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RCMP Daily Report: Key Police Responses Across New Brunswick
Between 6 a.m. on June 7 and 6 a.m. on June 8, 2026, the New Brunswick RCMP responded to a total of 328 calls for service across the province. These calls were triaged by priority, including 22 Priority 1 incidents, 138 Priority 2, 122 Priority 3, and 46 Priority 4 files, reflecting a wide range of urgent and routine policing needs.
This daily occurrence report highlights several operational files from the Northeast, Southeast, West, and Codiac regions, including missing persons, individuals in mental distress, assaults, vehicle collisions, thefts, a robbery with a weapon, and firearm-related offences. Investigations are ongoing in many of these cases, and in multiple incidents individuals were transported to hospital for medical or mental health care.
Official RCMP Details: June 7–8, 2026
The following files of note were reported by the New Brunswick RCMP. Locations listed refer to the RCMP detachment responsible for the area where the incident occurred.
Northeast Region
- Campbellton: Report of a missing person who was also described as being in mental distress. The individual was located and taken to hospital for care.
- Chaleur Region: Assault reported; the investigation remains in progress.
- Chaleur Region: Threats reported. One person was arrested and later released with a future court date pending.
Southeast Region
- Caledonia Region: Two-vehicle collision involving a stolen vehicle, which was recovered. The matter is still under investigation.
- Caledonia Region: Sudden death reported; police indicate no criminality is suspected.
- Caledonia Region: Call regarding an individual in mental distress; the person was taken to hospital.
- Grand Bay–Westfield: Single-vehicle collision; one person was transported to hospital.
- Richibucto: Firearm-related offence involving an individual in mental distress. The person was arrested, released with a future court appearance pending, and transported to hospital.
- Sackville: Impaired driving incident. A 90-day driver’s licence suspension was issued.
- Shediac: Theft reported; investigation ongoing.
- Shediac: Individual in mental distress; transported to hospital.
- Shediac: Second theft incident reported; investigation ongoing.
West Region
- McAdam: Individual in mental distress; the person was detained and taken to hospital.
- Minto: Assault with a weapon reported; investigation ongoing.
- Oromocto: Assault reported; investigation ongoing.
- Oromocto: Stolen vehicle recovered; investigation continues.
- Oromocto: Break and enter into a residence, theft, and alleged breach of conditions. Police are still investigating.
- Oromocto: Missing person file opened; investigation ongoing. (No specific description or public call for assistance was provided in this summary.)
- Saint-Léonard: Failure to stop for police reported; investigation ongoing.
- Saint-Léonard: Individual in mental distress; transported to hospital.
- St. Stephen: Sudden death reported; police state that no criminality is suspected.
Codiac Region
- Moncton: Robbery involving a weapon offence. The investigation is ongoing.
- Moncton: Stolen vehicle recovered; investigation remains underway.
While this specific report focuses on New Brunswick, CrimeCanada.ca tracks similar daily policing trends across the country to compare community risk levels and response patterns. For example, our crime statistics pages for areas such as Division No. 6, Subd. A in Newfoundland and Labrador and Six Nations (Part) 40 in Ontario show how different regions experience varying mixes of property crime, violent incidents, and mental-health-related calls.
CrimeCanada.ca Safety Perspective
From the perspective of CrimeCanada.ca, this daily occurrence snapshot for New Brunswick underscores three key safety themes: road safety, mental health crises, and property/violent crime. The presence of impaired driving, vehicle collisions, and a failure to stop for police highlights the importance of defensive driving, reporting dangerous drivers when safe to do so, and never getting behind the wheel while impaired. Multiple files involving individuals in mental distress show that front-line police are frequently responding to health and wellness emergencies; community members can support safety by taking comments about self-harm or distress seriously and contacting local emergency services if someone appears to be in immediate danger. Incidents such as assaults, robbery with a weapon, thefts, and break and enters demonstrate why it is vital to secure homes and vehicles, keep an inventory of valuables, and promptly report suspicious activity in your neighbourhood. Our mission is to turn this information into actionable awareness so residents can take practical steps—like locking doors, planning safe travel, checking in on vulnerable neighbours, and cooperating with investigations—to help keep New Brunswick communities safer.
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.
