In St. Marys, 5 fraud incidents were reported in 2026, representing 25% of the city's total crime count of 20. Fraud was the second most common category among the four tracked, following theft with 11 incidents.
Data current through . Source: official St. Marys police open-data portal.
This page covers reported fraud incidents in St. Marys, Ontario. Fraud is the second most common category of reported crime in the town, accounting for 25% of all incidents during the selected period.
Between April 11 and May 29, 2026, there were 5 reported fraud incidents in St. Marys. These incidents represent a quarter of the town's total reported crime during this window.
In St. Marys, fraud is the second most frequently reported crime category, behind theft (11 incidents) but ahead of break and enter (3 incidents) and assault (1 incident). While fraud makes up a significant portion of the town's reported crime, it is less common than theft, which accounts for more than half of all incidents. The relatively low overall crime count in St. Marys means that small changes in incident numbers can shift category rankings noticeably.
Fraud accounts for a notable share of St. Marys' reported crime, ranking second behind theft. The 5 incidents in this short window suggest it is a persistent concern, though the small absolute numbers mean trends are volatile. With only two months of data, it is too early to identify broader patterns, but fraud's 25% share of total crime is higher than in many larger Ontario municipalities. The lack of year-over-year data limits deeper analysis, but the current figures highlight fraud as a key category to watch in future reports.
There were 5 reported fraud incidents in St. Marys between April 11 and May 29, 2026. These incidents account for 25% of the town's total reported crime during this period.
Fraud is the second most common reported crime in St. Marys, behind theft (11 incidents) but ahead of break and enter (3 incidents) and assault (1 incident). It represents a quarter of all reported crime in the town.
No, year-over-year data is not available for fraud in St. Marys. The current dataset covers only a partial window in 2026, making trend analysis impossible at this time.
The data covers reported fraud incidents in St. Marys from April 11 to May 29, 2026. This is a partial window and does not represent a full year of data.
Data sourced from the Ontario open data portal, provided by the Government of ON.