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June 26, 2016 Gun crime up 200% in Toronto

7/6/2016

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Police say they believe the rise in shooting deaths is partly due to criminals carrying their guns instead of hiding them in secure places.
"It's a considerable increase in homicides," Staff Inspector Greg McLane of Toronto Police's homicide squad said Tuesday.
"It's hard to say whether there are more guns out there, but I'm of the belief that more people are carrying their guns. I ask myself this question: why do street gang and criminal lifestyle people feel they can walk around in communities in the city without fear of being stopped by police?"
McLane said he thinks people previously stored their guns for easy access, including in such unlikely places as trees and diaper bags, but now they are more likely to keep them on their persons.
He said if people start carrying their guns, then it means other people have to start carrying their firearms.
Police say a 'speedy arrest' was made in a double shooting in Scarborough because of information obtained from the public. (Jonathan Castell/CBC)
The guns may be stolen, loaned for specific reasons, bought and sold, or may be coming in from the U.S., he said. 
He acknowledged that many shootings in the city could involve street gangs and people who have criminal lifestyles.
McLane said fatal shootings can be harder for police to solve than murders involving other types of weapons, or those involving domestic disputes, because there is less contact between the assailant and victim at the time of death. 
Co-operation from the public makes all the difference, McLane said.
For example, he said information gleaned from the public and from surrounding infrastructure enabled police to make a "speedy arrest" in the double murder outside a shopping mall in the Ellesmere Road and Victoria Park Avenue area Friday night.
Joseph Anzolona, 26, and Cynthia Mullapudi, 24, were both shot multiple times at close range as they sat in the back seat of an SUV in a parking lot near an LCBO. Police arrested a 24-year-old man and charged him with two counts of first-degree murder.
"Every murder speaks for itself. They are all different," McLane said. "But the level of cooperation from the public in that case was excellent."

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