Windsor Star

Police forces create unit for offender management

- BRIAN MACLEOD bamacleod@postmedia.com

A new joint Offender Management Unit — a co-operative effort between the Windsor and Lasalle police services — has already paid dividends in chasing down people who are not adhering to compliance conditions since it started on March 11, police say.

“Over its first three weeks, this dedicated team completed over 14 compliance checks, leading to the arrest of eight offenders and arrest warrants issued for three other non-compliant individual­s,” police said in a release.

“The offenders arrested for breaching their conditions had originally been charged with or convicted of serious violent crimes including murder, attempted murder, robbery, firearms offences, and sexual assault.”

Windsor police Insp. David Deluca and Lasalle police Deputy Chief Jason Woods outlined how the program works Thursday at police headquarte­rs in Windsor.

“This allows us to focus on community safety and really make people accountabl­e,” said Deluca. “These individual­s were released with very strict conditions.”

The Offender Management Unit is responsibl­e for monitoring highrisk individual­s placed under house arrest, curfew, or electronic monitoring.

The joint initiative is effective because criminals are not limited to any one community, said Woods.

“Just because they reside in Windsor does not mean that they won't travel to other communitie­s. … Partnering together like this ensures that we will blanket the area and … we can utilize each other's strengths.”

The provincial government provided the joint initiative $2.2 million over three years as part of a $112-million investment to help police track and monitor repeat and violent offenders who are released on bail.

Windsor has dedicated two fulltime members of the unit, Lasalle has one full-time sworn member and one part-time member. The unit will operate out of Windsor police headquarte­rs.

While the two police services regularly work together, the funding makes it easier for the two services to dedicate resources to the unit, said Woods.

While the unit will focus on high-risk offenders, anyone with stringent bail conditions may be monitored.

“Some individual­s are released with much more stringent conditions,” said Deluca. “We as a unit are attempting to touch every single individual and if someone needs a little more attention, absolutely they'll get a little more of our attention.

“The officers that are assigned to this unit get to know all of the individual­s on the list very well now. So it makes it much more efficient.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada