Firearms registry pursues oldtimer beyond the

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johnr

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Firearms registry pursues oldtimer beyond the grave
http://www.sierratimes.com ^ | Published 01. 21. 03 at 2:39 Sierra Time | Canadian Press


Posted on 01/21/2003 8:33 PM EST by ATOMIC_PUNK


Firearms registry pursues oldtimer beyond the grave
Canadian Press
Published 01. 21. 03 at 2:39 Sierra Time
WEST NEW ANNAN, N.S. - The federal gun registry is chasing a Nova Scotia man beyond the grave to make sure he registers a restricted firearm.

Albert Byers died Dec. 9, 1974, but that didn't stop the government from writing him a letter recently to get him to register his handgun.

"I guess they don't check that sort of thing," said his great-nephew, Glenn Byers, whose parents received the notice in their rural mailbox.

They are probably the closest living relatives of his Uncle Bert, a bachelor who would be 108 now, Byers said.

Not only is Bert Byers lying in the West New Annan cemetery, 120 km northwest of Halifax, but it is unlikely that he owned a restricted firearm.

"No one remembers him ever having a handgun," Byers said. The notice doesn't say exactly what type of restricted firearm Bert Byers is supposed to have had, but a handgun is the most common type, he added.

Following a 1950s house fire, Bert Byers moved to a woods camp to live out the rest of his days. His great-nephew, also of West New Annan, said he probably owned a rifle because he hunted for his own meat.

Byers suspects old records may show his great-uncle registered a firearm following 1934 handgun legislation, but authorities have lost its trail through a maze of regulations and paperwork.

Byers tried contacting the firearms registry, only to have automated voices tell him to try again. Eventually he reached someone who told him the onus is on the gun owner to notify the registry.

"They must think he has a phone buried with him," Byers said. "He'd find it all amusing if he were here ... If it wasn't costing anything, it would be hilariously funny."

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Source:

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/826925/posts
 
Makes sense ...

The feds are leaving no (grave) stone unturned. The government is just trying to cover their butt on this one. They want to avoid the public outcry and having to deal with zombie-related-unregistered-handgun-violence...
 
This article really shows what is wrong with "a simple registration law" that "harms" nobody.

According to the article:
"Byers suspects old records may show his great-uncle registered a firearm following 1934 handgun legislation, but authorities have lost its trail through a maze of regulations and paperwork."

Took 68 years for the Canadian government to start confiscating firearms.

Does anyone still not see the danger in firearms registration?
 
Thanks for looking- I have to step out, we have bad weather coming in, and vehicles & relatives need attention. Back ASAP
 
"They must think he has a phone buried with him," Byers said. "He'd find it all amusing if he were here ... If it wasn't costing anything, it would be hilariously funny."

This sort of thing really makes me roll my eyes at the Gov't. bull****.

Perhaps it is just easier to pretend that there is a "criminal" who has nor re-registered a handgun or rifle, than it is to do the paperwork to have this firearm stricken from the books as "whereabouts unknown, presumed destroyed".

:scrutiny:
 
If there's a conviction ...

the guy could get "life". I bet he'd settle for that ...
 
Idea:

Get an attorney to write a letter informing the bureau of the gentleman's change of address. Then disclaim further knowledge of his present whereabouts.

123 Peaceful Lane, whatever.

I'm sure the cemetery has a mailbox.
 
Ledbetter has the right idea, find the address for the cemetary, and tell them that that is his new address, don't let the gov't know that it is a cemetary. Let them figure it out when they pull up to the cemetary with the SWAT team.:D
 
"tell them that that is his new address"

He has been there for 29 years. In fact, he has been there so long it has become a part of him, or him or it.
 
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