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Post by Sher on May 18, 2005 4:57:41 GMT -5
City cops are warning Edmontonians to guard their personal information after finding a cache of stolen credit cards, driver's licences and other personal information in a stolen pickup truck.
"I think what we're trying to impress upon people is that ... you have to protect yourself," said acting Det. Regan James of the southeast criminal investigation section.
He advised people to shred old documents and not to trash old credit cards.
"People have to understand you can't throw that stuff out. It's just basically a great appetizer for thieves to feed on and gain a new identity."
Cops stopped a stolen truck on Friday near 96 Street and 75 Avenue. Officers searched the pickup and found a black briefcase with several hundred credit cards, driver's licences and other pieces of personal identification - including a firearms acquisition certificate, health-care cards, social insurance cards, bank cards and birth certificates.
"Once they get that information they can certainly grow upon it ... and pretty soon you've got four or five different identities for yourself," said James.
Most of the items were likely stolen from homes or cars or were found in garbage bins, he said.
Now investigators face the arduous task of tracking down victims.
James said the suspect is well-known to be involved with a methamphetamine group. Stealing identities is one way to fund the habit, he added.
Pearl Barbara Warnell, 45, of no fixed address, has been charged with possession of stolen property under $5,000 and driving with a suspended licence.
More charges in connection with the seized property are expected.
She was denied bail yesterday, James said.
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Post by Sher on May 19, 2005 8:06:56 GMT -5
Cops are on the hunt for a carjacker who punched a tow-truck driver yesterday afternoon - and then tried to lick the blood off the driver's face. Neal White of Auto Rescue Towing said he was responding to an accident when he came across another crash at 149 Street and 107 Avenue. "I noticed a native guy walking in the middle of the road," he said. "Then I noticed my passenger side door opening up." Police Insp. Ric Gagnon said the man had threatened a woman and taken her Mustang from 173 Street and 100 Avenue earlier. He smashed the car into an SUV at 149 Street and 107 Avenue and tried unsuccessfully to get into a house before jumping into the cab of White's truck. White said the man punched him in the nose, unleashing a torrent of blood. The man claimed to have a knife and tried crawling into the driver's seat. White put the truck in gear and popped the clutch, causing the truck to stall, then jumped out. "I was all wired up, I was freaking out." The would-be hijacker tried unsuccessfully to start the vehicle. He then gave up, got out and ran, White said. "I started chasing him and yelled, 'Don't even think about getting in another car!' " Blood running down his nose and shirt, White caught up to the man. "He said, 'You have to wipe that blood up.' "Then he took me by the back of the head and tried to lick the blood off. I pushed him away. It was like something you watch on TV." The assailant tried getting into two other cars before jumping into a third, White said. Gagnon said the suspect threatened the man and ordered him to drive him downtown and the man agreed. Cops are looking for a native male, five-foot-nine, 200 pounds with short, red-dyed hair. He was wearing a black tracksuit with tear-away pants. He has tattoos up past his neck. An alleged carjacker who reportedly tried to lick the blood off the face of one of his victims once attacked his sister and nephew with a screwdriver. David Lewis Crane, 36, was arrested Tuesday night by cops hunting a man who hijacked two vehicles and attacked three people during a 40-minute crime spree earlier in the day. Sources say Crane was only released from the Edmonton Max earlier this month. In 1999, he was sentenced to five years for an attack in Calgary on his sister and her son which left them with a total of 35 wounds. "Just before 3:30 p.m. (Tuesday), two staff members were assaulted at the Keg Restaurant at 170 Street and 98 Avenue after a patron was asked to leave when he couldn't pay for his drinks," said EPS spokesman Andy Weiler. The guy then ran from the restaurant and tried to steal a Ford F150 pickup truck from a nearby parking lot. When the attempt failed, he forced a woman out of a Mustang convertible by claiming to have a knife. But the muscle car got into a collision with an SUV at 107 Avenue and 149 Street and the guy bailed out. "Not done there, the suspect ran from the area and tried to enter a home at 106 Avenue and 149 Street," said Weiler. "He was rebuffed by a woman in the home, so the man started running north on 149 Street." Tow-truck driver Neal White was the next to be victimized. A man climbed into the cab of his truck and punched him before trying to get into the driver's seat. White stalled the truck and jumped out. The guy fled and White followed him, blood running from his nose. White told the Sun his attacker then tried to lick the blood from his face. The guy then hijacked a Honda Civic and forced the driver to take him to the area of 96 Street and 110A Avenue. Around 9 p.m. Tuesday police arrested Crane at a bar at Stony Plain Road and 152 Street. He's been charged with two counts of robbery, two counts of assault, forcible confinement, uttering death threats, assault causing bodily harm, criminal hit-and-run, dangerous operation of a motor vehicle, mischief under $5,000 and meal by fraud.
