RCMP Daily Safety Report: 348 Calls Across New Brunswick

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RCMP Daily Safety Report: 348 Calls Across New Brunswick

Between 6 a.m. on July 11 and 6 a.m. on July 12, 2026, the New Brunswick RCMP responded to a total of 348 calls for service across the province. These calls ranged from urgent life-safety matters to lower-priority occurrences, demonstrating a busy 24-hour period for frontline officers.

Across the province, police recorded 11 Priority 1 calls, 131 Priority 2 calls, 165 Priority 3 calls, and 41 Priority 4 calls. Operational files of note include missing persons in multiple regions, mental health-related responses, impaired driving investigations, sudden deaths where no crime is suspected, and several ongoing files for assaults, thefts, and breaches of court conditions.

Official RCMP Details (July 11–12, 2026)

The RCMP has highlighted the following files of note by region. Locations refer to the RCMP detachment areas responsible for each incident.

Northeast Region

  • Blackville – Missing person; investigation remains active.
  • Blackville – Suspended driver; individual served with documents for a future court date.
  • Campbellton – Sudden death; police report no criminal element is suspected.
  • Chaleur Region – Individual in mental distress; person transported to hospital for care.
  • Tracadie – Missing person; investigation is ongoing.

Southeast Region

  • Caledonia Region – Assault; investigation continuing.
  • Caledonia Region – Assault with a weapon, mischief, and threats; two people were arrested and later released with a future court appearance scheduled.
  • Richibucto – Individual in mental distress; person taken to hospital.
  • Sackville – Theft; investigation remains open.
  • Shediac – Break and enter into a residence and theft of an all-terrain vehicle (ATV); investigation ongoing.
  • Shediac – Individual in mental distress; person transported to hospital.
  • Shediac – Impaired driver; immediate roadside suspension issued and vehicle towed.
  • Sussex – Sudden death; police advise that no criminality is suspected.

West Region

  • Oromocto – Impaired driver; immediate roadside suspension issued, individual arrested and later released on conditions pending a future court date.
  • Oromocto – Assault; investigation ongoing.
  • Saint-Léonard – Individual in mental distress and assault on a police officer; the person was taken to hospital, then arrested and later released pending a future court appearance.
  • Saint-Léonard – Impaired driver; immediate roadside suspension issued and vehicle impounded.
  • St. George – Sudden death; no criminality suspected.
  • St. Stephen – Failure to stop for police and drug offence; individual arrested, released pending a future court appearance, and drugs seized.
  • St. Stephen – Mischief and public intoxication; individual arrested and later released.
  • Tobique – Public intoxication; individual arrested and later released.
  • Western Valley Region – Suspended driver; individual issued documents for a future court date and the vehicle towed.
  • Western Valley Region – Breach of conditions; individual arrested.

Codiac Region (Moncton Area)

  • Moncton – Theft of vehicle; investigation ongoing.
  • Moncton – Failure to stop for police; investigation ongoing.
  • Moncton – Second file involving theft of vehicle; investigation ongoing.
  • Moncton – Missing person; investigation ongoing.
  • Moncton – Additional missing person file; investigation ongoing.

While this report focuses on New Brunswick, similar patterns of calls for service—such as impaired driving, assaults, and property crime—are tracked in other regions of Canada. For comparative insight into how rural and regional crime trends are monitored nationally, residents can review community-level data such as the Opportunity No. 17 crime statistics and safety data, which provide broader context on policing workloads and public safety challenges.

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CrimeCanada.ca Safety Perspective

From the perspective of CrimeCanada.ca, this daily occurrence summary for New Brunswick underscores several key public safety themes: the importance of reporting suspicious activity promptly, the ongoing need for community support around mental health crises, and the serious risk posed by impaired and suspended drivers. Multiple missing person files, vehicle thefts, impaired driving incidents, and assaults in a single 24-hour period illustrate how quickly police resources can be stretched across the province.

Residents can help strengthen safety by securing vehicles and ATVs, avoiding driving after consuming alcohol or drugs, and immediately calling police if they observe erratic driving, attempts to break into homes or vehicles, or individuals who appear to be in acute mental distress. When safe to do so, gathering details such as vehicle descriptions, licence plates, and timelines can significantly assist investigations. Our mission at CrimeCanada.ca is to support communities with clear information so that citizens can recognize risks early, make informed choices, and work alongside law enforcement to reduce crime and harm.


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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