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B.C. attorney general says increasing arrests to fight violent crime won't work

VICTORIA — More arrests are "futile," British Columbia's attorney general says as he rebuffed criticism of government policies on repeat offenders and violent crime across the province.
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B.C. Attorney General Murray Rankin looks on as Premier John Horgan speaks at the Legislature, in Victoria on March 30, 2022. Rankin says fighting crime by arresting more people will be "futile," and the government is considering a range of options to keep people safe. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chad Hipolito

VICTORIA — More arrests are "futile," British Columbia's attorney general says as he rebuffed criticism of government policies on repeat offenders and violent crime across the province. 

Murray Rankin told the legislature on Tuesday that increasing arrests is not the answer to battle crime.

His statement comes despite a recent government-commissioned report citing police and probation officers saying repeat offenders "are emboldened to continue offending, deteriorating community confidence in the justice system."

The minister said the New Democrat government is focused on resolving the issue of violent crime, but concentrating only on arresting more people won't work.

"We are committed to ending the cycle of reoffending and keeping people from becoming offenders in the first place," said Rankin. "Simply arresting people out of the situation we know is going to be futile. We need to do so much more and that is what we're doing."  

He said the government is considering a range of options to keep people safe, including consulting widely with communities, law enforcement officials and mental health and addictions service providers. 

Rankin said placing people under arrest for alleged crimes is part of the justice process, but not the primary function of the system.

"It's a necessary but not sufficient response to a problem that's extraordinarily complex," he said.

Opposition Liberal Leader Kevin Falcon told the legislature the government's ongoing "catch-and-release" policy where repeat offenders are quickly freed from custody despite being accused of violent crimes has created fear for residents in cities from Vancouver to Terrace.

"Criminals emboldened by the lack of enforcement of this government, and four violent random attacks in Vancouver every single day," he said."Most recently a young woman in Vancouver followed into her apartment, thrown on the ground and assaulted by a young man. Just the other day."

The Vancouver Police Department said in an Oct. 3 news release that bystanders stopped a stranger attack on a 29-year-old woman in the lobby of her downtown apartment.

The government's own commissioned prolific offender report released last month cites incidents of violent crime throughout B.C., and frustrations of law enforcement officers arresting alleged criminals only to see them back on the streets.

The report cited an unprovoked machete attack last July on two people in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside. It also included a report of an unprovoked attack in July of a man who violently knocked down a woman and a toddler.

The report by former Vancouver deputy police chief Doug LePard and Amanda Butler, a criminologist specializing in mental health and addiction, made 28 recommendations.

The report said police enforcement, aggressive prosecution and longer sentences won’t address the problem of violent crime, but also says official crime statistics may not provide an accurate picture of crime trends in B.C.

The report states: "In Terrace, the mayor and a councillor reported, 'The stats don't tell the truth. Crime isn't going down. It's the worst it's ever been. People aren't reporting because there's no point because they're out so fast.'" 

Falcon said the government has the power to direct Crown prosecutors to detain more people accused of violent crimes, but it has not taken that measure.

Rankin said he is travelling to Ottawa in the coming days to meet with federal Justice Minister David Lametti to address the crime issue. 

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 4, 2022.

Dirk Meissner, The Canadian Press