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Post by Sher on May 28, 2005 10:44:30 GMT -5
A Good Samaritan was stabbed repeatedly last night after trying to break up a fight between a man confronted by an ex-employee looking for his final paycheque, say cops.
"There were four or five people helping with his stab wounds so it wouldn't bleed," said Jason Anderson, 26, who saw the bloody aftermath. "It looked pretty bad."
Emergency medical services (EMS) said the knifing victim had been stabbed "multiple times" in the chest and was transported to the Royal Alexandra Hospital in stable condition. His injures are potentially life-threatening.
City cops were called around 5:10 p.m. to 118 Avenue and 124 Street after the ex-employee had gone to a nearby business - believed by police to possibly be a telemarketing office - looking for the cheque. Last night, stained blankets and blood could still be seen on an area sidewalk.
After the ex-employee came back for his pay, a dispute erupted between him and a current employee, said cops.
Outside the business, the Good Samaritan tried to break up the dispute, but was repeatedly stabbed. The employee was banged up but not seriously hurt, said cops.
The ex-employee finally fled.
Anderson said when he arrived he saw a man who had a black eye and other injuries.
"He looked like he got beat up," said Anderson.
"What's happening to this city? Every single day somebody is getting stabbed. Yep, Edmonton is going down fast, I believe."
The beaten employee was also transported to the Royal Alexandra Hospital in stable condition with blunt trauma injuries. His injuries are believed to be non-life-threatening, said EMS.
Police were still looking for the ex-employee last night.
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Post by Sher on May 30, 2005 5:15:46 GMT -5
A pregnant woman found her common-law husband dead after a drunken brawl at a party in Hobbema.
Now a 17-year-old girl is charged with second-degree murder of Ian Montour.
Heather Potts, 25, said she went to bring Montour home after a man came to her house to use the telephone and told her someone had been killed at the party.
"He was lying on the ground and he wasn't moving and when I got closer to him, he was gone," said Potts, who said police and ambulance crews hadn't arrived on scene. "I could just tell. His eyes were half open and his mouth was all bloody, there were teeth knocked out of his mouth and he was just laying there face up.
"I didn't want to believe it was him. I kept looking for signs of life but I knew deep down he was gone."
RCMP said they found Montour lying unconscious at 5:08 a.m. after 20 drunken party-goers - adults and youths - had been fighting Saturday. Medical personnel tried in vain to revive him. He was pronounced dead at the scene.
Police would not say what types of weapons were used in the bloody brawl, which also left a 21-year-old man and 34-year-old man with non-life-threatening injuries.
But Hobbema RCMP Const. Darrel Bruno said no guns were used and the violence has no links to gangs.
Montour moved his family from Samson First Nation two years ago to the smaller, quieter Montana First Nation, said Potts.
The couple, who had one child and were expecting a second, had even planned to leave Hobbema so Montour could take over his dad's electrical business. He was upgrading to complete high school.
"We were planning to get married," said Potts, four months pregnant.
Montour had three daughters from a previous marriage and she had one. All of them lived together.
"He took care of us really good," Potts said. "He was a good father and he liked to spend time with his girls and he lived for his girls. He always made sure we ate breakfast in the morning. He was the one who made supper every evening."
Montour was an outgoing man who enjoyed golfing and playing pool, Potts said.
She said Ian and his brother Ira were all that was left of the family after a car crash killed their mother and three siblings in the mid-1980s. Ira is now grieving with his father.
"I know Ian's in a better place now," said Potts. "That's what eases my pain when I think about it."
Potts's mother, Wanda Potts, said it's time leaders in Hobbema do something to stem the tide of violence, drug and alcohol abuse.
"They've taken away the father of five," she said. "I'd like to see chief and council do something about the violence here."
