Summer safety tips

Summer safety tips

Halifax Regional Police are sharing some simple tips to keep in mind for summer safety.

If you’ll be away from home:

  • Inform a trusted neighbour, friend or family member that you will be away and ask that they keep an eye on your property. It’s also a good idea to leave your vacation destination and contact information so you can be reached in case of an emergency.
  • Ensure your windows and doors are locked before you leave.
  • Don’t announce your travel plans on your social networking sites. Also, sending updates while you’re away informs everyone that you’re not home. An unoccupied residence is much more vulnerable for break-ins.
  • Try to make it appear as though your home is still occupied while you’re away. For example, use a light timer and ask a neighbour to collect your newspaper.

When on the road or in your vehicle:

  • Help protect your property by ensuring your vehicle is locked at all times and never leave valuables in your vehicle, especially in plain view.
  • Never leave pets or children unattended in parked vehicles, even with the windows rolled down.
  • Fog or heavy rain can come on suddenly in our maritime weather, remember to always drive to current conditions.
  • Summer brings cyclists and pedestrians to our streets in higher numbers. Always use the 1m clearance rule when passing cyclists, stay mindful of crosswalks and avoid distractions when driving.

Some things to think about for your outdoor activities:

  • If you’re cycling this summer, remember that all cyclists must wear a helmet. It is against the law to not wear one. This legislation extends to the use of scooters, skateboards, in-line skaters and roller skates. A properly designed and fitted helmet reduces injury.
  • If you’re going for a hike, remember to plan ahead, dress appropriately, bring the right equipment (take your cell phone with you) and never head into the woods alone.
  • You are required by law to have a lifejacket or Personal Flotation Device (PFD) on board for each person on a watercraft. Practice safe boating this summer and throughout the year.

Think twice before leaving your loved ones in your vehicle this summer

With the summer weather finally here, RCMP and SPCA are encouraging motorists to think twice before leaving your pets and children in your vehicle for any amount of time.

In the time it takes to run a quick errand, the interior of vehicles can heat up fast – making it intolerable for pets and children. Nova Scotia RCMP’s Cpl. Jennifer Clarke and Sp. Cst. Jo-Anne Landsburg with the Nova Scotia SPCA demonstrated today how uncomfortable it can get inside a parked vehicle, proving temperatures can get high enough to seriously harm or kill a pet or child if left for too long.

“Each year, the RCMP in Nova Scotia responds to complaints of animals being left in vehicles,” says Cpl. Jennifer Clarke. “When the weather is warm, it’s best to leave your furry friend home or visit pet friendly establishments to avoid a potentially tragic outcome.”

According to the SPCA, signs that an animal could be in distress include:

  • Exaggerated panting
  • Rapid or erratic pulse
  • Anxious or staring expression
  • Weakness and muscle tremors
  • Lack of coordination
  • Red or blue tongue and lips
  • Convulsions or vomiting
  • Collapse or coma

Remember, if the animal is alert, standing upright and barking, they are likely not in distress. Here are things to do if you come across an animal in a vehicle that appears to be in distress:

  • Look for the owner of the car. Go to nearby stores and have the owner paged.
  • If you cannot locate the owner, call your local police and stay at the vehicle until police arrive. Do not contact police unless the animal is obviously distressed.
  • File a report with the Nova Scotia SPCA online or by calling 1-888-703-7722. Ensure that you obtain a license plate of the vehicle.

Racist graffiti in Berwick being investigated as Hate Crime

July 4, 2019, Berwick, Nova Scotia . . .  At 11 a.m. on July 3, Kington RCMP responded to a call of racist graffiti that was written on the road outside a person’s home on Maple Avenue. The RCMP went to the home and found that a word that is offensive was painted on the road. This was done in the overnight hours between 9 p.m. on July 2 and 11 a.m. today.

Police inquired with neighbours for information about possible suspects, and are now reaching out to the public for assistance. Anyone who has information about this incident is asked to contact Kingston RCMP at 902-765-3317. Should you wish to remain anonymous call Nova Scotia Crime Stoppers toll free at 1-800-222-TIPS (8477), submit a secure web tip at www.crimestoppers.ns.ca, or use the P3 Tips App.

Break & Enter Tatamagouche Elementary School

Colchester County RCMP are looking for assistance in identifying persons responsible for a Break and Enter into the former Tatamagouche Elementary School between the 20th of June, 2019 and the 26th of June, 2019. The unknown persons caused significant damage inside the school along with what appeared to be an attempt to start a fire in one of the hallways.

