The industrial property crime units, scrap-metal tracking squads, and West Division tactical patrol teams within the Durham Region have dismantled a high-value copper and alloy theft ring. Tracked under regional commercial enforcement portfolios on Tuesday, July 7, 2026, criminal processing clerks finalized the charging registry Thief from Pickering stole more than $45K in recycled metal from Ajax business: Durham police. Triggered by a late-night compound alarm breach, an intensive investigation revealed the suspect had repeatedly bypassed facility security over a multi-week window, carting off industrial materials valued at more than $45,000.
Property crime detectives note that the arrest highlights an escalating trend of organized metal theft targeting regional salvage networks due to soaring secondary-market commodity prices.
The AIM Recycling Intercept and Compound Alarm Response
The suspect’s long-running theft pipeline was cut short when integrated security infrastructure tripped, prompting a rapid police response.
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The Alarm Dispatch: On the evening of Thursday, June 25, 2026, at approximately 9:15 p.m., Durham Regional Police units rushed to the AIM Recycling commercial facility located inside Ajax’s industrial sector. On-site electronic surveillance had captured a lone male cutting through a perimeter fence to gain entry to the restricted yard.
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The Serial Footprint: While patrol teams successfully located and arrested the suspect near the compound fence line that night, follow-up audits by the West Division Criminal Investigations Bureau quickly revealed a much larger pattern.
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The Cumulative Asset Loss: Forensic physical inventory sheets and security tape reviews linked the same suspect to a string of previous undetected breaks at the exact same location, with the total volume of stolen commercial raw metals clearing the $45,000 mark.
Analyzing the Accused Profile and Statutory Charges
The 35-year-old Pickering resident was booked into the regional holding facility, where investigators laid major indictments under the federal criminal code.
| Accused Identity Profile | Age Tier / Primary Residence | Primary Statutory Accusations Laid | Central Lead Case Desk Routing |
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Identity Protected (Pending initial court processing) |
35 Years Old / Pickering, ON |
• Commercial Break-and-Enter • Theft Over $5,000 |
Det.-Const. Ananthamurugan West Division CIB Unit |
| Status: In Custody | Regional Jurisdiction | Framework: Criminal Code of Canada | 905-579-1520, Extension 1905 |
The Industrial Asset Security Mandate
Commercial property investigators are warning industrial yard managers across Durham that scrap copper, heavy wire, and brass fixtures remain high-priority targets for organized thieves. Because raw metal is easily melted down or stripped of identifying tags, it can be quickly laundered through secondary-market dealers. Operators are urged to reinforce their perimeter fencing, deploy high-intensity motion lighting, and set up real-time video alarms that route directly to emergency dispatch lines.
Active Appeal for Secondary-Market Intelligence
West Division detectives are tracking the downstream buyers who purchased the bulk loads of stolen metal and are asking local scrap yards to audit their recent cash logs.
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Lead Investigative Node: Anyone who witnessed suspicious rental trucks loading cargo near the AIM Recycling yard prior to June 25, or who has direct knowledge of this case, is requested to contact Det.-Const. Ananthamurugan at 905-579-1520 ext. 1905.
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Off-the-Record Reporting: Tips can also be routed safely past primary police lines via Durham Regional Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-TIPS (8477). Reliable tips that lead to asset recovery may qualify for a tax-free cash reward.
The Durham Regional Police Service West Division handles the active case and court evidence files.
Ajax business owners, commercial property managers, and industrial logistics directors looking to look over commercial crime statistics, download facility protection toolkits, or track local court outcomes can access the public networks online at drps.ca or submit secure tips via durhamregionalcrimestoppers.ca.






