An autopsy on Montour is scheduled for today.
The accused, who cannot be identified, is in custody and will appear in Wetaskiwin court June 1.
"You never know what you're going to come across," said Bruno, when asked if he was surprised that a 17-year-old girl had been charged.
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Post by Sher on May 30, 2005 5:16:30 GMT -5
A woman airlifted to an Edmonton hospital Friday night, after allegedly being beaten by her husband, has died, Mounties confirmed last night.
She died yesterday morning in the University hospital. "We took her off the (life-support) machines," said daughter Charma Marshall, 39. "She was brain-dead."
Catharine Schacker, 55 at the time of her death, will continue to give, Marshall said.
Much of the former nurse's body - from her corneas to her lungs and skin - will be donated for transplants. "She was always talking about helping someone someday ... take an ugly situation and make somebody happy."
Redwater RCMP were called around 8:35 a.m. on Friday to a rural home near Thorhild, 100 km northeast of Edmonton, where they found the woman.
"She is being treated for serious blunt-trauma injuries," RCMP Cpl. Wayne Oakes said Friday.
Mounties later tracked down a suspect around 4:15 p.m. to an area near Smoky Lake, 110 km northeast of Edmonton.
Marshall, who lives in Medicine Hat, was staying at her mother's place along with her 14-year-old daughter. They'd arrived Thursday night. Her mom had driven her out to the farm to care for her after Marshall had surgery.
Tara Macedo, Schacker's granddaughter, saw her the day before. "I was playing with her, laughing and stuff. I said, 'Have fun at the farm' and gave her a hug. So I guess the last time I seen my grandma, she was happy."
Barry Bryan Schacker, 57, of Thorhild, has been charged with attempted murder. RCMP say the charge is expected to be upgraded today.
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Post by Sher on May 30, 2005 5:18:26 GMT -5
Rifle-wielding city cops evacuated nearby homes yesterday after police suspected a man was holed up in a Mill Woods townhouse with hunting rifles.
In the end, the suspect surrendered peacefully.
It all started in Calgary when a man, described by police as suicidal, allegedly broke into a house and made off with what cops figured was one or two guns before heading north.
In Edmonton, cops surrounded the house at 544 Lakewood Rd. N. shortly after 1 p.m.
A neighbour said she didn't know anything was wrong until she noticed three police cars outside.
"They were very quiet," said the woman, who wouldn't give her name. She said she was "unnerved" when cops drew their rifles.
TOLD TO GO BACK INSIDE
Neighbour Shawn Foisy, 25, was about to step out of his suite when a police officer told him to go back inside.
He locked the doors and went into the basement to have a cigarette, while his mother, sister and her child hid upstairs.
"I didn't know what to think," he said.
Sgt. Ken Hykawy said police took all precautions "just in case the subject that we were looking for attempted to escape or use those weapons against us or other members of the public."
When officers called the house, a woman and two young children emerged, leaving the man inside alone.
Eventually the suspect came outside and surrendered to officers.
The man was seen talking with police and Hykawy described him as co-operative following his arrest.
Police searched the townhouse and a truck. They recovered ammunition and a clip for a .22-calibre rifle, Hykawy said.
They later found two guns, including a .22-calibre Rueger and a .30-.30 in a garage at another home. They also found 1,600 rounds of ammunition.
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Post by Sher on Jun 1, 2005 9:37:05 GMT -5
PONOKA -- A mental hospital patient found hanging from a tree had voiced plans to kill himself in the days before his suicide, health staff testified at a fatality inquiry into the man's death.
But Clifford Way, 43, was allowed to leave Alberta Hospital twice on Nov. 6, 2003, because they deemed it safe at the time.
Way, who was originally from Newfoundland, was never seen alive again. His body wasn't discovered until 33 days later by a dog in dense bush on the central Alberta hospital's grounds.
Staff said Way had a yellow rope around his neck, possibly obtained from construction sites at the hospital, which was under redevelopment. Way's sisters, Olga Gould and Minnie Way, testified they warned hospital staff that their brother, who had a long history of depression, planned to take his life. "Why was he not protected? I was promised by Alberta Hospital that he would be protected at all times," Gould told psychiatrist Dr. Douglas Urness during the inquiry.
