>As criminal enterprises go, car theft leaves behind a remarkably thorough digital “paper trail.” It may be a labyrinth of shell companies, but the containers, the transactions, and the people behind them are all traceable, and the information in those digital manifests can travel far faster than the container ships transporting the stolen goods.
Those manifest records are among the raw materials that law enforcement uses – or should be using – to break the country’s car-theft rings. In the United States, manifest-level shipping data is used to uncover human trafficking, counterfeit and contaminated goods, sanctions evasion, and all other manner of nefarious activity. There, the data is updated and publicly released daily, allowing anyone to do their own investigative work. And it’s often third-party organizations, such as NGOs that combat forced labour, who uncover the wrongdoing.
If that data were publicly released in Canada, it would allow media, insurers and others to investigate vehicle theft quickly and independently, which would both assist and pressure law enforcement to act. The fact that we keep it private is one of the reasons why Canada has become the stolen-car capital of the world.
mightocondreas on
We know how, it’s an unwillingness within our management department
IwillKissYourKat on
Healthcare is involved with the drug trade. So have fun with that.
alwaysrent on
seems like giving people hope with good paying jobs is the answer often overlooked. its as if high unemployment and crime dont go hand in hand. its as if telling people they are unemployable and not allowed to make legal money doesn’t force them into a scrappy life to survive. oh wait.. im pretty sure the police already said something about this…. but nobody cares lol. its going to get much worse once those unemployed kids become unemployed adults…. always does
Global_Character7875 on
Guns guns and more guns
Rager_Sterling on
This sounds like the title of an article from the 3rd world or developing country
Leave A Reply
Du musst angemeldet sein, um einen Kommentar abzugeben.
6 Kommentare
>As criminal enterprises go, car theft leaves behind a remarkably thorough digital “paper trail.” It may be a labyrinth of shell companies, but the containers, the transactions, and the people behind them are all traceable, and the information in those digital manifests can travel far faster than the container ships transporting the stolen goods.
Those manifest records are among the raw materials that law enforcement uses – or should be using – to break the country’s car-theft rings. In the United States, manifest-level shipping data is used to uncover human trafficking, counterfeit and contaminated goods, sanctions evasion, and all other manner of nefarious activity. There, the data is updated and publicly released daily, allowing anyone to do their own investigative work. And it’s often third-party organizations, such as NGOs that combat forced labour, who uncover the wrongdoing.
If that data were publicly released in Canada, it would allow media, insurers and others to investigate vehicle theft quickly and independently, which would both assist and pressure law enforcement to act. The fact that we keep it private is one of the reasons why Canada has become the stolen-car capital of the world.
We know how, it’s an unwillingness within our management department
Healthcare is involved with the drug trade. So have fun with that.
seems like giving people hope with good paying jobs is the answer often overlooked. its as if high unemployment and crime dont go hand in hand. its as if telling people they are unemployable and not allowed to make legal money doesn’t force them into a scrappy life to survive. oh wait.. im pretty sure the police already said something about this…. but nobody cares lol. its going to get much worse once those unemployed kids become unemployed adults…. always does
Guns guns and more guns
This sounds like the title of an article from the 3rd world or developing country