The Durham Regional Police Service (DRPS) West Division Criminal Investigations Branch has launched an active cross-jurisdictional hunt for a pair of suspects executing high-value jewelry thefts against elderly residents. Under the criminal tracking file The Whitby Ajax Distraction Jewelry Robberies 2026, detectives have identified a deeply concerning pattern linking two recent street-level attacks. The suspect pair is utilizing a highly calculated mix of roadside distraction ploys and physical force to strip expensive necklaces and gold bracelets from victims directly outside their doorsteps before replacing the genuine heirlooms with worthless costume jewelry.
With two distinct senior citizens targeted within a seventy-two-hour window, public safety units are urging family members to brief elderly relatives about the dangers of approaching unfamiliar vehicles idling along neighborhood curbs.
Chronology of the Distraction Crime Wave
The newest escalation unfolded at approximately 6:30 p.m. on Wednesday, May 27, 2026, in a newly developed residential block in Whitby. A 63-year-old female resident was standing on the public sidewalk outside her home near the intersection of Whitefish Street and Des Newman Boulevard when a grey or silver four-door SUV featuring tinted windows pulled alongside her.
A male driver and a female passenger called the woman over to the vehicle window using broken Hindi. As the driver initiated a confusing conversation pattern, the female passenger reached out of the vehicle window, aggressively grabbed the victim’s arm, and began sliding fake rings onto her fingers. While the victim was disoriented by the physical contact, the passenger unclipped a high-value necklace from the victim’s neck. The suspects then tossed a handful of cheap counterfeit jewelry at the woman and accelerated away. Fortunately, the victim did not sustain major physical injuries.
This precise criminal blueprint mirrors a violent confrontation that transpired just three days prior on Sunday, May 24, 2026, inside the Ajax boundary. In that incident, a 76-year-old woman was gardening on her private lawn near Old Harwood Avenue and Bray Drive when an identical suspect vehicle pulled up. During the Ajax attack, the female suspect exited the passenger cabin, physically assaulted the elderly gardener to tear several gold bracelets and a necklace from her body, threw fake trinkets at her, and fled. The Ajax victim required treatment for minor physical injuries sustained during the struggle.
Suspect Biometrics and Investigative Call-In Channels
Forensic teams and tactical analysts have compiled synchronized suspect profiles based on security camera extractions from both neighborhoods.
| Suspect Unit | Physical Demographics | Style & Clothing Profile | Linguistic Markers |
| Suspect 1 (Male / Driver) | 40 to 45 years old | Light facial moustache profile | Spoke “broken Hindi” dialects |
| Suspect 2 (Female / Passenger) | 40 to 45 years old | Traditional black hijab head covering | Spoke “broken Hindi” dialects |
| Target Vehicle Profile | Grey / Silver metallic paint | Modern 4-door SUV platform with dark window tints | Used to bracket residential curbs |
The lead investigator, Detective Constable Sheridan, is requesting that any homeowners or commuters who operate dashboard cameras or smart-doorbell surveillance networks near Whitefish Street/Des Newman Boulevard in Whitby, or Old Harwood Avenue/Bray Drive in Ajax, pull their data logs from late May.
Information streams can be reported directly to the West Division Criminal Investigations Branch at 1-888-579-1520, extension 1905. Secure, entirely anonymous crime tips can also be funneled into Durham Regional Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-8477 or logged via their secure web portal at www.durhamregionalcrimestoppers.ca, where leads resulting in an arrest may trigger a cash payout.



















