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Homicide rate by province. Note: The rate columns can be sorted in ascending or descending order. Sort the province/territory column to return to alphabetical order. Rates are calculated per 100,000 inhabitants per year and sorted by population (note that homicide rates fluctuate a lot for areas with low population). Province/territory.
Statistics Canada data. Crime rates in Canada were reported at 5,334 incidents per 100,000 inhabitants with violent crime at 1,098 incidents and property crime at 3,245 incidents (per 100,000). [5] The province or territory with the lowest crime rate in 2017 was Quebec with 3,359 incidents per 100,000 followed by Ontario with 3,804 incidents ...
Winnipeg Police Service. Silver, a career criminal with arrests in Ottawa, Montreal, and Toronto, was suspected of involvement in at least 60 burglaries in Winnipeg. During one burglary, he shot Sgt. Major E. Sewell and Dtv. James Ayres. Fleeing by car, he was eventually cornered on foot at a nursing home by Cst.
Hate crimes reported by police more than doubled from 2019 to 2023, according to the latest figures from Statistics Canada, with 44.5% of incidents in 2023 motivated by race or ethnicity.
Spectator Tribune. Retrieved October 16, 2022. ^ "Murder on the prairie: who killed the six immigrant settlers?". June 20, 1918. ^ "Nov. 24, 1930: Mass murderer hanged after being found guilty in shortest trial". October 22, 1930. Retrieved November 24, 2014. ^ "Rosario Bilodeau hanged at Quebec". Montreal Gazette.
Homicide statistics by gender. According to the data given by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, worldwide, 79% of homicide victims were men in 2013. [1] In 2021, males accounted for most homicide victims in all jurisdictions except in Austria, the Czech Republic, Iceland, Latvia, Norway, Slovenia and Switzerland, where females were ...
Crime in Canada#Statistics Canada data; This page is a redirect. The following categories are used to track and monitor this redirect: To a section: ...
A 2011 Statistics Canada report estimated that, between 1997 and 2000, the rate of homicides for Aboriginal women and girls was almost seven times higher than that of other female victims. [40] Compared to non-Indigenous women and girls, they were also "disproportionately affected by all forms of violence."