Ontario's carjacking task force announces 109 vehicles recovered, dozens of arrests since last fall - Action News
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Toronto

Ontario's carjacking task force announces 109 vehicles recovered, dozens of arrests since last fall

In the first major update since the inception of Ontario's carjacking task force, Toronto police Supt. Steve Watts called the results "very successful."

Results mark first major update since task force's inception last year

A Toronto Police cruiser at on Glencairn Avenue crossing Bathurst Street on October 12, 2023.
Toronto police said the provincial carjacking task force helped arrest 89 people, lay 554 charges and recover 109 vehicles since last September. (Michael Wilson/CBC)

The province's carjacking task forcehelped arrest89 people, lay 554charges and recover 109 vehicles since forming last year, Toronto police announced Thursday.

In the first major update since its inception, Supt. Steve Watts,of organized crime enforcement, called the results, which date back to Sept. 21, "very successful."

"We continue to see a concerning rise in violence related to auto thefts that the PCJTF(Provincial Carjacking Joint Task Force) will continue to address," he said in a news release.

"Across the GTA, members of the task force are successfully disrupting the networks responsible for high-risk auto thefts and holding those who are responsible to account."

The task force was officially announced in Octoberamid a marked rise in violent auto thefts and break-and-enters in the GTA. It is co-led by the Toronto Police Service andOntario Provincial Police, but has members from forces throughout the region, including Peel, York, Halton and Durham police.

Itwas created to "disrupt the networks responsible for high-risk auto thefts, which increasingly involve violence, firearms and other weapons," according to Toronto police's website. Stolen vehicles are used to carry out other crimes, or are shipped and resold domestically and overseas.

Violent incidents related to auto crimes occurring in Ontario haveincreased over the last several years, Toronto police said, though the number of carjackings in Toronto decreased in 2023 compared to the year before. Last year, there were more than 300 carjackings in the GTA, with over 200 of those occurring in the city.

"Through this ongoing collaboration, we are confident that we can identify and dismantle the organized crimegroups that are responsible for the recent spike in serious vehicle crimes," saidOPPDet. Supt.Paula Milne, adding forces are working with partners likequitAssociation and the Canada Border Services Agency.

Police said people can take several steps to protect themselves andprevent home invasions and carjackings, including:

  • Parking vehicles in garages.
  • Keeping driveways well-lit, with exterior lights on all night.
  • Installing a home security system.
  • Putting security film on glass windows and doors.
  • Having multi-point door locks.
  • Keeping backyard gates locked and ground windows secured.
  • Locking the doors and activating the alarm on your key fob to create noise anddeter thieves if you see someone coming toward your vehicle.
  • Being wary of intentional rear-end collisions as a way for thieves to jump inside the vehicle and leave the scene, and documenting the incident if onetakes place.
  • Driving to the nearest police station if you suspect you're being followed.
  • Complying with demands if approached by armed suspects, then calling police when it is safe to do so.
WATCH |CBC News finds Toronto man's car in Ghana:

CBC finds Toronto man's stolen car in West Africa

1 year ago
Duration 2:00
CBC's David Common informs Len Green that his stolen car has been found in Ghana, 8,500 kilometres from Toronto, where it first went missing a year ago.

Brampton mayor calls for help from feds

Brampton Mayor Patrick Brown said authorities in the GTA have done "everything we can" to stop auto theft and is calling on the federal government for help.

He said he and Peel Police have been conducting "robust advocacy" toward the federal government aimed at stiffening auto theft charges in the Criminal Code and boosting audits at ports, particularly the Port of Montreal, to help catch stolen cars before they'reshipped overseas.

He said he hopes to expand on these points at a national summit on combating auto theft in Ottawa next month.

"The principal difference is screening. The principal difference is sentencing. We need to make sure there is teeth in sentencing and we need to make sure that we have security at our ports," he said.

There's "no single solution to this complex problem,"saidJean-Sbastien, a spokesperson for Dominic LeBlanc, the minister of public safety, democratic institutions and intergovernmental affairs, in an email.

"Only through cooperation and ideas from across jurisdictions will we see results. We look forward to seeing Mayor Brown at the Summit, and working with him and communities across the country to identify solutions and put them into action."

With files from Greg Ross and Vanessa Balintec