November 8, 2002
KRPF launches gun-storage
crack-down
Shooting spree in Salluit
leads to increased vigilance
ODILE
NELSON
KUUJJUAQ The Kativik
Regional Police are promising to confiscate improperly stored firearms after
a mischievous incident in Salluit sent two youths to hospital last week with
self-inflicted wounds.
The incident is only the
latest in a rash of gun-related offences over the past six months, police said,
and the increase is forcing them to be more stringent about seizing insecure
guns and rifles during unrelated, routine police calls.
"Although it is not
the intention of the KRPF to enforce the [Firearms Safety] Act to the letter,
we strongly feel that we have the obligation to take preventative action when
our officers notice a breach of the act when on a police call," Brian Jones,
chief of KRPF, said in a statement released last week.
Section 86 of the criminal
code makes it illegal to store firearms and ammunition in a "careless manner
or without reasonable precautions for the safety of other persons."
People found guilty of
insecurely storing firearms or ammunition can receive a two-year sentence for
their first offence.
The KRPFs heavy stance
against improperly stored firearms stems from an incident that began on the
evening of Oct. 30 in Salluit.
According to the press
release, two young offenders walked away from Salluits rehabilitation
centre around 7 p.m. that evening and went on a shooting spree after they found
a 22-rifle and ammunition lying in the shed of a nearby residence.
The two youths took the
weapon and ammunition and then set off randomly firing the weapon at various
locations throughout the town, including a construction camp, the local Telesat
Canada site and the rehabilitation centre.
The spree ended nearly
six hours later, when the Salluit nursing station called police and reported
one of the youth had shown up at the station with a self-inflicted gunshot wound
to his shoulder.
Police later found the
other youth on a hill above the centre. The second youth also had a self-inflicted
wound to his shoulder.
Emergency personnel flew
the pair to Puvirnituq by emergency helicopter where they were treated for non-life
threatening injuries.
The two face charges of
break and entering, careless use of a firearm, and mischief.
Their names cannot be released
under provisions of the Young Offenders Act.
Lucien Brassard, inspector
with the KRPF in Kuujjuaq, said this incident is relatively minor compared with
other gun-related incidents that have recently occurred in Nunavik.
A couple of recent situations
turned from violent to deadly when agitated offenders found easy access to improperly
stored guns and ammunition in local homes, he said.
It simply makes sense for
the KRPF to take a preventative stance and seize any insecure firearms they
may notice during routine calls, Brassard said.
"What we want is to
make firearms less accessible and avoid problems before they begin," Brassard
said. "In many homes, firearms are not stored securely. In Inuit homes
front doors are also not locked as a sign of hospitality, openness. But [this
can cause problems] if the door is open, the firearms are stored near ammunition
and there is no trigger lock...If we can only limit the access to firearms other
incidents should be less serious."
Police will confiscate
any insecure firearms they see on routine searches and not return them until
the owner can prove they will be properly stored.
Police said they will accept
trigger lock devices as a secured way to lock firearms.
If owners do not secure
their firearms, police will not return their weapons, Brassard said.
Police may also charge
the owners with an indictable offence.
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