Police would like to speak to anyone who saw any suspicious activity in the area in that time period. Colchester District RCMP is requesting anyone with information to contact their office at 902-893-6820. Should you wish to remain anonymous, call Nova Scotia Crime Stoppers toll free at 1-800-222-TIPS (8477), submit a secure web tip at www.crimestoppers.ns.ca, or use the P3 Tips App. Police file# 2019949982 refers..

Help the RCMP solve Bible Hill arson

Help the RCMP solve an arson

July 2, 2019, Bible Hill, Nova Scotia . . . On July 1 at 8:20 a.m., Colchester District RCMP responded to a suspicious fire at a residence in Bible Hill Estates Trailer Park. A woman went to the home to pick up an item and when she opened the door, smoke poured from the building. She called 911. Bible Hill Fire Department responded to the scene and noted signs that the fire had been intentionally set. The home, located on Wild Chance Dr. was empty at the time and no one was injured.

Investigators believe that the fire was set between 10 p.m. on June 30 and 8:20 a.m. on July 1. Police would like to speak to anyone who saw any suspicious activity in the area in that time period. Colchester District RCMP is requesting anyone with information to contact their office at 902-893-6820. Should you wish to remain anonymous, call Nova Scotia Crime Stoppers toll free at 1-800-222-TIPS (8477), submit a secure web tip at www.crimestoppers.ns.ca, or use the P3 Tips App. Police file# 2019949982 refers.

RCMP investigates stolen truck from Peggy’s Cove

RCMP investigates stolen truck

July 2, 2019, Peggy’s Cove, Nova Scotia… Halifax District RCMP is investigating a stolen truck from a residence in Peggy’s Cove.

Between midnight and 4 a.m. on June 30, a white 2016 Dodge Ram 1500 truck was stolen from the driveway of a residence on Rocky Rd. The truck has 4 doors, a 6- foot box, a Line-X sticker in the back window and had the Nova Scotia licence plate # FM43214 attached to it. The truck was unlocked and the keys were left inside at the time of the theft.

Anyone with information about this incident is asked to contact Halifax District RCMP at 902 490-5020. Should you wish to remain anonymous, call Nova Scotia Crime Stoppers toll free at 1-800-222-TIPS (8477), submit a secure web tip at www.crimestoppers.ns.ca, or use the P3 Tips App.

File # 19-91337

 

La GRC enquête sur un vol de camion

 Le 2 juillet 2019, Peggy’s Cove (Nouvelle-Écosse) – La GRC du District d’Halifax enquête sur le vol d’un camion dans la cour d’une résidence à Peggy’s Cove.

Entre minuit et 4 h le 30 juin, une camionnette Dodge Ram 1500 2016 blanche a été volée dans la cour d’une résidence du chemin Rocky. Il s’agit d’une camionnette à quatre portes, avec boîte de 6 pi. Un autocollant Line-X figure sur la fenêtre arrière. Le numéro qui figurait sur la plaque d’immatriculation au moment du vol était FM43214. Les portes du camion n’étaient pas verrouillées et les clés se trouvaient à l’intérieur au moment du vol.

On demande à toute personne qui possède de l’information au sujet de cet incident de communiquer avec la GRC du District d’Halifax au 902 490-5020. Si vous désirez conserver l’anonymat, vous pouvez également communiquer avec Échec au crime Nouvelle-Écosse en composant le 1-800-222-8477, en remplissant le formulaire sécurisé à www.crimestoppers.ns.ca ou en utilisant l’application de soumission de renseignements P3.

Dossier : 19-91337

 

Trafficked at a Club When She Was 19—And It Could Happen to *Anyone*

This Woman Was Trafficked at a Club When She Was 19—And It Could Happen to *Anyone*

Sydney Loney   2019-01-31

A recent photo of Markie Dell, now 26. She was trafficked as a teenager when a co-worker invited her to a night out at a club in Toronto, a ploy to put the 19-year-old in her debt. Dell was forced to make her pimps $1000 a day by dancing at strip clubs—and worse. (Markie Dell)

The club was big. It had two floors and, that night, it was packed. Although the room was dark, lights flashed and were reflected in mirrors along the walls. The air was stale and smelled of drugs. On one of two stages, Markie Dell danced to hip hop songs and stared straight ahead. She let the lights blind her, trying to ignore the breath of unknown men on her bare legs as they leaned toward her on the stage.

