Saturday, 29 April 2023

Canada, U.S. to share more data in fight against cross-border gun smuggling, opioids

 

Canada, U.S. to share more data in fight against cross-border gun smuggling, opioids

New agreements will allow police agencies to 'go after ghost guns,' minister says

Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino said Ottawa has signed four new or updated agreements with Washington that allow the RCMP and Canada Border Services Agency to exchange more data with partners south of the border.

"It means more joint investigations into gun smuggling and trafficking. It means even more exchanging of intelligence and information between our law enforcement agencies," Mendicino told reporters Friday afternoon in Ottawa.

He said the agreements under a rebooted Canada-U.S. Cross-Border Crime Forum will allow more information-sharing with the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, such as the role of cryptocurrency in money laundering.

Mendicino made the announcement alongside Justice Minister David Lametti and their American counterparts, Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas and Attorney General Merrick Garland.

The agreements also aim to help stem the flow of opioids such as fentanyl, with Garland saying they will track the ingredients used to create the deadly drug and the flow of its components from China.

A joint statement commits both countries to "build a global coalition against synthetic drugs" that can help counter transnational organized crime and to identify and target shippers and receivers of firearms.

Illegal drugs and firearms lay on a table in front of a podium during a press conference. Drugs and firearms are presented at a news conference at the RCMP headquarters in Surrey, B.C., on April 25, 2018. The RCMP, along with the U.S. Coast Guard, Homeland Security and U.S. Customs and Border Protection, conducted the raid which also seized a large sum of cash and high-speed boats. (Jonathan Hayward/The Canadian PRess)

Mendicino said the four agreements "will allow us to leverage new technology that has recently emerged that will allow us to go after ghost guns in particular," referring to untracked, privately manufactured firearms used by gangs.

The four have pledged to review recent incidents of migrants dying along the border, pledging to hold smugglers accountable and crack down on irregular migration using sensors, personnel and timely information.

Yet the four leaders gave few details as to what had materially changed as a result of Friday's agreements.

"As the threat landscape proves so dynamic and complex, as changes in that landscape occur, we identify ways in which we can strengthen that partnership and take action," Mayorkas said.

"It's all about meeting the moment, meeting the changes that occur and addressing them in real time — sharing actionable, relevant information in real time."

The statement adds that law enforcement on both sides of the border will also be trained to have a shared understanding of privacy laws.

The American officials said the group also spoke about Haiti, where brazen gangs have filled a political power vacuum and have Washington worried about the spread of guns, drugs and gangs across the region.

Mayorkas and Garland did not dwell on Washington's request months ago to have Canada lead a military intervention, which Haiti's unelected government says would help stabilize the country.

Instead, they noted the importance of legal pathways for migration and helping Haiti have a functional police force.

"Both countries remain committed to exploring joint law enforcement actions in Haiti," reads the joint statement.

 
 
 
222 Comments


 
David Amos
Methinks Mendicino and Mayorkas have puzzled about what to do about me for quite some time N'esy Pas?  
 
 
 
 
Bob Wilson 
The more I listen to Mendicino talk the more I’m sure he has no idea what he’s talking about.
 
 
David Amos 
Reply to Bob Wilson
Finally somebody noticed
 
 
Dottie Prentice
Reply to Bob Wilson 
He's a clown
 
 
 
 
 
 
Dottie Prentice  
Stories of great Liberal achievement are dropping-off the front page faster than Trudeau's approval rating! 
 
 
Bill Gender 
Reply to Dottie Prentice  
Another day another scandal 
 
 
David Amos 
Reply to Dottie Prentice 
Mais Oui 
 
 
David Amos 
Reply to Bill Gender 
C'est Vrai 
 
 
 
 
dawn mills  
Not great, not all. Rcmp currently are allowing our security to be colonized by the US. They basically wait for someone internationally to complain before making arrests. This dosent improve our abilities and interferes with Canadians privacy, and this guy shaking hands has provided extremely poor performance with the Mexican boarder. Total fail. This is nothing more than intelligence gathering by the US on Canadians and will open the doors for cartels. Not new policies or anything that assists and reaffirms our police, it simply is a commercial endeavor.
 
 
James Robson
Reply to dawn mills 
Dawn--be aware that the Toronto Star exposed the existence of an FBI office in the City in 2007 and that the BATF around then was involved in observing a Hamilton area native peoples protest blockade. It seems as if our sovereignty has been compromised by our Lib-Con governments for a long time. And our so-called "Free Trade" treaties with the US have been part of this, as the late former PM John Turner warned to no avail. 
 
 
Bill Gender 
Reply to dawn mills  
But you no issues with the Chinese government colonizing our security with the full support of this current minority leader and government with the full backing of Singh and the NDP ? 
 
 
James Robson  
Reply to Bill Gender  
Bill I too have some serious concerns about this--and that our msm have decided to drop any focus on the authoritative views of former senior career officer Michel Juneau-Katsuya, since he dropped his bombshell information in public six weeks ago. But, do note that both the Trudeau and Harper regimes as well as their predecessors, have been playing footsie with ever-dangerous Beijing for over 50 years. Even Australia's whistleblowers and former PM Malcolm Turnbull have been warning us for five years about our vulnerability to insidious Chinese secret police infiltration and intimidation.
 
 
David Amos 
Reply to James Robson 
I butted heads with the all knowing Michel Juneau-Katsuya in 2004   
 
 
 
 
 
 
James Robson
Canadians need essential information about the major differences in law between the US and Canada with regard to firearms ownership. Canada has had mandatory RCMP registration of all handguns here since 1932--with Criminal Code penalties for anyone who is in possession without. And for about 30 years we have also had universal national licensing of all Canadian owners of handguns, shotguns and rifles. There is a very sharp licensing demarcation in the US where 26 of 50 states lack any gun owner licensing and an adult may well be able to purchase any firearm legal to own in that state--possibly without limit. This is another US states-rights fiasco that prevents US federal gun owner licensing in the public interest.

This inability to prevent dangerous criminals, political extremists, the mentally deranged and religious zealots from arming themselves and harming perceived enemies, has created a continuing public safety nightmare across America. But, contrary to some political and media messaging, Canada does not face such threats to the public peace and good order. However, on December 7th, 2018, a senior but anonymous LPC official told the Toronto Star's Tonda MacCharles in a front-page interview titled, "Why No handgun Ban?" that, "The government of Canada accepts that there are at least TWICE(sic) as many smuggled handguns in Canada as those legally owned by Canadians". We should be asking our MPs pointed questions.

 
David Amos 
Reply to James Robson 
I have been stress testing them since the gun registry nonsense in 2004 
 
 
 

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