Corrections & Data Accuracy Policy
CrimeCanada.ca publishes crime-related news summaries, safety explainers, and data-driven tools (such as maps and statistics). Because crime information can change as new details emerge, we maintain a clear process for corrections, updates, and clarifications.
Emergency note: If you are in immediate danger, call 911. If you need non-emergency assistance, contact your local police service or community supports.
What this page is for: Fixing mistakes on our website (CrimeCanada.ca), such as incorrect locations, dates, wording, or mislinked sources—so readers can rely on our information with appropriate caution.
What can be corrected on CrimeCanada.ca
Content we typically correct
- Typos and formatting issues (names, dates, street spellings, labels)
- Incorrect location pins or boundaries on maps
- Misstated numbers when we cite a specific source
- Broken links, wrong citations, or misattributed quotations
- Outdated status where a reliable update is available (e.g., a case outcome is published)
Content we may not change (or may handle differently)
- Requests to remove accurate, lawfully published information solely because it is unfavourable
- Disputes about opinions, commentary, or clearly labelled analysis (we may add context instead)
- Claims that cannot be verified with credible documentation
- Ongoing incidents where key facts are not confirmed (we may publish an update rather than a “correction”)
Privacy-first handling (important)
We aim to minimize harm. If a request raises privacy concerns (for example, identifying details about private individuals, or sensitive information that is not necessary for public understanding), we may remove, generalize, or limit details even when other information remains available elsewhere.
We also take a conservative approach when a matter may be subject to a publication ban or other legal restriction: we do not guess. If we learn that limits apply, we will update the page accordingly.
How to request a correction
The fastest way is to email us with enough detail for verification. If you are reporting an error on a specific page, include the full page URL.
- Send your request to [email protected] with the subject line: Correction Request.
- Identify the page (URL) and the exact text/data you believe is incorrect (quote it or screenshot it).
- Explain what should change and why. If you have documentation, include it (links or attachments).
- Tell us how to reach you (name + email). If you are acting on behalf of someone else, say so.
Documentation that helps: official public notices, court-file references, government open-data references, or direct links to the original source we cited. If you do not have documentation, we can still review, but verification may be limited.
What happens after you submit a request
| Step | What we do |
|---|---|
| 1) Triage | We confirm the page, log the request, and assess urgency (e.g., safety risk, major factual error, privacy concern). |
| 2) Verification | We review the cited sources and any documentation you provide. If a point cannot be verified, we may publish a clarification or note the limitation. |
| 3) Update | We apply the appropriate label: Correction, Update, Clarification, or (rarely) Removal for privacy/legal reasons. |
| 4) Transparency | Where appropriate, we add a brief editor’s note describing what changed and when (without adding unnecessary personal details). |
Our goal: Fix clear errors quickly, document meaningful changes, and avoid overstating what any dataset or early report can prove.
How we label changes
Correction
A factual mistake was identified and fixed (e.g., wrong date, incorrect map pin, misquoted source).
Update
New credible information became available after publication (e.g., a new statement, a charge change, a court outcome).
Clarification
We reword or add context to avoid confusion, without changing the underlying meaning.
Removal / Redaction
We remove or limit details to reduce privacy harm, respect restrictions, or address a serious risk—while keeping the page accurate and transparent where possible.
Important limitations
- No “real-time” guarantee: Our pages may lag behind events, and some sources update after delays.
- Not official data access: CrimeCanada.ca is an independent information site. We do not claim direct government or police database access.
- Early information can change: Initial reports may be incomplete or later corrected by official sources.
- Legal sensitivity: We use neutral language and avoid stating guilt unless it is confirmed by a conviction.
Related pages
- Legal Resources (understanding the system and common terms)
- National News & Analysis (Canada-wide coverage with context)
- Safety Academy (practical prevention education)
Contact
For corrections, email [email protected] with Correction Request in the subject line. If you believe content creates an immediate safety or privacy risk, state that clearly at the top of your message.
Disclaimer: This page explains CrimeCanada.ca’s editorial process. It is not legal advice. For legal advice, consult a qualified professional.
