipal police. Beefed-up drug and traffic enforcement has played a major role in the increase of 464 from 1,916 total charges in 2005 to 2,380 in 2006, City of Kawartha Lakes Police Service Chief John Hagarty said Tuesday. Last year's statistics were made public at Monday's police services board meeting, where the number of individual offenses and other numbers are presented every month along with those from previous years for comparison. The additional officers hired last year have enabled the municipal police service to put more emphasis on proactive efforts, Hagarty said, such as cracking down on illegal drugs and those who do not drive safely. "We want to have an impact on our community," he said. The anticipation is that doing this will affect other statistics proportionately and the chief said the proof is already in the numbers. Although front line officers wrote some 1,234 more traffic tickets in 2006 than in 2005 - a jump of a 97 per cent - the number of motor vehicle collisions on area roads decreased by 78, or 19 per cent, from 497 in 2005 to 419 in 2006. "Whether they will level out at some point, I don't know...but I don't believe they will come back to the numbers they were before," Hagarty said of traffic tickets. The service has also bumped up its fight against the illegal drug trade, which Hagarty said affects the number of crimes like theft and break and enters. "It requires them to turn to crime to support their habit, which affects us all," he said. Again, the statistics are already reflecting results. Although the number of total drug charges fell from 208 in 2005 to 185 in 2006, so did the number of break and enters and theft under $5,000. Break and enters fell from 278 in 2005 to 217 in 2006, a drop of 28 per cent. Although theft over $5,000 charges increased from 55 in 2005 to 70 in 2006, theft under $5,000 charges fell from 870 in 2005 to 779 in 2006, a drop of 12 per cent. It will be interesting to see in the coming years if the total number of drug crimes drops, Hagarty said, calling that a sure sign drug traffickers are actually getting the message and are taking their trade elsewhere. "You would have to think that at some point that number will come down," he said. "It will never be eliminated...but it shouldn't be as successful as it has been in the past." Having more officers has also allowed the service to spend significantly more time on foot patrols in the downtown, which also now includes the bike unit launched July 1. This move has allowed officer to be more vigilant in enforcing liquor laws, Hagarty said. Charges such as having alcohol readily available while driving, drinking underage and drinking in public increased from 261 in 2005 to 451 in 2006, a difference of 73 per cent. Fraud charges were also down to 241 in 2006 from 273 in 2005. Charges on the rise in 2006 over 2005 included those involving young offenders (from 299 to 464), assaults (from 592 to 694) and mischief (from 448 to 543). The total number of incidents investigated by the police service was also up slightly, to 12,520 incidents in 2006 from 12,451 in 2005. In 2004, the service probed 14,540 different cases. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake