Regina Leader-Post

Even Canadian government not immune from automobile thefts

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The federal Liberals are trying to crack down on a scourge of auto thefts across the country, even as the government is struggling to keep its own vehicles away from thieves, new data show.

Documents tabled in the House of Commons on Monday show 48 government vehicles from 14 department­s and agencies were stolen between January 2016 and February of this year.

Vehicles were reported stolen in Saskatchew­an, British Columbia, Alberta, Manitoba, Quebec and Nunavut. Ontario is the province where the largest proportion of vehicles were nabbed, including 10 in Ottawa, where most of the federal government is based, and two in the Toronto area.

The official vehicle of the minister of justice was stolen three times between 2021 and 2023.

Perhaps unsurprisi­ngly given the number of vehicles in its fleet, the RCMP was hit the hardest. All told, 19 of its vehicles were taken, mostly in the Prairie Provinces.

Parks Canada had seven vehicles stolen, Agricultur­e and Agri-food Canada reported four stolen and the Canada Border Services Agency and Indigenous Services Canada each had three taken.

The Canadian Food Inspection Agency and Fisheries and Oceans Canada, which includes the Canadian Coast Guard, each had two vehicles stolen.

The documents say of the four dozen stolen vehicles, two were stolen more than once and 34 have been recovered.

An Equite Associatio­n report prepared for a national auto theft summit organized by the federal government in February found more than 70,000 cars were stolen in 2023, based on an analysis of police data from across the country.

It found between 2021 and 2023, the number of stolen vehicles climbed 58 per cent in Quebec, 48 per cent in Ontario and 34 per cent in Atlantic Canada.

Police say while as many as onethird of stolen vehicles are being resold within Canada.

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