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Post by Sher on Jun 4, 2005 9:06:24 GMT -5
A man accused of a bizarre, violent one-day crime spree in the city was just days out of jail - released under federal laws for a sixth, failed shot at an honest life.
News of the man's criminal history yesterday rocked one of his most recent victims, who has yet to return to work from stress leave.
National Parole Board records show police described David Lewis Crane, 36, as "explosively violent."
A 20-year parole officer called him "one of the nastiest, (most) menacing offenders I have ever come across."
A judge noted his "terrible record of violence and weapons offences." And he's been diagnosed with an antisocial personality disorder.
Crane, whose prior charges include stabbing his sister 18 times with a screwdriver, her son 13 times and another boy four times, as well as prison assaults, weapons charges and gang membership, was even once arrested on his way out of jail, charged with uttering threats against guards on his way out for his fourth "statutory release."
"This is one of the best examples I've seen recently" for a reconsideration of the corrections release system, said the city police high-risk offender program's Det. Wil Tonowski.
"I mean, where does it end?"
The last time a warrant was issued for Crane's return to jail - in February this year - police sent the heavily armed tactical team to bring him in.
But while Correctional Service officials recommended his most recent statutory release be revoked, a three-member parole board panel didn't have the grounds.
"Our decision not to revoke your statutory release is based on the fact that you paid the consequences of being unlawfully at large ... and the absence of outstanding charges," the board stated.
The order to release Crane was issued May 5.
On May 17, two Keg Restaurant employees told police they were assaulted by a man who couldn't pay his bill.
A suspect left the restaurant and tried to steal a truck, then carjacked a woman's Mustang convertible.
That car was wrecked several blocks away, and the man attempted a home invasion.
The man then attacked a tow truck driver, but couldn't drive that vehicle and jumped into another person's Honda Civic, forcing the driver to take him to the inner city.
A man was later arrested and is due in court June 15 to enter pleas to 11 charges.
"I am quite shocked. I can't believe this guy would be out roaming around, that I would encounter someone like that ... I'm at a loss for words," said Neal White, 23, the tow truck driver attacked May 17.
White is on stress leave and has yet to return to his job.
Tonowski said records obtained by the Sun show that when Crane appeared before the numerous parole boards, "their hands were tied" by rules that demanded his release.
"They let him out because they had to let him out. I would like to see a three-strike rule, or something like that.
"Instead of someone getting out and breaching, breaching, breaching, they would be held after the third time without the statutory release."
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Post by Sher on Jun 4, 2005 9:07:27 GMT -5
An Alberta man has been charged with sexually assaulting a young girl during a live Internet broadcast, RCMP say.
Police in Alberta and the U.S. Department of Home Security worked together on the case after a woman in Missouri saw the girl being molested during the broadcast and called authorities, said RCMP Cpl. Wayne Oakes.
"She felt that something needed to be done to intervene for the child's safety," Oakes said yesterday.
"The investigation resulted in authorities gaining reasonable and probable cause to lay charges."
Cory Lee Nelson, 36, of Fort McMurray, faces charges of transmitting child pornography, sexual interference, sexual assault, counselling an offence and counselling an offence of sexual assault.
He is to appear in Calgary provincial court on Tuesday.
The girl, who was described as being between five and nine years old, is no longer in danger, he said.
The investigation, which began on April 4, included assistance from the Edmonton and Calgary police services.
Oakes said part of the evidence trail placed Nelson in Calgary on the date of the alleged offences.
The case comes to light as Alberta is forming a team of investigators dedicated to child pornography and prostitution cases, Oakes said.
"I know that the (Alberta) solicitor general is very concerned that we do have the ability and the resources to progress with these kind of investigations," he said.
Alberta is expected to roll out its new Integrated Child Exploitation team later this year, he said.
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Post by Sher on Jun 6, 2005 11:24:30 GMT -5
Cop shoots at van
An officer fired at least two rounds from his .40-calibre service pistol and then darted for cover yesterday after a stolen minivan came barrelling at him in the north end, say cops. By DAN PALMER, EDMONTON SUN
An officer fired at least two rounds from his .40-calibre service pistol and then darted for cover yesterday after a stolen minivan came barrelling at him in the north end, say cops.
"They could've killed him," said Nick Rudyk, 71, who saw the 3 p.m. drama unfold while he was in his front garden near 62 Street and 136 Avenue.
