RCMP Daily Safety Brief: Key Occurrences Across New Brunswick

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New Brunswick RCMP daily occurrence report for April 3 to April 4, 2026, highlighting key public safety incidents

RCMP Daily Safety Brief: Key Occurrences Across New Brunswick

The New Brunswick RCMP has released its daily occurrence summary covering calls for service from 6 a.m. April 3 to 6 a.m. April 4, 2026. During this 24‑hour period, officers responded to a total of 298 calls across the province, including threats, impaired driving, assaults, mental health–related incidents, and missing person investigations.

The calls were categorized as follows: 25 Priority 1 (most urgent), 136 Priority 2, 101 Priority 3, and 36 Priority 4. The RCMP has highlighted several operational files of note from the Northeast, Southeast, West, and Codiac regions to help residents understand current public safety trends in their communities.

Official Details of Notable Occurrences

The following files of note were reported by detachment area. Locations refer to the RCMP detachment responsible for the area in which each incident occurred.

Northeast Region

  • Blackville – Threats: An investigation into reported threats is currently ongoing.
  • Chaleur Region – Missing person: A reported missing individual was located safe.
  • Tracadie – Sudden death: A sudden death was reported; police do not suspect criminal involvement.
  • Tracadie – Impaired driving: A driver was found to be impaired and received a seven-day driver’s licence suspension.

Southeast Region

  • Grand Bay-Westfield – Breach of conditions and assault: An individual was arrested following allegations that release conditions were breached and an assault occurred.
  • Hampton – Impaired driving: A driver was investigated for impairment and issued a seven-day driver’s licence suspension.
  • Hampton – Breach of conditions: An individual was arrested for allegedly breaching court-ordered conditions.
  • Richibucto – Missing person: A missing person investigation remains ongoing.
  • Shediac – Wellbeing check: Police conducted a welfare check and spoke with the individual concerned.
  • Shediac – Single-vehicle collision: A crash involving a single vehicle resulted in one person being transported to hospital.

West Region

  • Perth-Andover – Sudden death: A sudden death was reported with no criminality suspected.
  • Perth-Andover – Mental distress: An individual in mental distress was transported to hospital for further care.
  • Western Valley Region – Breach of conditions: An individual was arrested in relation to alleged non-compliance with release conditions.

Codiac Region

  • Dieppe – Theft of all-terrain vehicle: An ATV was reported stolen; the investigation is ongoing.
  • Moncton – Impaired driving and weapons-related offence: An individual was arrested in connection with an impaired driving incident that also involved a weapon offence.
  • Moncton – Mental distress: A person in mental distress was transported to hospital.
  • Moncton – Assault with a weapon: An individual was arrested following a reported assault involving a weapon.
  • Moncton – Break and enter and vehicle theft: A business was broken into and two vehicles were stolen; one of the vehicles has since been recovered. The file remains under investigation.
  • Moncton – Impaired driving: A driver was issued a ninety-day driver’s licence suspension for impairment.
  • Riverview – Mental distress: Police spoke with an individual in mental distress and Mental Health Response Services also attended.

Daily occurrence summaries like this one provide an important snapshot of how police resources are used, similar to how national crime and safety analytics — such as those available for communities like Region 6, Unorganized in the Northwest Territories — help Canadians compare trends and understand risk in their own regions.

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CrimeCanada.ca Safety Perspective

From the perspective of CrimeCanada.ca, this New Brunswick daily report underscores several ongoing safety themes: impaired driving in multiple communities, breaches of court-ordered conditions, property crime (including ATV and vehicle thefts, and a business break and enter), and a significant number of calls involving individuals in mental distress or in need of wellbeing checks. Each of these categories has a direct impact on community safety and quality of life.

Residents across New Brunswick can support safer streets by promptly reporting suspected impaired drivers, unusual activity around businesses after hours, and any information about stolen property such as ATVs or vehicles. At the same time, the repeated mental health–related calls in this summary highlight the importance of contacting emergency services when someone appears to be in crisis and cannot stay safe on their own. CrimeCanada.ca’s mission is to enhance awareness by combining official police releases with broader crime and safety data, much like we do for communities such as Dawn-Euphemia, Ontario, to help Canadians make informed decisions that protect themselves, their families, and their neighbourhoods.


Official Source & Community Safety

This safety alert is based on an official release from the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP). CrimeCanada.ca aggregates and analyzes this data to keep the new-brunswick community informed, aware, and safe. We are an independent safety data aggregator and not the original creators of the underlying incident report.

Read the full official release here: RCMP Official Statement.

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