In 2017, Timmins recorded 102 theft incidents, representing 5% of the city's total crime count of 2,055. Theft ranked as the second most common crime category among seven tracked types.
Data current through . Source: official Timmins police open-data portal.
This page covers reported theft incidents in Timmins, Ontario, during a two-month period from October 22 to December 21, 2017. Theft accounted for 102 incidents, representing 5% of the city's total reported crime during this window.
While theft is the second-most reported category in Timmins, it remains a smaller portion of overall crime compared to larger urban centres. The data reflects only reported incidents, and actual occurrences may differ due to under-reporting.
In Timmins, theft ranks as the second-most reported crime category, behind 'Other' (1,829 incidents) but ahead of assault (59), mischief (30), break-and-enter (23), and auto theft (7). Theft's 102 incidents make up a small but notable share of the city's crime landscape, though it is far less frequent than the broad 'Other' category, which dominates local reports.
Theft in Timmins stands out as the second-most reported crime category, yet its 102 incidents over two months are dwarfed by the 'Other' category's 1,829. This suggests theft is a consistent but not dominant concern. The lack of year-over-year data limits trend analysis, but the numbers show theft is more frequent than violent crimes like assault or property crimes like break-and-enter. The short reporting window means these figures cannot be annualized or compared to full-year datasets.
There were 102 reported theft incidents between October 22 and December 21, 2017. This represents 5% of all crime reported in Timmins during that period.
Theft is the second-most reported category, behind 'Other' (1,829 incidents) but ahead of assault (59), mischief (30), and break-and-enter (23). It accounts for a small but notable portion of local crime.
No, the data covers only a two-month window from October 22 to December 21, 2017. It cannot be used to estimate annual totals or trends.
No, the dataset includes only 2017 figures, so year-over-year comparisons are not possible. The 102 incidents reflect a single reporting period.
Data sourced from the Ontario open data portal, covering reported incidents in Timmins.