Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

Alberta extortion ring: Canadian police trace Indian crime network

Police are investigating a series of extortions and related crimes that they believe are orchestrated by a suspect in India

Alberta extortion ring: Canadian police trace Indian crime network

POLICE in Canada are investigating a series of extortions and related crimes that they believe are orchestrated by a suspect in India and involve criminals in Edmonton, Alberta, targeting the region's affluent South Asian people.

In what Edmonton Police described as a new trend in Canada, victims typically receive a WhatsApp message along with a request for compensation for the victims' safety.


There have been similar incidents reported in British Columbia and Ontario, though police said there was no evidence to suggest those incidents are related to the ones in the Edmonton area.

Edmonton Police said they so far have reports of 27 incidents between October and January, including extortions, arson, and drive-by shootings, and asked others who may have been targeted to come forward.

"At this time, we believe the series has been committed by a group of local individuals being directed by a suspect in India," Edmonton police inspector Lance Parker told reporters.

Police have arrested six young males in connection with the arson and firearms offenses, Parker said. No injuries have been reported from the shootings, though a firefighter was injured in one of the arsons, at least $6.7 million in property damage had been recorded.

Police declined to comment further on the Indian connection and said Canada's federal police, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, were handling the cross-border aspect of the investigation.

Diplomatic relations between India and Canada have frayed in recent months over Canada's allegations linking Indian agents to the murder of Sikh separatist Hardeep Singh Nijjar in British Columbia last year. India has rejected that allegation. Canadian authorities have yet to charge anyone for the killing.

About four per cent of the Canadian population is of Indian heritage, making Canada home to one of the largest communities of Indian origin, according to the Canadian foreign ministry.

(Reuters)

More For You

Junior doctors

Striking doctors protest outside Bristol Royal Infirmary hospital on July 25, 2025 in Bristol. (Photo: Getty Images)

Getty Images

Junior doctors to strike for five days after rejecting government offer

JUNIOR doctors in England have rejected a new government offer aimed at ending the dispute over jobs and pay, saying it “does not go far enough.”

The British Medical Association (BMA) confirmed that junior doctors will strike for five days from 7am on November 14 to 7am on November 19, reported The Times.

Keep ReadingShow less