It was the spring of 2011. The tall 19-year-old with long legs, dyed-black hair and freckles muted by a fake tan was being forced to strip at a club in Niagara Falls, Ont., as she had been for the past five months—but that night, Dell saw a chance to escape.

She had confided in a client who promised to help her and she knew he was parked out on the street. When she noticed that the two women assigned to watch her were busy giving dances, Dell realized it might be her only chance. Dancers aren’t allowed near the front door, but as soon as her set was over, out the front door she ran, still in her eight-inch heels and pale pink two-piece outfit.

“I was so scared. There was always someone watching and I didn’t know what would happen if they caught me. I ran right through the crowd of men waiting to get in, and I didn’t look back.”

Her client drove her to a motel down the road. But Dell soon discovered that her rescuer was no fairy-tale knight in shining armour—and that her ordeal was only just beginning.

Human trafficking isn’t what you think it is

Many people have human trafficking confused with human smuggling, which is the illegal entry of a person into a country; trafficking actually means controlling a person for the purpose of exploiting them. Usually, that exploitation is sexual and the person being exploited is a woman or child.

If you ask most Canadians, they’d say they’re horrified that trafficking exists, but relieved that we live here, where things like that don’t happen. After all, other nations call us “nice.” This isn’t the kind of place where men and women entrap teenagers, then move them from city to city, buying and selling them as modern-day sex slaves. Or one where people discover that it’s happening—and don’t do anything about it.

But Canada is exactly that kind of place.

Over 90 percent of the girls being trafficked in Canada were born here, and experts suspect there are thousands of them. (Because trafficking is a hidden crime that’s tough to track—and was only recognized as a criminal offence in Canada in 2005—there are no definitive national numbers.) The average age at which exploitation begins is 13; the average age of rescue, if a girl is rescued at all, is 17. Given the statistics we do have, you’d think there’d be a massive public outcry. But this is the kind of problem we’d prefer to pretend doesn’t exist, although that’s getting harder to do.

Human trafficking is now the fastest growing criminal industry in the world. It’s very lucrative, and business is booming, says Shae Invidiata, founder of Free Them, a Toronto-based anti-trafficking organization that has helped rescue 500 victims (and counting). “One girl in Canada can make a pimp $300,000 a year,” Invidiata says. “It’s happening everywhere. Whenever I give a talk at a high school, someone will come up to me and say, ‘I didn’t know this is what it was called, but I think it’s happening to my friend.’”

Also watch: ‘Girl epidemic’ highlights human trafficking (Provided by CNN)

Click to expand

‘Girl epidemic’ highlights human trafficking

This past December alone, a 29-year-old man was arrested in Yellowknife for trafficking a woman from Saskatchewan; three men (two 18, one 20) were arrested for allegedly luring and prostituting a 14-year-old girl in hotel rooms across southern Ontario; and in Calgary, police were searching for a 29-year-old woman who, with three teenage boys for accomplices, held a woman captive and forced her to have sex with 10 different men over five days.

It’s gotten to the point where, last February, the Edmonton Police Service changed the name of its Vice unit, which historically referred to a police unit charged with investigating “moral crimes,” including gambling, the illegal manufacture or sale of alcohol and adult entertainment, to the Human Trafficking and Exploitation Unit. “Traditional ‘vice’ work is not what we do now,” says staff sergeant Dale Johnson. “It’s all sex industry and trafficking.”

How a girl gets trafficked

Just over a year ago, the Edmonton Police Service arrested a man in Edmonton who had previously served time for drug trafficking, but had expanded his business. After forming a relationship with an underage girl by plying her with new clothes, makeup and promises of a future together—a so-called grooming process that often only takes a couple of weeks—he pimped her out to men more than twice her age. “We believe that, while he was in jail, the accused learned that selling women is potentially easier, more profitable and more covert than selling drugs,” says Cory Kerr, a detective in the Unit.

The youngest victim they’ve rescued so far was 13, the oldest was in her 30s. “It can happen to anyone who finds themselves in a vulnerable spot and falls victim to a persuasive personality,” Johnson says. “I’ve seen intelligent, articulate, self-aware women who suddenly find themselves in situations they could never have imagined.”

Girls and young women from all socio-economic backgrounds are hunted in malls, coffee shops, movie theatres, outside their schools and, increasingly, online. “Don’t fool yourself into thinking this couldn’t be your sister, your daughter, your niece,” Invidiata says. There have been cases where girls were picked up from school, still in their uniforms, pimped out, then dropped off at home. They may be too afraid or ashamed to tell anyone, or may not even realize they’re being exploited.

