Butter stolen from another Ontario grocery store this time $1,200 worth in Brantford, police say - Action News
Home WebMail Thursday, November 21, 2024, 11:33 PM | Calgary | -11.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Hamilton

Butter stolen from another Ontario grocery store this time $1,200 worth in Brantford, police say

The theft happened on Oct. 29 at about 8:25 p.m. from a grocery store at Lynden Road and Wayne Gretzky Parkway, Brantford Police Service say.

Brantford police are looking for 2 suspects who made their escape in a white van on Oct. 29

Sliced pieces of butter on a cutting board.
Police say $1,200 worth of butter was stolen from a Brantford, Ont., grocery store last week. (Shutterstock / itor)

Police in Brantford, Ont., are searching for two men who slipped away from a grocery storewith $1,200 worth of butter.

The theft happened on Oct. 29 at about 8:25 p.m. from a grocery store at Lynden Road and Wayne Gretzky Parkway, Brantford Police Service said in a news release.

The suspects were caught on security cameras and are described by police as wearing all black clothing, including black baseball hats.

They fledthe scenein a white van, said police.

This is not the first large quantity ofbutter to be stolen in southern Ontario in recent months, but police don't know if the cases are connected.

Nine thefts have been reported to Guelph police in the last year, said spokesperson Scott Tracey.

"It's certainly unusual but there is an organized aspect to it," Tracey told CBC News.

Watch | Butter stolen from Guelph grocery stores

Ontario butter thieves strike again with large-scale robberies

22 days ago
Duration 2:01
Police in Guelph, Ont., say there have been seven 'large-scale' butter thefts over the last 10 months, including two in October. The most recent cases resulted in losses of more than $900 each.

The stolen butter ends up on the black market, or on resale websites, but is difficult to track, said Guelph police.

SylvainCharlebois, a Dalhousie University professor who studies food distribution, said along with it being "particularly easy" to resell, butter also freezes well for a long time making it a hot commodity for thieves.

Butter retail priceshave shot up in recent years. For example, abrick sold for $4.20 on average in Ontario in August 2020, according to Statistics Canada. A brick now sells for $5.74.

The latest theft happened in late October when two men placed four cases of butter worth over $950 in a cart and walked out an emergency exit, Guelph police said in a news release.

"Butter continues to be a hot commodity for thieves in Guelph," the statement said.

As of Tuesday, no arrests have been made in that incident, Tracey said.

Guelph and Brantford police are asking anyone with information to contact investigators or Crime Stoppers.

With files from Jamie Strashin