Taking Back Our Streets: New Government
Targets REAL Criminals
June 14, 2006
While shopping for bargains this past Boxing Day with
her Mom, 15-year-old Jane Creba was shot dead after she
was caught in the crossfire of a gang-related shootout
on a Toronto street packed with pedestrians. As Toronto
Police Chief Bill Blair put it, everyone felt that this
“could be their daughter or their sister”.
This week, 25 people were arrested in relation to Ms.
Creba’s murder and the wounding of six other innocent
bystanders. Two 19-year-old men and a 17-year-old were
charged with second-degree murder. Five others were charged
with manslaughter. A semi-automatic 9mm Ruger handgun
was seized during the arrests.
Again, in the words of Chief Blair, “this was an
outrageous attack on public safety.” While Ms. Creba’s
death sadly served to highlight this incident more than
other urban gun crimes, it was not an isolated event.
Shootings, firearms smuggling and illegal firearms are
an epidemic in Canada’s major cities.
Combating these types of firearms offences are where
federal resources should be directed. The long-gun registry
did nothing to stop what happened to Jane Creba. As my
Conservative colleagues and I have been repeating for
more than a decade …criminals and gang members do
not register their firearms!
Fortunately, despite being in government for just over
four months and despite being limited by minority status
and opposition parties (Liberal, NDP, Bloc Quebecois)
that support the useless long-gun registry, the Conservative
government has been able to start re-directing federal
resources towards initiatives that will actually help
Canadians take back their streets!
I outlined last month our plan to stop the harassment
of law-abiding long-gun owners and the waste of tax dollars
by transferring the firearms registry to the RCMP and
waiving and reimbursing license renewal and upgrade fees.
Until we can introduce and pass legislation to actually
change Canadian law, we have put in place a one-year amnesty
to protect gun-owners from prosecution for possessing
a non-restricted rifle or shotgun without a valid license
or registration certificate.
However, our government also introduced Bill C-10, legislation
to impose mandatory minimum penalties for firearms offences
including: possession of a loaded restricted or prohibited
firearm, firearms trafficking, possession for the purposes
of trafficking, making an automatic firearm, firearms
smuggling, possession of firearms obtained by crime, possession
of firearm contrary to a court order and new offences
of robbery where a firearm is stolen and breaking and
entering with intent to steal or stealing a firearm.
Beyond deterring youth and adults alike from committing
these crimes by conveying their severity, these penalties
will enact suitable punishment against some of the nation’s
most dangerous criminals.
Bill C-10 is targeted towards punishing gang members
with guns, those who use restricted weapons to commit
crimes and those who supply weapons illegally. It is currently
being reviewed by the Standing Committee on Justice and
will be back before the House of Commons for further debate
and a vote this fall.
Finally, federal legislation that will actually make
a difference in lowering gun-related crime. And it doesn’t
come with the billion dollar price tag attached to the
Liberal’s long-gun registry!
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