Also watch: Actress AnnaLynne McCord fights to end human trafficking (Provided by Breakfast Television)

“I told people, ‘I’m new, I don’t want to do this,’ but no one cared”

Dell was trafficked within 24 hours. Already vulnerable (she was a shy kid with few friends and had been sexually exploited by her boss at a part-time job when she was 16), she was waiting tables in her hometown of Hamilton, Ont. when a coworker she didn’t know well told her she seemed cool, and invited her to a party in Toronto.

Dell came from a relatively sheltered, middle-class family. She had never heard of trafficking and didn’t know what a pimp was. She was living with her father at the time, but the relationship was rocky. Her mother had left home three years earlier and her dad, always “the cool parent,” had become really strict. “I just packed a bag and didn’t even tell him where I was going,” Dell says. Her new “friend,” a Black woman with a blonde weave, perpetually polished nails and a penchant for crop tops who we’ll call Kayla, picked Dell up in a rental car. They drove to Kayla’s apartment, where they were joined by a couple of her friends, had a few drinks and got ready to go to a club. It seemed like a fun, typical night out, but the next morning, Kayla turned ugly. She informed Dell that she owed her $600 for the car rental, the club entry and the drinks—and she got angry when Dell said she didn’t have the money.

Also watch: Ticket agent rescues teen girls from suspected trafficking plot (Provided by People)

Ticket Agent Rescues Teen Girls from Suspected Trafficking Plot

Break and enter suspect outsmarted by safe

June 27, 2019, Greenwood, Nova Scotia . . . Employees of a local Greenwood business came to work on June 26 to find the front door smashed and the company’s safe left in the entryway of the building. The safe was not unlocked or compromised in any way. Surveillance video shows a man approaching the shop on foot, then looking inside for a few minutes. He then tried to pry the door open and eventually smashed the window. The man was wearing camouflage pants, brown boots, a blue sweater, yellow gloves and had a white mask covering his face. He was also carrying a flashlight and a pry bar.

Anyone with information about this break and enter is asked to call Kings District RCMP in Kingston at 902-765-3317. Should you wish to remain anonymous call Nova-Scotia Crime stoppers toll free at 1-800-222-TIPS(8477), submit a secure web tip at www.crimestoppers.ns.ca, or use the P3 Tips App.

Police Investigate Robbery in Fairview

Police Investigate Robbery – Halifax

At 11:30 p.m., 25 June, Halifax Regional Police responded to a report of a robbery that occurred earlier in the evening at 6:30 p.m., near Main Avenue / Dutch Village Road Halifax.  The victim was walking at when two unknown males grabbed the victim from behind and removed a chain and medication.  The victim sustained minor non-life-threatening injures and was treated at that hospital.  The suspects fled on foot in an unknown direction.

The suspect description is limited to Unknown white males, one wearing a black long sleeve shirt.

Investigators with the General Investigation Section are asking anyone with information about this incident to call police at 902-490-5016.  Anonymous tips can be sent to Crime Stoppers by calling toll-free 1-800-222-TIPS (8477), submitting a secure web tip at www.crimestoppers.ns.ca. Police file:  18-89091

Police looking for female shoplifter

Police seek assistance in identifying three women responsible for thefts in Dartmouth

Police are asking for the public’s assistance in identifying three women who are believed to be responsible for thefts in Dartmouth.

At approximately 9:10 p.m. on May 6 police received a report of a theft that had occurred at the Twiggz store in the Mic Mac Mall located at 21 Micmac Boulevard. Three women entered the store selected numerous jackets before running out of the store.  A staff member followed the women and observed them getting into a white car that was waiting for them.

The women are described as follows:

1) A black woman, approximately 25-years-old with her hair in a bun, wearing sunglasses, light brown hooded jacket, pale blue/white jeans and white sneakers.

2) A black woman, wearing sunglasses, a headscarf, black jacket, blue jeans and sneakers.

3: A black woman wearing sunglasses, a headscarf, pink or red hooded jacket, black trousers, and black shoes.

Investigators are asking anyone who has information about their identity or this incident to call police at 902-490-5020. Anonymous tips can be sent to Crime Stoppers by calling toll-free 1-800-222-TIPS (8477), submitting a secure web tip at www.crimestoppers.ns.ca or using the P3 Tips App. Police File:  19-63627

The subjects of interest are: