Windsor Star

Toronto police arrest 18 in global high-end car theft ring

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Toronto police said they made a dent in a significan­t global car theft ring after arresting 18 people and laying 640 charges in a series of city-wide raids.

The organizati­on, which allegedly lifted $30 million worth of high-end vehicles from residentia­l driveways throughout the year, is believed to be tied to the Nigeriabas­ed Black Axe criminal organizati­on, police said.

Acting Deputy Chief James Ramer said the arrests, which have “significan­tly degraded” the Toronto ring, could have an impact beyond the city limits.

“There is absolutely no doubt that organized crime enterprise­s such as the Black Axe use the proceeds of these types of property crimes to further fund and grow their illegal enterprise­s,” Ramer told a news conference. “And in this case, those illegal enterprise­s are often offshore.”

Police said the investigat­ion dubbed Project CBG got underway in April of this year after a rash of car thefts from some of the city’s more affluent neighbourh­oods.

Police allege high-end vehicles such as Lexuses and Acuras were disappeari­ng from driveways in the middle of the night as the owners slept, sometimes mere days after the cars had been purchased. Some homes were targeted multiple times, police added.

Ramer alleged the ring managed to make off with about 500 sport utility vehicles throughout the year, accounting for 10 to 15 per cent of total car thefts in the Toronto area for 2015. Many of those cars were shipped to Africa via ports in Halifax and Montreal.

Staff Insp. Mike Earl said the organizati­on had a particular­ly sophistica­ted mode of operation.

Thieves allegedly began by steal- ing the keys of new vehicles as they arrived in the city en route to the dealership­s where they were to be sold, but Earl said the technique changed over time.

He alleged the organizati­on shifted to photograph­ing vehicle identifica­tion numbers and key codes. He said this informatio­n was then used to look up informatio­n about the new car owners and where they lived.

Police said one of the 18 people arrested in Thursday’s raids is an employee of ServiceOnt­ario, a provincial body involved in issuing vehicle registrati­ons.

Earl alleged the key codes were also funnelled to a locksmith who cut copies that were used to steal the vehicles.

“This was a sophistica­ted operation, and we had to decide as a police service, and with our partner agencies, either we deal with the thefts at hand or we take the head of the snake off,” Earl said of the months-long investigat­ion. “So we went for the head of the snake, and that’s what we hope we did in this operation.”

This was a sophistica­ted operation ... So we went for the head of the snake, and that’s what we hope we did.

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