If you don't live in Canada, you may not know what's been going on. We are not happy about being the number one dangerous city in Canada. Our Mayor is in Ottawa. Our Premier met with extortion victims and was horrified with what they told him.
Remember when we went from the Royal Canadian Mounted Police to our Surrey Police Services. We don't have helicopters or a dog squad. Many of the officers that were hired to our new police force had a lot of experience are close to retirement. They won't work the streets! The union agreement says two officers to every police car and I have NEVER seen that happen. They don't have enough boots on the ground!
Premier David Eby put the Surrey Police Service and police board under a microscope Tuesday during a meeting with Surrey business leaders related to the ongoing extortion crisis plaguing South Asian businesses and residents in this city. There will be a change of the guard with five of eight Surrey Police Board directors getting replaced after their terms expire. Board chairman Harley Chappell confirmed this Tuesday afternoon.
This is from a local newspaper:
Patience has worn thin on the extortions front as pressure from Surrey Police Board directors came to bear on Chief Constable Norm Lipinski at its November 13 meeting. During that meeting director Bilal Cheema noted there’s “a lot of angst” in the community. “There’s a lot of worry, there’s a lot of fear. What concerns me is that when I hear the chief of our police tell me that we’re reaching our capacity I don’t feel that the criminals are reaching their capacity and that concerns the hell out of me.” Cheema said at the November board meeting people are asking him for answers and he doesn’t know what to tell them. “I feel ashamed,” he said. “I sit on the Surrey Police Board and they expect me to have answers – I don’t have answers, and I bet some of my colleagues don’t have answers either.” Eby on Tuesday expressed concern about “inconsistent communications” between the extortion task force and the Surrey Police Service to the community. “These inconsistent communications result in the community feeling that everybody is not on the same page, that they’re not all working together, that they’re not coordinated on the number-one issue in their lives,” he said.
If you watched the news, the Surrey Police Force announced the apprehension of three foreign nationals who shot at a residence in Crescent Beach. It was another extortion warning. What they didn't tell you is they didn't catch them. Thanks to the RCMP and the Delta Dog Squad they were caught! The Surrey Police Service lied to the citizens of Surrey! They don't tell you that on the news.
This police transition isn't going well. Hopefully the Premier will admit it was a mistake and give us back the Royal Canadian Mounted Police! We are paying a lot of more in policing and getting a lot less for our tax dollars! There are changes coming in the law that will help but you have to catch these people first!
Here is the press release from Mayor Brenda Locke:
Ottawa – Mayor Brenda Locke is in Ottawa this week to press for additional support to address the national extortion crisis. This will be her number one priority during her meetings with federal ministers, senior officials and municipal leaders.
“The extortion crisis has devastated families, shaken businesses, and put communities across the country on edge,” said Mayor Locke. “While recent steps from the federal government, such as the announcement of up to 20 additional RCMP officers, are encouraging, more needs to be done. This is a national emergency, and it requires a full-scale national response.”
Mayor Locke will reiterate her call to appoint a Commissioner for Extortion Violence Against Canadians to oversee the implementation of key measures, including:
- Immediate deployment of additional RCMP, federal organized crime units, and intelligence resources to Surrey
- Federal RCMP leadership of a joint federal-provincial-municipal task force with authority to act rapidly on extortion-related violence
- Expedited removal of non-citizens charged or convicted of extortion, firearms offences, or participation in extortion-related criminal activity
- Review of legislative gaps and recommendations to strengthen police capacity for arresting, charging and prosecuting offenders
- Quarterly public reporting on the severity of extortion-related activity and progress in addressing the crisis
“Three years in, we’re finally seeing movement from other orders of government, but the crisis is far from over,” Mayor Locke said. “My message in Ottawa will be simple: We cannot allow organized crime to continue threatening our city’s residents and business owners. We need decisive action now.”


