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Today in Canada > News > ‘Frequent flyers’ behind surge in violence on public transit
News

‘Frequent flyers’ behind surge in violence on public transit

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Last updated: 2026/01/13 at 5:53 AM
Press Room Published January 13, 2026
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Estimated 7 minutes

The audio version of this article is generated by AI-based technology. Mispronunciations can occur. We are working with our partners to continually review and improve the results.

This story is a collaboration between CBC Visual Investigations and the Investigative Journalism Foundation (IJF).


As police try to address a dramatic spike in violence on transit systems across the country, they’re finding a relatively small number of people are committing a disproportionate number of violent crimes.

In particular, the Edmonton Police Service (EPS) says 22 per cent of offenders are responsible for nearly half of the crime on transit.

“We’ve been pushing this boulder up a hill as a sector for the last few years,” said public transportation consultant David Cooper, who has observed similar problems with repeat offenders on transit systems across Canada. 

“A lot of times it’s the same people really impacting detrimentally the same cohort of people in a transit space,” he said. “What was very eye-opening to me, going out with police in several cities and going out with front-line staff, is that the police know who they are.”

Exclusive Statistics Canada data obtained by CBC’s visual investigations team and the Investigative Journalism Foundation (IJF) shows that Edmonton’s transit-related violent crime rate more than doubled between 2015 and 2024. The annual number of physical assaults on transit spiked by a whopping 260 per cent in the same time period.

A police officer stands behind a man who has his hands on his head.
CBC followed Sgt. Scott Nolt, left, and other Edmonton Police Service members as they did patrols on transit in December 2025. (CBC)

Edmonton police are currently playing catch-up to address the issue, according to acting Sgt. Scott Nolt of the EPS’s crime suppression branch.

“From my personal perspective, I think the transit system was neglected from a policing sense for a period of time, until we got back … into the space two years ago,” he said. “The transit peace officers do a great job, but they’re severely limited by authority and policies.”

Two people sit on a ledge and speak.
Transportation consultant David Cooper wrote a report making 27 recommendations to improve transit safety in 2023. (CBC)

Exclusive: surveillance video of subway attack

The man who attacked Ben Mazor on an Edmonton LRT train on Nov. 21, 2023, was a repeat offender with a criminal history going back decades, according to court records. 

Exclusive video obtained through a freedom of information request shows Mazor boarding the train at Stadium Station, where a man was blocking passengers from reaching the seats. In the video, Mazor pushes past and argues with the man, who follows Mazor as he sits down.

“It was after I sat down that he started becoming violent and attacking me,” Mazor told CBC.

Two men on a transit vehicle.
This screenshot from a video shows Ben Mazor and his attacker on the LRT in Edmonton in 2023. (Edmonton Police Service)

He was punched and knocked to the ground in the attack. The video shows Mazor scrambling to his feet and then repeatedly pushing the train’s alarm button for help.

“You don’t know how far south it can go when someone is willing to be that violent,” he said.

The attack left Mazor with a broken nose, a concussion and smashed eyeglasses. The man who punched him was arrested six months later, convicted of assault and sentenced to four months in jail.

Last month, he pleaded guilty to another assault charge.

A man with injuries to his face takes a photo.
Ben Mazor had a broken nose and concussion after he was assaulted on the Edmonton LRT in 2023. (Submitted by Ben Mazor)

Police arrest 3 people in 20 minutes

The last decade has seen a dramatic spike in reports of violent crimes on transit systems in several Canadian metro regions, out of proportion with overall crime trends, the Statistics Canada data shows.

The cumulative number of assaults reported on transit in eight of Canada’s 10 largest census metropolitan areas doubled between 2016 and 2024. Over the same time period, there was a 53 per cent increase in assaults across all types of locations in those regions.

  • This is part of a series of stories about violence on public transit. Do you have an experience to share? Send an email to [email protected].

Edmonton’s increase in transit-related violence was one of the biggest in the data set, although there are signs the problem is easing. Violent crime rates on transit in Edmonton and several other cities have gradually started to come down after hitting a peak in 2023, while still remaining well above pre-pandemic levels.

A second set of data, obtained through a freedom of information request to the EPS, adds more detail to the picture. The Coliseum LRT station was by far the biggest hot spot for violent crime on Edmonton’s transit system, with 289 incidents reported to police between 2018 and 2024 — at least 42 per cent more than any other station or transit centre.

In the same time period, about 44 per cent of violent crimes reported on Edmonton transit led to charges, the numbers show.

A police officer speaks with someone in a transit station.
Edmonton police made multiple arrests the night CBC was present. Multiple people were banned from taking transit for previous offences. (CBC)

To get a sense of the problem, CBC’s Eric Szeto accompanied Edmonton police as they patrolled transit in December. Officers were on the lookout for the repeat offenders Nolt described as “frequent flyers” in the criminal justice system.

During the first 20 minutes of the transit patrol with police, three people were arrested. When officers ran their names at the scene, they discovered two were already banned from the transit system because of previous offences.

About a thousand people are currently banned from transit property in Edmonton, according to  EPS. Nolt estimates that up to 90 per cent of them are banned because of violent crimes committed on transit, including robberies, assaults, sex crimes and weapons offences.

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