About 24 hours earlier, a minivan was reported stolen from the area, said police. Officers then got word yesterday about it being driven around the neighbourhood.
"We had a report of the same van being driven in a careless manner, driving over mailboxes, on the sidewalk and mounting the curb," said police Insp. Al Bohachyk.
"So police officers went into the area to try to locate the van and indeed did."
Cops spotted the minivan near 65 Street and 149 Avenue, following it but then briefly losing sight of it until an officer saw it again near 62 Street and 136 Avenue.
"(The officer) pulled up his car to block the escape route and ordered the occupants of the van out at gunpoint. They backed up and drove at him. He fired a couple of rounds from his police service weapon," said Bohachyk.
"The officer certainly feared for his life and had to take some physical action to get out of the way. However, he was not injured."
Rudyk watched from just metres away. He first heard the sound of screeching tires and then saw the marked police cruiser with its flashing lights.
When the van came speeding towards the officer, "he fired two shots and got out of the way," said Rudyk, adding the cop then spotted him.
"He hollered at me to get in the house."
Rudyk complied.
Bohachyk said other officers stopped the minivan moments later in the area and took two boys, aged 15, into custody.
After the arrests, police examined the minivan in an alley near 63 Street and 132A Avenue.
Bohachyk didn't know where the fired rounds hit, but pointed out that those would be questions city police internal affairs investigators will be asking the officer.
The minivan had a flat front tire and a damaged windshield when it was found in the alley.
It's standard police procedure for internal affairs to investigate after an officer discharges a weapon.
On May 12, a city officer opened fire on two people in a stolen car after the driver tried to run him down near a busy west Edmonton strip mall. The driver and his passenger, both of whom suffered non-life-threatening wounds, are now facing multiple charges.
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Post by Sher on Jun 6, 2005 11:26:37 GMT -5
City police are investigating after a tot was allegedly sexually assaulted.
Police were called to the city's north side around 5:15 p.m. on Saturday after a report of a two-year-old assaulted by a 13-year-old boy. Officers who investigate child abuse matters are looking into the incident.
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Post by Sher on Jun 7, 2005 15:38:00 GMT -5
Teen faces life sentence for killing youth worker Last Updated Tue, 07 Jun 2005 12:21:59 EDT CBC News A 16-year-old Albertan will be sentenced Tuesday after pleading guilty to killing and sexually assaulting his youth-care worker while they were on a walk from his group home.
INDEPTH: Youth Criminal Justice Act
Ira Badger, who suffers from fetal alcohol spectrum disorder, is facing a life sentence in the murder of 20-year-old Sharla Collier in November 2002.
Collier, who worked weekends at a provincial residential care facility in Lethbridge, was found near the Oldman River. She had been killed by a blow to the head.
Badger was 14 at the time, but can be identified because he was tried as an adult.
An agreed statement of fact, entered into court after the teen pleaded guilty to first-degree murder on Monday, said Badger killed his worker by grabbing a tree branch the size of a baseball bat and hitting her several times.
Then he sexually assaulted the young woman.
Forensic psychiatrist Jose Mejie, who examined Badger, determined that the teenager knew what he was doing was wrong – but he wasn't sure Badger meant to kill Collier.
The psychiatrist said Badger wanted her to be unconscious so he could have sex with her.
While a court found Badger fit to stand trial, Mejie said the teenager doesn't have the ability to understand abstract concepts such as death.
The first-degree murder conviction for Badger means an automatic life sentence, with no chance of parole for five to seven years.
Someone over the age of 18 convicted of first-degree murder would not be able to apply for parole for 25 years.
"A person may get parole but they may not – but they'll be bound by that sentence for all their life," said Crown prosecutor Gordon Falconer.
Falconer said he would ask for the maximum seven-year sentence in the Lethbridge court today.
Collier's family will be entering victim-impact statements before the sentencing.
Collier's mother, Karen Collier, wasn't saying what she intended to tell her daughter's killer, but she did have a message for her daughter.
"Justice for you, Sharla," she said. "Maybe she can rest and have a little bit of peace now, wherever she is now."
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Post by Sher on Jun 9, 2005 11:25:10 GMT -5
EDMONTON – Three teenagers are now facing charges of aggravated sexual assault and kidnapping in connection with the death of a 13-year-old girl whose body was found on a golf course in April.
