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Coquitlam RCMP target crime hotspots

The Coquitlam and Port Coquitlam neighbourhoods have seen a spike in business and residential break-ins, theft from cars and vehicle theft.

Coquitlam RCMP has identified two crime hotspots across the Tri-Cities, reminding residents in these areas to keep an eye out for thieves stealing from homes, businesses, cars and the vehicles themselves.

The first crime hotspot encompasses an area surrounding Coquitlam's Lord Baden-Powell Elementary between Austin Heights and Cariboo neighbourhoods, stretching from Selman Street in the west to Blue Mountain Baptist Church in the east, and from the Vancouver Golf Club in the north to just south of Rochester Avenue in the south.

Crime hotspot 1
Crime hotspot 1, April 26 - May 2 - Google Maps

The second hotspot centres on the triangle of Port Coquitlam north of the Coquitlam River, bounded by British Columbia Highway 7 in the west and Lougheed Highway in the northeast. 

Crime hotspot 2, April 26 - May 2
Crime hotspot 2, April 26 - May 2 - Google Maps

When it comes to business crime, Coquitlam RCMP recommend staff training to deter would be criminals. The more staff greet and talk with customers, the less likely they are to commit a crime. But RCMP also recommends business owners train employees to recognize suspicious and criminal activity, and how to safely react before police arrive.

For vehicle crime, simple measures like locking doors, rolling up windows, and removing valuables are good first steps. But RCMP also recommends getting to know neighbours so that it’s easier to spot unfamiliar faces and suspicious activity.

Coquitlam RCMP release crime hotspots once every two weeks as a kind of public information bulletin designed to get the public to understand what the dangers are in a neighbourhood and to help change people’s behaviours that make them vulnerable to crime.

Hotspots often centre on neighbourhoods with a dense population, a high volume of traffic or a busy business district. But according to Coquitlam RCMP, they also signal patterns of criminal activity, like when a repeat offender or group of criminals is working in that neighbourhood.

Hotspots also help RCMP officers re-direct patrols and focus policing across the Tri-Cities.

“We have full time analyst that work on this all the time,” said Cpl. Michael McLaughlin.”[It's] what we call the cornerstone of preventative policing.”

In communities like Coquitlam and Port Coquitlam, it’s important to remember that what makes a hotspot ‘hot’ is relative.

“We are blessed with a very low crime rate,” said the RCMP spokesperson.

“It could be three or four and that would be enough.”