Table of Contents
Community Alert: Manitoba RCMP Warn After Children Found Unrestrained in Speeding Vehicle
SECTION 1: THE ALERT
On May 18, 2026, a Manitoba RCMP Traffic Services officer stopped a speeding vehicle on Highway 17 in the Rural Municipality of Fisher. The northbound vehicle was recorded at 126 km/h in a 100 km/h zone. During the traffic stop, the officer discovered four children under the age of 12 in the back seat who were not wearing seat belts or secured in proper child restraint systems.
The driver, a 29-year-old man from Peguis First Nation, was issued multiple tickets totalling $1,190. Manitoba RCMP are using this incident as a clear reminder that all occupants, especially children, must be properly restrained every time a vehicle is in motion, on any road, at any time. As summer traffic increases across Manitoba communities, from rural areas like the RM of Fisher to communities such as Cartwright-Roblin and other Manitoba regions, the risk of serious injury or death in collisions rises when seat belts and child seats are not used correctly.
SECTION 2: OFFICIAL DETAILS
According to the official information provided by Manitoba RCMP:
- On May 18, 2026, at approximately 5:15 p.m., a Manitoba RCMP Traffic Services officer conducted a traffic stop on a northbound vehicle on Highway 17 in the RM of Fisher.
- The vehicle was travelling at 126 km/h in a posted 100 km/h zone.
- The officer observed two adults seated in the front and four children, all under 12 years old, seated in the back of the vehicle.
- None of the four children were wearing seat belts or were secured in appropriate child car seats or booster seats.
- Provincial legislation requires children to remain in booster seats until they are at least 4-foot-9 (145 cm), weigh 80 pounds (36 kg), or are at least nine years old, so that the seat belt fits their body safely.
The 29-year-old male driver from Peguis First Nation received four traffic tickets, with total fines of $1,190, for the following offences:
- Speeding.
- Driving a motor vehicle on a highway when a person under 18 years of age is not wearing the seat belt provided for that seating position.
- Driving a motor vehicle when a child passenger of an age, weight, or height that requires a child restraining device is not properly seated and restrained in that device as required by regulation.
- Driving a motor vehicle on a highway with more occupants than available seating positions equipped with seat belts.
RCMP Traffic Services highlight that the late spring and summer period is typically a busy time on Manitoba roads and highways, when collision numbers can rise. Ensuring that all occupants are properly buckled, particularly children who need car seats or booster seats, is a critical step in preventing serious or fatal injuries.
Transport Canada provides detailed guidance on selecting and installing child car seats and booster seats, including practical installation tips and diagrams. Families across Manitoba, including those in smaller and rural communities such as Rolling River 67 and surrounding areas, are strongly encouraged to review these guidelines to confirm their equipment is appropriate and correctly installed. Official federal guidance on proper child car seat and booster seat use is available on the Government of Canada website: Transport Canada – Child Car Seat and Booster Seat Safety.
SECTION 3: CRIME CANADA SAFETY PERSPECTIVE
At CrimeCanada.ca, we track and analyze safety incidents across Manitoba to help families understand that road safety is not only about impaired or reckless driving—it is also about everyday decisions like buckling children in correctly, every single trip. Unrestrained or improperly restrained children face a dramatically higher risk of severe injury in even low-speed collisions, and this risk is increased on high-speed rural highways and connector routes throughout the province.
To support a safer community, CrimeCanada.ca encourages caregivers to: routinely check that each child’s car seat or booster is appropriate for their age, height, and weight; ensure seat belts lie flat across the chest and hips, not the neck or stomach; never exceed the number of seat-belted seating positions in a vehicle; and plan extra time for trips so that proper buckling is never rushed or skipped. Combining these basic precautions with attentive driving can prevent tragedies and ease the burden on emergency responders and local health systems across Manitoba.
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 manitoba 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.

