Pubdate: Wed, 27 May 2015 Source: Metro (Calgary, CN AB) Copyright: 2015 Metro Canada Contact: http://www.metronews.ca/Calgary Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4471 Author: Anna Brooks Page: 11 RISE IN SHOOTINGS WORRIES POLICE Calgary police voiced their concerns Tuesday about rising numbers of drive-by shootings and gun violence this year in Calgary. "I hate for people to live in fear, but it's a reality we have to address," said Quinn Jacques with the Calgary Police Service guns and gangs unit. "We're accountable. We have to find out why it's happening and take steps to deal with it." Regardless of whether these shootings are random or targeted, Jacques said one of his biggest worries is an innocent bystander getting hit. The most recent example of this was seen on Sunday when a man driving in the Rundle area of northeast Calgary was hit by a bullet that flew through the back window of his vehicle. While Jacques said investigators don't yet know if it was a random hit or a targeted attack, the incident was only a millimetre away from being a homicide. "That's what scares me the most," Jacques said. "It's very alarming when errant shots are ending up in someone's home when they're sound asleep." Coupled with the uptake in drive-by shootings are increases in the number of firearms in Calgary. Jacques said in the past, police used to recover either drugs or guns in criminal investigations, but now the two seem to go hand-in-hand. "Where there are guns, there are drugs. That concerns us," he said. "A couple of years ago, it would be uncommon to find firearms present with drugs. Now it's almost exclusive." In January, shots were fired from a vehicle into a home in the Rundle community of Calgary; only a month later, another drive-by saw shots fired into a vehicle in Marlborough. Jacques said police have no new information and are still investigating Sunday's shooting. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom