St. Marys recorded 16 crime incidents between April 11 and May 17, 2026. Theft was the most frequent category, making up 56.3% of all reported incidents.
Data current through . Source: official St. Marys police open-data portal.
This map displays 16 reported incidents in St. Marys, Ontario, over a 60-day period from April 11, 2026, to May 17, 2026. The data is sourced from the local police portal, providing a snapshot of criminal activity in the area. Residents and visitors can use this information to stay informed about recent trends and patterns in their community.
Understanding these incident reports helps highlight areas and types of crime that may require attention. While the numbers are relatively low, they offer insight into the types of offences occurring in St. Marys during this timeframe.
The dataset covers only a 60-day window in 2026, with 16 incidents recorded. There is no year-over-year comparison available, as this is the only year with data. Without prior years for context, it is not possible to determine whether this represents an increase, decrease, or stable trend.
Theft was the most frequently reported incident type, accounting for 9 of the 16 total incidents (56.3%). Break and enter followed, with 3 incidents (18.8%), tied with fraud, which also had 3 incidents (18.8%). Assault was the least common among the top categories, with only 1 incident reported (6.3%).
St. Marys recorded 16 incidents over 60 days in 2026, with theft dominating at 56.3% of reports. Break and enter and fraud each accounted for 18.8%, while assault made up only 6.3%. The small total count and short window make it difficult to draw broader conclusions, but the concentration of theft stands out as the most frequent concern.
There were 16 reported incidents in St. Marys between April 11, 2026, and May 17, 2026. This includes theft, break and enter, fraud, and assault.
Theft was the most common incident, accounting for 9 of the 16 reported incidents, or 56.3%. Break and enter and fraud each accounted for 3 incidents, or 18.8% each.
The data for 2026 shows 16 incidents, but there is no year-over-year comparison available at this time.
Neighbourhood-level data is not available for this period, so it's not possible to identify specific areas with higher incident counts.
The data covers incidents reported between April 11, 2026, and May 17, 2026, and was last updated on June 3, 2026.
This data is sourced from open data provided by the Ontario government, specifically from reported incidents in St. Marys.
Data sourced from the Ontario open data portal, covering reported incidents in St. Marys.