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   ont.politics      Ontario politics      90,757 messages   

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   Message 89,908 of 90,757   
   brewnoser2@gmail.com to All   
   Criminals now getting their guns in Cana   
   11 Aug 18 17:41:11   
   
   Kim Bolan -  September 27, 2016   
      
   Criminals now getting their guns in Canada: police   
      
   RCMP see a disturbing shift in B.C. where majority of guns used illegally are   
   acquired through legal sources   
      
      
   Langley resident Christina Stover obtained a firearms acquisition licence just   
   last year, which entitled her to buy weapons at any gun store in Canada.   
      
   Within a matter of months, the 40-year-old former security guard had legally   
   purchased 19 firearms.   
      
   Then, on March 11, police allege Stover, who had no prior criminal record,   
   delivered a cache of guns to two men at their rented Surrey home on 192nd   
   Street.  All three were arrested the same day.   
      
   Ridge Meadows Supt. David Fleugel said the “investigation has resulted in   
   police seizing a number of firearms that were being stored illegally, and may   
   have been destined for a criminal element in a number of communities.”   
      
   Police seized nine firearms, including handguns, rifles and shotguns, he said.   
      
   Sources confirm that several firearms bought by Stover since last year have   
   not been located.  The investigation continues.   
      
   Police see a disturbing shift in where B.C. criminals are getting their guns.   
      
   B.C. gangsters used to get most of their guns from sources in the U.S. who   
   smuggled them across the border. They now obtain most of their illicit   
   firearms within Canada, either by stealing them from legal owners or using   
   straw purchasers who have    
   licences to buy them.   
      
   According to the most recent data available from the RCMP’s National Weapons   
   Enforcement Support Team, 61 per cent of crime guns in the province were   
   domestically sourced.   
      
   “And the balance, about 39 per cent, were believed to be smuggled from the   
   United States or elsewhere.  The source was not domestic,” said Insp. Chris   
   McBryan, the officer in charge of NWEST’s western region.   
      
   NWEST worked with Ridge Meadows RCMP on the Stover investigation.   
      
   “NWEST is dedicated to providing assistance in combating the illegal   
   distribution of firearms to organized crime,” McBryan said.   
      
   “This investigation is another example of how effective partnerships between   
   NWEST and municipal policing services, like Ridge Meadows RCMP, counter the   
   illegal movement of firearms within Canada.”   
      
   Stover appeared in Surrey Provincial Court Monday on eight charges of   
   illegally transferring firearms and one of careless storage of a gun.  She was   
   released on $1,500 bail.  She must keep the peace and stay away from her   
   co-accused as well as any store    
   that sells guns.   
      
   Surrey roommates Gualter De Medeiros, 54, and Warren Svensrud, 50, have also   
   been released on bail.  De Medeiros, who’s believed to have gang links, is   
   charged with six counts of possession of a firearm knowing there was no   
   licence, two counts of    
   possession of a restricted or prohibited firearm with ammunition and one of   
   careless storage of a gun.  Svensrud is charged with two counts of possessing   
   a firearm without a licence and one of careless storage.   
      
   Surrey has been plagued by rampant gun violence linked to the drug trade.   
   Already in 2016 there have been 32 shootings, which have resulted in one   
   murder, several injuries and property damage — including a bullet hole in   
   the side of an RCMP community    
   office.   
      
   Mounties seized 13 firearms in Surrey just last week.   
      
   Staff Sgt. Lindsey Houghton of the Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit   
   said his agency worked on several cases targeting smugglers bringing guns into   
   Canada from the U.S. between 2010 and 2014.   
      
   In February, Tyler Ryan Cuff was sentenced in a Surrey courtroom to 42 months   
   in prison for bringing firearms he purchased at Washington State guns shows   
   into B.C.   
      
   At least 13 of the firearms he bought have been recovered at crime scenes in   
   Canada.   
      
   Cuff was arrested after a CFSEU investigation in August 2014, months before   
   Washington expanded background checks to include private sales of firearms,   
   which are common at gun shows.   
      
   And in May 2015, Oregon also toughened gun laws by making background checks   
   mandatory for all private sales, including online purchases.   
      
   Houghton said the changes in U.S. law plus enforcement action on both sides of   
   the border have led to the change in how B.C. criminals obtain their firepower.   
      
   “Any of these deterrents will result in the criminals changing their   
   behaviour and seeking out firearms in a different way,” Houghton said.   
      
   “Now it’s the overwhelming majority of firearms that make their way into   
   the hands of people using them illegally come from legal sources — a   
   legitimate law-abiding gun owner doing everything they can and their house   
   gets broken into and their gun    
   gets stolen.”   
      
   Houghton said “these criminals are like water: they’ll find the path of   
   least resistance to get to their end goal.”   
      
   So police are changing their tactics, too.   
      
   CFSEU is working with Surrey RCMP and NWEST on a new “Safe City” project   
   where they visit the owners of restricted and prohibited firearms whose   
   registrations have expired.   
      
   If the owner no longer wants their firearm, police take it.   If they want to   
   keep it, they must get their paperwork in order.   
      
   “The objective of this project is to educate firearms owners on the current   
   laws surrounding firearms, as some may not even realize that they are   
   non-compliant,” Surrey RCMP Asst. Com. Bill Fordy said.   “Our aim is to   
   reduce the number of    
   illegally-owned and unregistered firearms in Surrey, as well as enhance public   
   and police officer safety.”   
      
   McBryan, of NWEST, said the shift to domestically sourced crime guns is   
   happening across Canada.   
      
   “The numbers aren’t exactly the same.  The idea that most crime guns are   
   domestically sourced now is consistent,” he said.   
      
   Conservative Surrey MP and former mayor Dianne Watts said she has heard from   
   police that most criminals are now getting their firearms on this side of the   
   border.   
      
   “If we go back a little bit in history, there was a huge influx of weapons   
   coming up from the United States and that was the norm for quite a period of   
   time,” said Watts, who represents South Surrey-White Rock.   
      
   “Because of the crackdown on that front, it morphs into something else. So   
   now you have somebody who is inconspicuous and goes and purchases legitimately   
   these guns and then sells them to people to undertake criminal activity. There   
   has got to be a    
   major lens put on that.”   
      
   ________________________________________________   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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