Yes, but this is a follow-up.
Nearly 600 stolen cars from GTA seized from Montreal port
By Jacob Serebrin The Canadian Press
Posted April 14, 2024 11:47 am
Updated April 14, 2024 1:36 pm
Between mid-December and the end of March, police inspected about 400 shipping containers at the Port of Montreal and found nearly 600 stolen vehicles, most of them from the Toronto area.
The operation showed how Canada’s second-largest port has become a key transport hub for stolen vehicle exports. Police say that’s because of the port’s strategic location and large container volume. And while authorities say they are doing what they can to stop the scourge of auto theft, experts say jurisdictional limitations, a lack of personnel, and organized crime are standing in the way.
“It’s a very large port,” said Bryan Gast, vice-president of investigative services at Équité Association, an anti-crime organization composed of insurance companies. With rail and road links to the Greater Toronto Area — where many vehicles are stolen — Montreal’s port is “conveniently located” for criminals.
An Ontario Provincial Police investigator for more than 20 years, Gast said stolen vehicles are packed in shipping containers in the Toronto area, given falsified paperwork, including customs declarations stating the cargo is legitimate, and then shipped to the port by rail or truck.
Gast’s organization participated in Project Vector, the Ontario Provincial Police-led operation at the port that recovered 598 stolen vehicles between December and March.
Aside from its location, the sheer volume of merchandise moving through the port is exploited by criminals. Last year, around 1.7 million containers transited through the Port of Montreal, including 70 per cent of Canada’s legal vehicle exports, according to port authorities. That’s around a million more containers than Canada’s next two largest East Coast ports combined.
Car thieves, Gast said, “can intermingle their containers that contain these stolen vehicles in among the trade that’s legally flowing out of Canada.”
The Port of Montreal said it works closely with police and border services, but port officials can open containers only to save someone’s life or prevent environmental damage, said spokeswoman Renée Larouche.
More than 800 police officers from a range of agencies have access cards to enter the port and, if they have a warrant, open containers, Larouche said. However, in customs-controlled areas of the port, only border officers can open containers without a warrant.
Three-quarters of the vehicles recovered during Project Vector were from Ontario, including 125 from the Peel Region, which has become the province’s car theft capital, according to local police.
Patrick Brown, the mayor of the Peel Region city of Brampton, said a lack of container screening at the Montreal port has made exporting stolen vehicles a lucrative, low-risk endeavour.
He said car theft is a more serious problem in Canada than in the United States because American authorities use scanning equipment on a much larger percentage of shipping containers.
“Organized crime doesn’t take that risk in the U.S.,” he said in a recent interview. “In Canada, we scan less than one per cent” of containers.
Brown said the recently announced $28 million in federal funding for the Canada Border Services Agency should be used immediately to buy scanners for the Montreal port and the two Toronto-area shipping hubs where containers move from trucks to trains. As well, he said, police should be able to enter customs-controlled areas of those facilities without a warrant or special permission from the CBSA.
“People will have tracking devices in their cars, they’ll track them to the intermodal hub, or track them to the port and local police can’t even go on and do anything about it,” he said.
During Project Vector, Peel Police said their access to containers at the port was restricted by CBSA’s “very limited resources,” Cst. Tyler Bell-Morena wrote in an email.
The CBSA wouldn’t say what percentage of containers are scanned every year, but Annie Beauséjour, the agency’s regional director general for Quebec, said all containers flagged by police are inspected by border agents.
“We would like to be able to scan all the containers leaving the country; unfortunately, this is not something realistic,” she said in an interview, adding that the border agency isn’t allowed to slow the flow of trade.