United Conservative Party leader Jason Kenney said that’s a large part of the problem with rural crime – that offenders are released or lost in the system.
“One solution it seems is to clear up the back log in the court system, which may require more judges and prosecutors,” said Kenney.
It’s also time to create a greater police presence in rural Alberta, he said. Current response times can sometimes be over an hour in the country.
He said the UCP’s task force, created jointly with the federal Conservatives, is consulting with victims of crime, prosecutors, police and other stakeholders to find solutions to the problem.
Rural property crime in Alberta has at least doubled over the past two or three years and it needs to stop, he said. It’s becoming more dangerous, as residents become fed up and fearful – just recently homeowner Edouard Maurice is charged after RCMP received reports of shots fired at a rural property on Feb. 24. He allegedly encountered two individuals rummaging through his vehicles, and in the ensuing confrontation, a firearm was discharged an unknown amount of times.
Kenney said the first duty of government is public safety, and the provincial and federal governments must both do everything possible to provide timely police protection to people who are victims of crime and reduce rural crime rates.
“Property thefts are becoming break-and-entries, which are becoming home invasions, which are becoming increasingly violent,” he said. “And now, people are starting to take the law into their own hands.”