Lethbridge Herald

Taber men facing charges following ALERT investigat­ion

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Authoritie­s say they have broken a rural break-in ring that trafficked in stolen guns and cars that was based in Taber but operated throughout southern Alberta.

At a Wednesday morning press conference in Medicine Hat, two folding tables displayed 63 long guns that police say were seized in raids of three locations last month. In total, $200,000 worth of allegedly stolen goods were seized including seven vehicles and constructi­on equipment.

Five suspects face a total of 76 charges related to breakins in at least nine smaller communitie­s.

Taber Police Chief Graham Abela told reporters “some” of the suspects were “well known to police” and the area RCMP detachment.

He said the help of regional forces and the Alberta ALERT unit were critical in seeing the investigat­ion through.

“We’re a small organizati­on and when we reached out, ALERT was there,” said Abela, later adding “this will have a huge impact in our community.”

Shawn Boser of the ALERT’s Southeast Alberta property crime unit, which is based in Medicine Hat, said the partnershi­p played a key role in the widespread investigat­ion.

“We’ve been successful in targeting and ultimately disrupting a group of individual­s that were terrorizin­g small communitie­s with thefts and property crime offences,” said Boser.

“Widespread theft like this has a huge impact on community safety and especially in rural communitie­s it shakes the sense of security.”

Police believe the guns were trafficked to other criminal groups but did not expand on how long the operation was going other than to say it was well-establishe­d.

The investigat­ion began in mid-July, said the Taber Police Service.

The raid was conducted on Sept. 11 and police had spent the last month cataloguin­g the items and returning all but the firearms to rightful owners.

Police say the goods came from break-and-enter robberies in a host of smaller communitie­s, including Taber, Vauxhall, Bow Island, Seven Persons, Stirling, Vulcan, Coaldale and Barnwell. Some property was traced to as far north as Sundre, north of Calgary.

Four of the five men have been formally charged and have appeared in Lethbridge provincial court, said police.

Dustyn McCracken, 20, of Taber, is still at large, though warrants have been issued for his arrest including one for fleeing police.

He faces 15 charges in total, including possessing and traffickin­g stolen property, and theft of a motor vehicle.

Jason Pizzati, 46, of Taber, remains in custody and is charged with eight counts of possessing the proceeds of crime, six firearms traffickin­g offences and 17 counts of traffickin­g stolen goods.

Greg Kosowan, 72, faces nine counts in total related to firearms traffickin­g and two counts of possessing the proceeds of crime.

Cornelius Wolf, 38, is charged with attempted fraud and possession of stolen goods.

Heinrich Wolf, 35, is charged with altering a vehicle’s VIN identifier and forgery.

It is not immediatel­y clear when they will next appear in court.

 ?? Alberta Newspaper Group photo by Collin Gallant ?? Police officials discuss an investigat­ion that resulted in 63 guns and a total of $200,000 in property being seized last month, during a press conference at Medicine Hat Police Headquarte­rs on Wednesday.
Alberta Newspaper Group photo by Collin Gallant Police officials discuss an investigat­ion that resulted in 63 guns and a total of $200,000 in property being seized last month, during a press conference at Medicine Hat Police Headquarte­rs on Wednesday.

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