logo
Fredericton adds 14 security cameras as part of additional community safety measures

Fredericton adds 14 security cameras as part of additional community safety measures

CTV News5 days ago

The City of Fredericton has appointed an oversight committee to ensure accountability and action on the recently unveiled recommendations in a Community Safey Task Force report.
The updates, presented during the City's Committee on Public Safety Thursday afternoon, include the appointment of the oversight committee. The initiative checks off the top recommendation of the Task Force's report.
The goal of the task force is to improve community safety in Fredericton by bringing together relevant stakeholders to look at areas like justice, policing, mental health, addictions, and homelessness.
The seven-member oversight committee includes officials from both municipal and provincial levels of government, Mayor Kate Rogers, Fredericton Police Chief Gary Forward, and Fredericton Chamber of Commerce Executive Director Morgan Peters.
The group will work on creating action plans and provide quarterly updates on progress to council through the Public Safety Committee.
Other measures include the installation of 14 additional security cameras around the city, bringing the overall total to 42 cameras around Fredericton.
The new cameras will be put at various high schools, the northside trail and crosstown trail, the Victoria Circle Roundabout, and in business districts. Locations were chosen based on crime trends as well as the input of the community and police force.
The Fredericton Police Force is also hoping to extend the Community Engagement Unit (CEU) beyond its six-month pilot period due to its success. The force is seeking an extension from the unit until the end of 2025.
The CEU was launched in February and is staffed by six retired officers who prioritized non-emergency calls like theft, mischief, and overall public assistance.
Between Feb. 3 and May 28, the CEU handled 523 lower-priority calls, freeing up frontline officers for an estimated 1,046 service hours.
For more New Brunswick news, visit our dedicated provincial page.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Motorcyclist dead after collision with bus and vehicle in Etobicoke
Motorcyclist dead after collision with bus and vehicle in Etobicoke

CBC

time14 minutes ago

  • CBC

Motorcyclist dead after collision with bus and vehicle in Etobicoke

Social Sharing A male motorcyclist has died after a collision with a bus and a vehicle in Etobicoke on Tuesday, Toronto police say. The collision happened in the intersection of Kipling Avenue and Steeles Avenue W. Police were called to the scene shortly after 7 p.m. In a post on X, police said the motorcyclist, an adult, was pinned under the bus then freed and taken to hospital in critical condition. He was pronounced dead in hospital. Police have closed the westbound lanes of Steeles Avenue W. and the northbound lanes of Kipling Avenue at Kidron Valley Drive as they investigate.

Crown concedes defence appeal in 1994 double murder days after charges against co-accused stayed
Crown concedes defence appeal in 1994 double murder days after charges against co-accused stayed

CBC

time26 minutes ago

  • CBC

Crown concedes defence appeal in 1994 double murder days after charges against co-accused stayed

The Crown has consented to a retrial for one of the men accused in a 30-year-old double murder, just days after abandoning the prosecution of a second man facing the same charges. In 2023 Leonard Cochrane, 55, was convicted of two counts of first-degree murder in the 1994 fatal shootings of Barry Buchart and Trevor Deakins. Cochrane appealed his convictions, but the case hadn't yet make it to a hearing. Instead the Crown conceded the defence appeal, citing a "disclosure issue," according to Cochrane's lawyer Balfour Der. The news comes after charges against Cochrane's co-accused, Stuart MacGregor, were dropped on Friday due to what the prosecution called "a significant issue with the evidence." Charges were laid in the once-cold case with the help of genetic genealogical investigative techniques. Investigators tracked down family members of the suspect, which ultimately led to Cochrane's arrest after his DNA was matched to blood found at the crime scene. "We're pleased with that decision [to concede the appeal], but we felt we had some good grounds of appeal to pursue on very novel points that no doubt would have found their way to the Supreme Court of Canada," said Der. Buchart, 26, and Deakins, 25, were killed in 1994 in their home in the southeast community of Radisson Heights. Both victims were shot at point-blank range. At the time, Buchart sold marijuana. In Cochrane's trial, the judge found that he was one of two masked men who broke into the victims' home on July 11, 1994, to steal drugs or money. Cochrane was arrested in 2020, MacGregor was charged three years later.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store