Crime in Canada | |
---|---|
Crime rates* (2022) | |
Violent Criminal Code violations | |
Homicide | 2.25 (2022 Stat) |
Attempted murder | 2.16 |
Sexual assault | 90 |
Assault | 503 |
Robbery | 56 |
Uttering threats | 224 |
Total violent crime violations | 1,365 |
Property crime violations | |
Breaking and entering | 341 |
Theft of motor vehicle | 271 |
Theft over $5,000 | 62 |
Theft under $5,000 | 963 |
Mischief | 807 |
Total property crime violations | 3,314 |
Notes *Number of reported crimes per 100,000 population. Census population: 35,151,728[1] Source: Police-reported crime for selected offences, Canada, 2021 and 2022 |
Crime in Canada is generally considered low overall. Under the Canadian constitution, the power to establish criminal law & rules of investigation is vested in the federal Parliament. The provinces share responsibility for law enforcement (although provincial policing in many jurisdictions is contracted to the federal Royal Canadian Mounted Police), and while the power to prosecute criminal offences is assigned to the federal government, responsibility for prosecutions is delegated to the provinces for most types of criminal offences. Laws and sentencing guidelines are uniform throughout the country, but provinces vary in their level of enforcement.[2]
According to the latest report of Statistics Canada, overall crime in Canada has been steadily declining since the late 1990s as measured by the Crime Severity Index (CSI) and the Violent Crime Severity Index (VCSI), with a more recent uptick since an all-time low in 2014.[3] Both measures of crime saw an 8% to 10% decrease between 2010 and 2018.[3] Violent crime, specifically homicide, has declined in Canada by over 40% since its peak in 1975, placing Canada 79th in the world by homicide rate—far worse than Australia, England, and Ireland, and relatively close to poorer European countries. It is tied for first in the Americas with Chile (homicide rates are 2.7 times lower than in the United States). Current crimes that are increasing include drug-related offences, fraud, sexual assault and theft, with fraud increasing 46% between 2008 and 2018.[4]