Crime Bytes: Short Stories about Crime and Public Safety podcast artwork

PODCAST · government

Crime Bytes: Short Stories about Crime and Public Safety

From the quirky to the critical, Crime Bytes explores the ideas shaping how we think about crime, safety, and justice today.Each bite-sized episode unpacks a surprising fact, policy debate, research finding, or real-world example—from Canada’s Crime Severity Index to why certain crimes go unreported, to what cities are doing to rethink public safety. Smart, accessible, and grounded in evidence, Crime Bytes connects data, policy, and people in ways that matter.Perfect for curious minds, public sector pros, and anyone who wants more than just headlines.Big ideas, small episodes. Always worth a byte.

  1. 6

    The Legal and Psychological Landscapes of Violent Crime in Canada

    This episode offers a compelling deep-dive into the most severe violent crimes in Canada, bridging law, criminology, and psychology.It starts by dissecting the Criminal Code, distinguishing between murder (specific intent) and manslaughter (general intent), and explores the three levels of assault. The series highlights the critical role psychological evidence plays in determining criminal responsibility.The podcast delivers a focused critique of the system's failure to address Intimate Partner Violence (IPV), particularly the pervasive, non-physical trauma of coercive control. It uses national statistics and psychological models (like batterer typologies) to reveal why high-risk domestic abusers often slip through the cracks and how historical trauma affects the disproportionately high rates of violence facing Indigenous peoples.Ultimately, this is a necessary listen for anyone seeking to understand the psychological forces driving Canadian violence and the systemic reforms needed to achieve justice.

  2. 5

    Beyond Guilt: NCRMD, Mental Disorder, and the Vancouver Festival Tragedy

    On April 26, 2025, a celebration of Filipino culture at the Lapu-Lapu Day festival in Vancouver was shattered by an unimaginable act of violence. The vehicle-ramming attack that claimed 11 lives brought to the forefront a complex and often misunderstood area of Canadian law: Not Criminally Responsible on Account of Mental Disorder (NCRMD).In this episode, we delve into the legal and ethical maze of the NCRMD defense. What does it mean for an accused to be declared "not criminally responsible," and what is the difference between an acquittal and this special verdict? We'll examine the criteria laid out in Section 16 of the Criminal Code, the role of Review Boards, and the paramount consideration of public safety. We explore the tension between justice for victims and the treatment of mental illness in the legal system. Tune in as we dissect the law that aims to balance accountability, public protection, and compassion.

  3. 4

    Canada’s Car-Theft Surge: Organized Crime, Politics, and the Battle for Solutions

    Canada is in the grip of a car-theft epidemic - one that looks less like petty crime and more like a billion-dollar logistics business. Since 2020, thousands of late-model SUVs and pickups have vanished from suburban driveways, funneled through ports, and shipped overseas in a global supply chain run by organized crime.In this episode, we dig into the anatomy of the surge: 75 organized crime groups in Ontario alone, a 62% year-over-year increase in professional theft rings, and a single border sweep that netted 598 stolen vehicles at the Port of Montreal. Insurance losses hit an unprecedented $1.5 billion in 2023, triple the pre-pandemic average.But there’s a twist: in 2024 and 2025, thefts finally began to fall. Why? Not because of courtroom battles over bail reform, but because governments and industry finally hit the criminals where it hurts—the export pipeline. From container inspections to international intelligence-sharing, these efforts slashed thefts by 19% nationwide in just six months.This is more than a story about stolen cars - it’s about how organized crime adapts, how politics shapes policing, and how evidence points to what actually works. From the driveway to the dock, we uncover the real story behind Canada’s car-theft explosion.

  4. 3

    What Research Really Says About AI in Policing

    AI is moving from the lab to the street, powering everything from threat detection and cybercrime response to emergency management. In this episode, we unpack what the latest research says about AI in policing: its promise to reduce human bias and make decisions more consistent; the surge in OSINT and smart-city tools; and why explainable AI, strong legal guardrails, and public trust are non-negotiable. We explore how data-driven policing can improve safety while confronting real risks: algorithmic bias, opaque models, and surveillance overreach, etc., and why cross-disciplinary collaboration (technologists, police leaders, policymakers, and communities) is the only path to responsible adoption. If you’ve ever wondered whether algorithms can make policing fairer, or just faster, this episode separates the hype from the hard questions. Note that we will also irritatingly attempt to cite our sources within the podcast... not sorry.

  5. 2

    Beyond the Crime Rate: Understanding Canada’s CSI

    What if crime wasn’t just counted, but weighed? Canada’s Crime Severity Index (CSI) does exactly that, shifting the focus from how many crimes occur to how serious they are. In this episode, we unpack how the CSI, first introduced in 2009, revolutionized the way we measure crime by using court sentencing data to give more weight to high-harm offenses like homicide and fraud, while downplaying minor incidents.We’ll explore what the CSI reveals about Canada’s long-term crime trends, including decades of decline, the rise of cybercrime and sexual offenses after 2015, and the surprising recent drop in severity. Along the way, we’ll highlight what the index can (and can’t) tell us about safety, why policymakers and police rely on it, and how Canada’s pioneering model is inspiring similar approaches in the UK, Australia, and New Zealand.Join us for a thought-provoking look at the numbers behind crime—and what they really mean for communities.

  6. 1

    Routine Activities Theory: Digital Crime & Prevention

    Our inaugural podcast on Crime Bytes!

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

From the quirky to the critical, Crime Bytes explores the ideas shaping how we think about crime, safety, and justice today.Each bite-sized episode unpacks a surprising fact, policy debate, research finding, or real-world example—from Canada’s Crime Severity Index to why certain crimes go unreported, to what cities are doing to rethink public safety. Smart, accessible, and grounded in evidence, Crime Bytes connects data, policy, and people in ways that matter.Perfect for curious minds, public sector pros, and anyone who wants more than just headlines.Big ideas, small episodes. Always worth a byte.

HOSTED BY

Dr. P.

CATEGORIES

Frequently Asked Questions

How many episodes does Crime Bytes: Short Stories about Crime and Public Safety have?

Crime Bytes: Short Stories about Crime and Public Safety currently has 6 episodes available on PodParley. New episodes are automatically indexed when they're published to the podcast feed.

What is Crime Bytes: Short Stories about Crime and Public Safety about?

From the quirky to the critical, Crime Bytes explores the ideas shaping how we think about crime, safety, and justice today.Each bite-sized episode unpacks a surprising fact, policy debate, research finding, or real-world example—from Canada’s Crime Severity Index to why certain crimes go...

How often does Crime Bytes: Short Stories about Crime and Public Safety release new episodes?

Crime Bytes: Short Stories about Crime and Public Safety has 6 episodes. Check the episode list to see recent publication dates and frequency.

Where can I listen to Crime Bytes: Short Stories about Crime and Public Safety?

You can listen to Crime Bytes: Short Stories about Crime and Public Safety on PodParley by clicking any episode. We provide an embedded audio player for direct listening, and you can also subscribe via your preferred podcast app using the RSS feed.

Who hosts Crime Bytes: Short Stories about Crime and Public Safety?

Crime Bytes: Short Stories about Crime and Public Safety is created and hosted by Dr. P..
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