12  H.Q.   Summer 2026
intelligence 
officers, 
analysts 
and 
private/public 
safety 
professionals 
from 
across 
Ontario, 
Canada 
and 
beyond, including:
•	Municipal, provincial and federal 
policing partners from across 
Canada and internationally, 
including FVEY partners (Australia, 
Canada, New Zealand, the United 
Kingdom and the United States);
•	Canadian Border Services Agency 
(CBSA), Transport Canada (TC), 
NAV CANADA, FINTRAC and our 
Canadian Armed Forces (CAF);
•	Aircraft Management Council of 
Ontario (AMCO), Canadian Owners 
Pilot Association (COPA), Alberta 
Airport Management Association 
(AAMA) and many public/private 
GA sites (land & marine)  
across Ontario;
•	British Columbia, Ontario and our 
National Crime Stoppers Program 
networks; and
•	Ontario Police Video Training 
Alliance (OPVTA), which is com-
prised of members of the Niagara 
Regional Police Service’s Video Unit. 
THE “CRIME DOESN’T  
FLY HERE” CAMPAIGN
One of the most significant outcomes of 
this collaboration is the Crime Stoppers 
Program’s “Crime Doesn’t Fly Here” 
education and awareness campaign. 
Developed with and for the GA com-
munity, these materials empower pilots, 
operators, airport staff and community 
members to recognize indicators of GA 
exploitation and know how to report 
concerns safely and responsibly.
These engagement and awareness 
materials (regarding GA vulnerabilities 
– digital posters and public service 
announcements/videos) are free and 
available to our communities, part-
ners, educators and interested people 
through the Canadian Association of 
Chiefs of Police (CACP) website. These 
materials are designed to educate with-
out stigmatizing and to inform without 
alarm – for information and to download 
material, please go to the Aviation 
Security section of the CACP website.
It is critical to remember that 
situational awareness remains the 
first line of defence in all safety and 
security matters. Our aviation com-
munity/sector is highly observant, 
focused and vigilant to ensure a high 
degree of safety for all. The purpose 
of our GA initiative is to support the 
aviation industry with their high 
safety standards, while encouraging 
enhanced collaboration with police 
and law enforcement agencies to 
foster a more robust security culture.
A CALL TO ACTION 
For police leaders and frontline 
members alike, success begins with a 
return to and focus on the fundamen-
tals. Community and public safety are 
built on trust, relationships and pres-
ence. I understand the high demands 
placed on police services. It remains 
critically important to engage with the 
communities we are sworn to protect 
and serve.
The GA community is filled with 
professionals who want to help. 
Sometimes the most effective step 
forward is also the simplest: show up, 
start the conversation, be curious and 
learn about this incredible commun-
ity. There is nothing that organized 
crime and their illicit networks fear 
more than a trusted and cooperative 
relationship between the community 
and police. 
Collaboration and partnerships 
cannot be underestimated. For our 
GA initiative, we have worked with 
many different groups, collectives 
and associations. During our dis-
cussion groups, open forums and 
brainstorming sessions, we identified 
key vulnerabilities in the GA domain 
that we have advanced as OACP & 
CACP Resolutions.
Our recommendations have been 
supported and endorsed through a 
formal CACP Resolution to Combatting 
Organized Crime in the General 
Aviation Domain (CACP Resolution 
2025-01). This collective approach 
has allowed us to set a course that 
will support our recommendations 
for action, including:
•	Enhancing the security of the  
GA domain with increased  
law enforcement and  
intelligence resources;
•	Modernize and integrate real-time 
information and intelligence shar-
ing between law enforcement, 
public safety and aviation sector 
agencies; and
•	Increased funding for skills 
development and training to 
support municipal, provincial, 
federal law enforcement and other 
public safety officers in relation to 
GA investigations and inspections.
The GA Strategic Intelligence Probe 
and Initiative demonstrates what is 
possible when we collaborate, innov-
ate and target the illicit networks 
that have infiltrated our community, 
country and civil society. Transnational 
Serious Organized Crime groups and 
Foreign Threat Actors cause immeas-
urable harm to our domestic and 
international communities. It’s time 
for Canada to “answer the bell” and 
join together to detect, deter, disrupt 
and dismantle these criminal organiz-
ations and their illicit networks.
As Canada continues to engage 
domestically and internationally, one 
message remains clear: safety and 
security are shared responsibilities. 
Together, we are proving that crime 
doesn’t fly here, and that collabor-
ation and action remains Canada’s 
greatest strength.
RCMP Inspector Barry Dolan, is a serving 
Commissioned Officer with over 40 
years of policing experience. He is 
currently on federal secondment to the 
CISO, Ministry of the Solicitor General 
of Ontario. His experience includes 
extensive leadership and management 
of administrative, communications, uni-
form, incident command, investigative 
and intelligence operations. Dolan is the 
chair of the Provincial GA Command JOIG 
and the OACP Intelligence Operations 
Committee (IOC) and a member of 
the CACP Aviation Security Committee 
(ASC) and the Private Sector Liaison 
Committee (PSLC).

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