Wednesday, January 28, 2026
ADVT 
National

SHAMEFUL: Looters Taking Advantage Of B.C. Fires Are Typical At Natural Disasters- Expert

The Canadian Press, 14 Jul, 2017 12:35 PM
    VANCOUVER — As if the risk of losing their homes isn't enough, wildfire evacuees in British Columbia have faced the additional threat of looters searching through their belongings after they rushed to safety.
     
     
    Rob Gordon, a criminologist at Simon Fraser University in Surrey, B.C., says looting is an unfortunate but routine part of virtually every natural disaster, from fires to floods, hurricanes to earthquakes.
     
     
    "It's predatory behaviour of the worst kind," Gordon said, adding that looters are opportunists.
     
     
    "There is nothing especially organized. People just see a chance to make off with somebody else's possessions, and they'll do it if they can get away with it."
     
     
    The RCMP have arrested at least a dozen people accused of exploiting the disaster over the past week.
     
     
     
     
    Emergency officials have ordered thousands of residents to lock up and leave since the province declared a state of emergency on July 7 after hundreds of fires started across B.C.'s central and southern Interior.
     
     
    Gordon said looters are often locals who have had an eye on a particular house or business. Besides cash, the most likely items to be stolen are typically small, portable and easy to resell, such as electronics, jewelry and guns, he said.
     
     
    "There's a market in firearms," he explained. "And they're, generally speaking, quite easy to move."
     
     
    To help prevent looting, Gordon would like to see police train volunteer safety officers who would remain in their communities during an emergency, when it's safe to do so.
     
     
     
     
    "My betting is there would be a lot of people willing to go back into their communities to protect their property and the property of their neighbours," he said, comparing it to a volunteer firefighting program.
     
     
    "It's a model of emergency service which is already in place in many respects," Gordon said of auxiliary policing systems. "A lot of communities have them. The Gulf Islands have them. I'm just surprised that is not the case in the Interior."
     
     
    Quesnel Mayor Bob Simpson said he has been receiving reports of "fake fire marshals" knocking on doors telling residents their street is under an evacuation alert.
     
     
     
     
    "We believe that these are people potentially looking for opportunities to rob vacant homes," Simpson said.
     
     
    "Most of my thoughts are unprintable. I think it's unconscionable that these individuals take advantage of this situation."
     
     
    Swindlers are not necessarily always on the ground when emergencies hit. Evan Kelly of the Better Business Bureau warned about scam artists who set up fake crowdfunding websites to take money illegally.
     
     
    "It really comes down to the emotional aspect, and that's what scammers are trying to capitalize on here," he said, describing such cons as "the lowest of the low."
     
     
     
     
    Kelly encouraged people interested in donating online to contribute to charities that have registered with the Canada Revenue Agency. Door-to-door solicitors should be able to provide a tax receipt immediately without leaving the front step, he added.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Three People Dead After House Fire In Hamilton

    Three People Dead After House Fire In Hamilton
    The flames broke out shortly after midnight and when firefighters arrived, they found heavy smoke pouring from the house, fire officials said.

    Three People Dead After House Fire In Hamilton

    Justin Trudeau Rejects Call For Five Per Cent Tax On Broadband Internet Services

    Justin Trudeau Rejects Call For Five Per Cent Tax On Broadband Internet Services
    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is shooting down a parliamentary committee's recommendation that Ottawa impose a five per cent tax on broadband Internet services as a way to "level the playing field" in Canada's rapidly evolving news industry.

    Justin Trudeau Rejects Call For Five Per Cent Tax On Broadband Internet Services

    Asylum Claim Wait Times Could Hit Over 11 Years, Cost $2.97 Billion: Documents

    The Immigration and Refugee Board is already trying to whittle down its current backlog, but received no new money in the latest federal budget.

    Asylum Claim Wait Times Could Hit Over 11 Years, Cost $2.97 Billion: Documents

    Police Arrest Nine In Alleged Gaming, Money Laundering Crime Group In B.C.

    Police Arrest Nine In Alleged Gaming, Money Laundering Crime Group In B.C.
    Police in British Columbia say they have arrested nine people after breaking up a network they believe to be connected to illegal gaming houses and money laundering.

    Police Arrest Nine In Alleged Gaming, Money Laundering Crime Group In B.C.

    Store Clerk Credited For Protecting Senior

    Store Clerk Credited For Protecting Senior
    81-year-old man was defrauded of $1,500 by people claiming to be from the Canada Revenue Agency, who demanded that he pay a fictitious tax debt over the phone

    Store Clerk Credited For Protecting Senior

    Two Suspicious Deaths Are Suspected Overdoses: Vancouver Police

    Two Suspicious Deaths Are Suspected Overdoses: Vancouver Police
    Police say the deaths of two adults in an apartment in Vancouver appear to be fatal drug overdoses.

    Two Suspicious Deaths Are Suspected Overdoses: Vancouver Police