Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Mr. Chair, I came here this morning interested to hear from the ministers about what the Liberal government is going to do, is planning to do or is doing to reduce auto theft in this country.
Auto theft has been a major problem in Canada, and we have seen, for as long as the Liberal government has been in power, a dramatic uptick. If you were to graph auto thefts in this country, you would see that auto thefts were trending down to 2015, and at that point there's a shift from trending down to trending upward, with dramatic increases in the last number of years.
I recently had the opportunity to sit down with the acting chief for my hometown of Barrhead, an RCMP officer, just to have a discussion around auto theft, what the trends are and what some examples are of the problems we have in our neighbourhood around auto theft. It was very interesting to have a meeting with him.
He brought a particular case along with him. He said that this individual had likely stolen 15 cars in the last 10 years, had been charged 148 times, had been convicted 43 times and had the remainder of those charges basically dropped or plead out. He complained about the fact that this was a revolving door. He also noted that the bail system was completely broken and was causing a dramatic amount of.... This was one individual they had charged 148 times. He lives in our community, and a disproportionate amount of police resources goes into policing one individual.
He told me that multiple vehicles had been stolen by this individual while he was out on bail. He was arrested in possession of a stolen vehicle, was put in jail, was released on bail and was awaiting his trial, only to steal multiple more vehicles. He said that there was a bundling, and by the time the court date came, the prosecution would bundle all the charges together. He would plead guilty to some in order for the other ones to just disappear. Therefore, the possession of stolen property, which he was charged with multiple times, would get bundled together because he was arrested for it the first time, arrested the next time and the next time, but he hadn't had the court date for the first arrest; therefore, by the time he made it to court, they would just take multiple charges, bundle them together and enter into a plea deal around all of that.
The police officer was telling me that this gentleman has spent four out of the last 10 years in prison, all related to auto theft, but, interestingly, was never once charged with auto theft. He was charged with possession of stolen property, so that's an interesting feature.
I said to the police officer that it seemed interesting, and I asked why they weren't charging him with auto theft. He said that the trouble with the courts right now is that you have to prove the individual stole the vehicle.