Canada: 1.6 million guns elude registry (REALLLY?)

Status
Not open for further replies.

WAGCEVP

Member
Joined
May 26, 2003
Messages
864
Canada: 1.6 million guns elude registry (REALLLY?)


NUMBER OF GUNS IN CANADA = 16.5 Million
Documented as of: December 13, 2001
Click Here for more information:

http://www.garrybreitkreuz.com/breitkreuzgpress/GunControl50.htm


1976 LIBERAL ESTIMATE OF THE NUMBER OF GUNS IN CANADA = 10.5 Million
Documented as of: March 19, 1976
Click Here for more information:
http://www.garrybreitkreuz.com/publications/firearms_facts_feb27-03.htm


NUMBER OF GUNS REGISTERED = 6,019,925
Documented as of: April 15, 2003
Click Here for more information:

http://www.garrybreitkreuz.com/publications/FirearmsRegistered-2003-04-15.xl s


--------------

PUBLICATION GLOBE AND MAIL
DATE: TUE JUL.01,2003
PAGE: A1 (ILLUS)
BYLINE: DANIEL LEBLANC
CLASS: National News
EDITION: Metro DATELINE: Ottawa ON

--------------------------------------------------------------------------
1.6 million guns elude registry

-------------------------------------------------------------------------

The grace period to register rifles and other long firearms ended
yesterday with about 1.6 million shotguns and rifles -- about one of every five such weapons in the country -- still outside of the national database. But the federal government is not rushing to track down and charge people with unregistered long weapons.

Despite being past the deadline, Canadians will not face punishment if they contact the Canadian Firearms Centre to register a weapon in the coming weeks.

They run the risk of a fine or jail term only if they are caught by police with an unregistered weapon.

Over all, about 6.3 million firearms are registered with the Canadian Firearms Centre, short of the government's estimate of 7.9 million long firearms in Canada.

In addition, Ottawa estimates there are 2.3 million firearms owners in Canada, of which about 200,000 have not signed up for a licence.

Critics of the registry say the law will make criminals out of otherwise law-abiding gun owners.

Canadian Alliance MP Garry Breitkreuz said the huge number of unregistered weapons and unlicensed gun owners is a sign of the system's failure. He urged Ottawa to scrap the costly registry, which requires all gun owners
to get a licence and register their firearms.
"[This] creates a whole new class of paper criminals in this country," he said.

Mr. Breitkreuz said he is not reassured by Ottawa's promise that no one will be prosecuted simply for the late registration of a firearm.

"This verbal amnesty makes a mockery of the Criminal Code," he said.

David Austin of the Canadian Firearms Centre said Canadians will not be punished for the late registration of a firearm, but that they are taking a risk in waiting too long.

"In terms of an individual who is outside the system, we'd recommend that they immediately apply," he said.

There was a last-minute surge of people registering long firearms
yesterday. The influx of electronic registrations even slowed down the Canadian Firearms Centre's Web site.

The registry was initially estimated by the Liberal government in 1995 to cost $2-million, after licensing fees were collected, but is now pegged to cost $1-billion by 2005. The Canadian Alliance said the money should have been used to increase the number of police officers in the country.

The deadline for gun owners to register their long firearms had been extended from Jan. 1.

(Handgun registration has been mandatory since 1934, and regulations were tightened in 1977 to restrict handgun possession and prohibit automatic and other heavy weapons and such items as silencers.

The pressure group Coalition for Gun Control estimates there are about one million handguns in Canada.)
The law allows police to charge first-time offenders, who have not
registered long guns under the Firearms Act, and penalties could result in a $2,000 fine or six months in jail. Or police may lay Criminal Code weapons charges of illegal possession, which carry tougher penalties of up to 10 years in jail.
However, it is not clear who will face prosecution for failing to
register. British Columbia, Nova Scotia, Ontario, Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba have announced that they will not prosecute people who fail to register rifles or shotguns.

Korean War veteran Oscar Lacombe, 74, of Edmonton, tried to get charged for failing to register his weapon, but police decided to use the Criminal
Code rather than the Firearms Act.

The former sergeant-at-arms of the Alberta Legislature carried his
unregistered .22-calibre rifle to the legislature in January, pleading with police to arrest him.

He wanted to challenge the Firearms Act to the Supreme Court of Canada.
 
Sorry to dig up an old post, but does anyone have a link to an online article regarding the 1.6 million missing guns?
 
It's gone out of the news up here, so I doubt you'll find anything online. That 1.6 million is a very LOW estimate too, going by the last set of figures released. In 1974, the Liberals estimated that there were a minimum of 6 million guns in Canada, a maximum of 21 million, and a most likely true number of somewhere around 14 million. Since that time, there have been a minimum of 7 million guns imported into the country, making for a minimum of 13 million guns in Canada. Today, now that they are desperate to make the registry seem like it's "working", they're back to saying "Oh, there are about 6 million guns in Canada", so any number above that is gravy, as far as they're concerned.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top