Canada is among the world’s top 10 targets for auto theft, with Canadian vehicles regularly popping up at international ports of entry, according to a new Interpol report.
Out of 137 countries connected to Interpol’s stolen motor vehicle database, Canada regularly ranks among the top 10 with the most thefts, the international policing organization said.
More than 200 Canadian cars have been found scattered across the world each week since the RCMP integrated its stolen vehicle database with Interpol’s in February, the international police agency said.
Interpol’s stolen motor vehicle database holds data on 12 million vehicles worldwide and is linked to 137 countries. Police from member countries can use the database as a resource to determine if a suspicious vehicle has been reported as stolen. In 2023, approximately 226,000 vehicles globally were identified through the database as stolen.
“Stolen vehicles are international criminal currency. Not only are they used to traffic drugs, but also as payment to other criminal networks as well as fueling activities from human trafficking to terrorism,” Interpol Secretary General Jürgen Stock said in the statement.
Auto Theft in Canada
Auto theft has become prolific in Canada in recent years, including a rise in organized crime-led car-jackings and vehicle theft-related home invasions. Ottawa has described the operations as “highly lucrative” and “highly sophisticated” with auto theft rings operating coast-to-coast.The acceleration in thefts prompted a meeting of political leaders, law enforcement, and industry stakeholders in the nation’s capital in February to discuss ways to stem the number of cars being stolen and shipped abroad.
Since then there has been a crackdown by police in the GTA with several busts publicized in recent months.
The Provincial Carjacking Joint Task Force, led by Toronto Police and the Ontario Provincial Police (OPP), focused on violent vehicle-related crimes in and around the Toronto region, making arrests and recoveries between September 2023 and March 2024, the police announced last month.
An auto theft ring bust in May resulted in more than 300 charges being laid by Peel Regional Police after recovering 369 vehicles worth $33.2 million.