The two girls and a boy were earlier charged with first-degree murder.
The additional charges mirror those laid against two men, aged 19 and 34, two weeks ago. The man also face first-degree murder charges.
Nina Courtepatte's body was found on the fourth fairway of the Edmonton Springs Golf Resort on April 4. She died from blunt force trauma, but police won't say to what part of her body.
Police say she was tricked into going to the golf course by a group of people she was with at the West Edmonton Mall, and that her killing was planned and deliberate.
Police earlier said Nina knew two of the accused, and appeared to have gone willingly to the golf course.
Police also said initially that the autopsy showed no sign of sexual assault.
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Post by Sher on Jun 9, 2005 11:29:10 GMT -5
LETHBRIDGE – Killing and sexually assaulting a youth care worker was a despicable and brutal act, Justice Vaughan Hembroff said Wednesday, ordering a 16-year-old boy to serve seven years in jail before he can apply for parole.
Crown Gordon Falconer had argued that Ira Badger, who can be identified because he was tried as an adult, is dangerous and should spend seven years behind bars before having a chance at release – the maximum term under the law.
Badger was 14 and staying at a group home in Lethbridge when youth worker Sharla Collier took him for a walk along the Oldman River in November 2002.
Badger pleaded guilty Monday to repeatedly hitting the 20 year old with a tree branch the size of a baseball bat and then assaulting her.
"Our hearts will always hurt, but Sharla would want us to go on," her mother Karen said after the judge's decision.
A number of doctors testified that Badger, who has fetal alcohol syndrome, is a risk to reoffend without life-long supervision.
Defence lawyer Harry Van Harten was pushing for the minimum allowable time before Badger could apply for parole – five years – saying the court needs to consider the boy's age at the time of the crime and his mental capacity.
He says his client's mental capacity will keep him locked up for a long time.
"He will not do well and he will have a great deal of difficulty, likely, I think, in ever satisfying the parole board that he should be eligible for parole," Van Harten said.
Someone over the age of 18 convicted of first-degree murder, as Badger was, wouldn't be eligible for parole for 25 years.
Badger will have to provide a DNA sample, register as a sex offender and won't be allowed to own firearms. Badger will also spend the first four years of his sentence in the Calgary Young Offender Centre, before being moved to an adult facility.
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Post by Sher on Jun 11, 2005 0:27:38 GMT -5
Police have charged a 29-year-old Edmonton man after thousands of pornographic images and videos of children - including those of the man's two stepchildren - were found on his computer.
And the images - some of newborn babies - are the worst ever seen by Edmonton city police Det. Randy Wickins, with the Internet Child Exploitation (ICE) team.
"Some of it's just, it's very violent," Wickins said.
"And it's torture."
Two other Edmonton children were involved as well, Wickins said. The four children - between five and nine years old now - knew each other.
The youngest was two years old when the twisted escapades began, police said.
And the network of which the man was part, with the images and videos traded between users, is international.
"We're looking at other targets, other evil people around the world that are hurting kids," Wickins said.
"That's why Ottawa's involved, assisting with working with Interpol and other child exploitation (teams)."
The RCMP's National Child Exploitation Co-ordination Centre is in Ottawa. Interpol is an international organization that helps police from around the world solve crimes
"We're close to at least one arrest," Wickins said, adding he cannot reveal more details at this point in the investigation.
The 29-year-old man works locally, Wickins said. The man is in custody and won't be identified.
"If we gave his name, that would probably identify the children, and we don't want to do that," Wickins said.
The investigation began with a tip to police, leading them "to talk to some kids," Wickins said, "and we ended up getting a search warrant and getting into the residence and we found a lot of stuff on the computer that was really quite disturbing.
"Some of it was violent and it was just horrible abuse," Wickins said.
The abuse was happening in a north Edmonton home from which a computer was seized, and the children are doing OK now, Wickins said.
The investigation began May 10. It uncovered pornographic videos and images involving children that have been distributed all over the world, via the Internet.
Asked whether the man helped police to find more people with such images, Wickins said: "I'm not going to talk about that."
The Edmonton man has been charged with four counts of sexual assault, four counts of sexual interference, and possession of, distribution of, and accessing child pornography.
He'll be in court Tuesday.
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