Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
National

Retired Police Officers Warn Quebec Against Starting Costly Gun Registry

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 May, 2016 11:35 AM
    MONTREAL — Retired Montreal police officer Marc Brisebois remembers always being grateful for any gun-related information that popped up on his screen whenever he was on patrol and called to a house.
     
    "If you have that in front of you, you can take a decision more quickly," said Brisebois, who retired in 2006 after 30 years on the force. "We were happy to have that info."
     
    Twenty-one years after the introduction of the federal long-gun registry — since abolished by the Conservatives — Quebec is making progress on creating its own database of non-restricted firearms.
     
    While Brisebois' comments reflect the official line from police forces and unions across the country — especially in Quebec — not all rank-and file officers agree with him.
     
    Some retired cops from across the country are warning Quebec against setting up a registry they say isn't worth the money and just serves to make citizens feel safer.
     
    John, who didn't want to use his last name, retired from the Montreal police in 2007 after more than 30 years service, many of them spent patrolling downtown.
     
    He said it "boggles the mind" that so many millions were spent on the federal registry — with what he called so few results.
     
    When the Liberals introduced the registry in 1995, they said it would cost roughly $110 million to create. Instead, the figure ballooned to hundreds of millions of dollars before the Conservatives abolished it in 2012.
     
    Quebec says setting up its proper registry will cost $17 million and another $5 million, annually, to maintain. The controversial plan has fuelled reports of dissent within all major parties on the issue.
     
    John said smart officers never relied on gun data when answering calls because even if they were told a suspect had no registered firearms, "you still didn't know if anyone in that home has a gun."
     
    "If (the screen) says there is no gun registered to anyone in the house are you going to put your hand in your pocket and your mind on neutral?" he asked rhetorically. ''That's when you're going to get shot. You go on every call like it's armed."
     
    Quebec's police leaders and union bosses argue the registry is essential because officers checked the old database hundreds of times a day.
     
    Critics, however, say that while everyone wants safe streets and less violence, there is little evidence a registry makes cities safer. They also argue the millions dedicated to maintaining a gun database can be used more efficiently on crime prevention or increased access to mental-health services.
     
    The Ontario Superior Court ruled in 2014 against a constitutional challenge to the Conservative law abolishing the registry, saying "there is no reliable evidence" the decision "actually has, or will, increase the incidence of violence or death by firearms."
     
    Homicide rates in Canada have been decreasing for years and have fallen in Quebec since the registry was abolished in 2012.
     
     
    A retired officer who worked in Vancouver's police department for 28 years told The Canadian Press he would "never rely on the federal government to tell me if there were guns in a house."
     
    "That is useless information because guns move," he said. "Any policeman who doesn't assume there are guns in the house is a fool and has a very, very good chance of getting badly hurt."
     
    He added that when the registry came online in the 1990s, "it had absolutely no effect on the street. And I think you'll find that most policemen will tell you that if they ran a house address and the operator came back and said there are no guns — they would take that as a total waste of air."
     
    The Vancouver officer said police bosses and unions support the registry for political reasons.
     
    "A lot of decisions that come down the pipe in police departments are a result of police departments getting funding from politicians," he said.
     
    But Brisebois believes the registry is more than just a tool for law enforcement — that it's a symbol of how a society treats firearms and that it reinforces Canada's cultural differences from those of the United States.
     
    "Seeing what the registry did for me — spend the money," Brisebois said.
     
    "The important thing is to show people you are doing something (about guns)," he said. "The American way is that guns represent liberty and rights — do we want this? I don't. So am I ready to spend that money? Yes."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ruth Ellen Brosseau On Trudeau: 'Do I Have Justify How Hard I Was Hit In The Breast?'

    Ruth Ellen Brosseau On Trudeau: 'Do I Have Justify How Hard I Was Hit In The Breast?'
    Ruth Ellen Brosseau says she has faced personal attacks since she was elbowed in the House of Commons by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, including that she should be "ashamed to be a woman" and that she is "not a feminist."

    Ruth Ellen Brosseau On Trudeau: 'Do I Have Justify How Hard I Was Hit In The Breast?'

    Surrey Police Charge Vancouver Man With Christmas Eve Attack, One Still Outstanding

    Surrey Police Charge Vancouver Man With Christmas Eve Attack, One Still Outstanding
    Surrey RCMP advises that an arrest and charges have been laid against one of the suspects involved in an assault that occurred this past Christmas Eve

    Surrey Police Charge Vancouver Man With Christmas Eve Attack, One Still Outstanding

    Parliament Apologizes For 1914 Komagata Maru Incident

    Parliament Apologizes For 1914 Komagata Maru Incident
    OTTAWA — There's a Punjabi phrase shouted to give thanks for victories: the truth will always prevail.

    Parliament Apologizes For 1914 Komagata Maru Incident

    B.C. Bill Requiring Universities To Have Sexual Assault Policies Passes Into Law

    B.C. Bill Requiring Universities To Have Sexual Assault Policies Passes Into Law
    The Sexual Violence and Misconduct Policy Act received royal assent on Thursday, less than a month after it was introduced in the legislature.

    B.C. Bill Requiring Universities To Have Sexual Assault Policies Passes Into Law

    Mysterious Boxes Found Around Calgary Contain Money, Woman's Sad Story

    Mysterious Boxes Found Around Calgary Contain Money, Woman's Sad Story
    CALGARY — An intriguing mystery is unfolding at transit stations, bus stops and benches around Calgary.

    Mysterious Boxes Found Around Calgary Contain Money, Woman's Sad Story

    Ruth Ellen Brosseau Fires Back After Personal Attacks Online Over Elbowing Incident

    Ruth Ellen Brosseau Fires Back After Personal Attacks Online Over Elbowing Incident
    She's also retweeted and challenged a number of Twitter users who have blamed her for being elbowed, saying she shouldn't have been standing in Trudeau's path.

    Ruth Ellen Brosseau Fires Back After Personal Attacks Online Over Elbowing Incident