Thursday, December 18, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. City Wants To Inject High-Risk Offenders With GPS Tracking Devices

The Canadian Press, 25 Feb, 2016 12:06 PM
    VANCOUVER — A British Columbia community hopes to take the extraordinary measure of injecting high-risk and prolific offenders with GPS tracking devices in order to curb a crime problem.
     
    City council in Williams Lake has voted unanimously in favour of a motion to support tracking criminals' movements 24 hours a day by implanting microchips into their arms.
     
    Coun. Scott Nelson says the technology can be purchased from a U.S. company and the city will seek federal and provincial approval to use the device on people designated high-risk or prolific offenders by the RCMP.
     
    Nelson says a recent incident involving a man who stole a teen's bike at gunpoint in a local park highlights the need for strong action to help his community feel safer.
     
    Williams Lake RCMP Insp. Milo MacDonald says he appreciates the city's efforts to tackle crime but he's not aware of any law that would allow officers to use the microchips.
     
    Micheal Vonn of the B.C. Civil Liberties Association says the idea is a non-starter that the federal government would never approve it on constitutional grounds.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Zika Not Only Bug Of Concern To Travellers - Mosquitoes Also Carry Other Viruses

    Dengue, chikungunya and yellow fever can also be harboured by the Zika-carrying Aedes mosquitoes that are endemic in Central and South America, many Caribbean countries, Mexico and parts of the southern U.S.

    Zika Not Only Bug Of Concern To Travellers - Mosquitoes Also Carry Other Viruses

    Inquiry Must Address Spectrum Of Violence Against Indigenous Women: Activist

    Inquiry Must Address Spectrum Of Violence Against Indigenous Women: Activist
    OTTAWA — An Ojibway activist is calling on the federal government to include domestic abuse in a forthcoming inquiry exploring the issue of missing and murdered aboriginal women.

    Inquiry Must Address Spectrum Of Violence Against Indigenous Women: Activist

    Marc Garneau Has 'Mixed Feelings' About Bombardier News, Skirts Questions On Bailout

    Marc Garneau Has 'Mixed Feelings' About Bombardier News, Skirts Questions On Bailout
    Transport Minister Marc Garneau says he has mixed feelings about Bombardier Inc.'s announcement of 7,000 job cuts, along with a deal to sell planes to Air Canada.

    Marc Garneau Has 'Mixed Feelings' About Bombardier News, Skirts Questions On Bailout

    Fun, Food And Booze: Newfoundland And Labrador's Two-year Healthy Life Gap

    Fun, Food And Booze: Newfoundland And Labrador's Two-year Healthy Life Gap
    B.C. Health Minister Terry Lake said at least some of his province's generally better fitness is due to the "West Coast Effect."

    Fun, Food And Booze: Newfoundland And Labrador's Two-year Healthy Life Gap

    Alberta Battling Ezra Levant's Online News Outlet Over Legislature Access

    Alberta Battling Ezra Levant's Online News Outlet Over Legislature Access
    The Alberta government is battling an online news outlet over access to the legislature and has asked a recently retired journalist to review its media policy.

    Alberta Battling Ezra Levant's Online News Outlet Over Legislature Access

    New Brunswick Judge To Decide Today Whether To Grant Dennis Oland Bail

    New Brunswick Judge To Decide Today Whether To Grant Dennis Oland Bail
    Dennis Oland will learn today if he'll walk out of a Fredericton courthouse free on bail, or go to prison to await the appeal of his second-degree murder conviction.

    New Brunswick Judge To Decide Today Whether To Grant Dennis Oland Bail