Politics

Ending long-gun registry could boost trafficking

A federal government memo warned that scrapping the long-gun registry could fuel illegal trafficking across the Canadian border, weakening import controls by eliminating a requirement for border officials to verify firearms coming into the country.

Public Safety Minister Vic Toews appears before House committee Tuesday on bill to scrap long-gun registry

Public Safety Minister Vic Toews appears before the Public Safety committee Tuesday to discuss the government's bill to scrap the long-gun registry. A memo obtained under the Access to Information Act suggests that ending the registry could facilitate illegal firearms trafficking across the border. (Fred Chartrand/Canadian Press)

Scrapping the requirement to register rifles and shotguns could fuel illegal firearms trafficking across the Canadian border, warns an internal federal memo.

It says the move would weaken import controls by eliminating a requirement for border officials to verify firearms coming into the country.

"Such a loophole could facilitate unregistered prohibited and restricted firearm trafficking into and through Canada," says the declassified memo, originally marked secret.

The memo was released under the Access to Information Act to the National Firearms Association and posted along with hundreds of other pages on the organization's website.

It was prepared by Mark Potter, a senior Public Safety Department official, for an assistant deputy minister as Parliament was debating a private member's bill to kill the registry. That bill was narrowly defeated in the House of Commons last year.

Upon winning re-election with a majority, the Conservatives made legislation to end the long-gun registry a priority. The bill introduced last month would halt registration of long guns and permanently delete more than seven million files on gun ownership.

Many police, health and victims' groups oppose the move, while anglers and hunters welcome plans for the registry's demise.

The Tories argue the registration of long guns is wasteful and unnecessary, although they support the licensing of gun owners and the registration of prohibited and restricted weapons, including handguns.

The internal Public Safety memo comes to light as Public Safety Minister Vic Toews plans to appear before a Commons committee Tuesday on the federal bill.

The memo notes that businesses and individuals who have a valid firearms licence and supporting documentation may import non-restricted firearms such as common hunting rifles into Canada -- a process administered by the Canada Border Services Agency.

Firearms brought into Canada must go through a verification process, to ensure people have the proper licensing privileges to possess the gun they're importing. Verification, the responsibility of the RCMP-administered Canadian Firearms Program, involves providing a detailed description of the firearm and in some cases may entail a physical inspection.

The memo says the border services agency is "neither trained nor required to verify firearms," and the requirement would disappear along with the long-gun registry.

As a result, says the document, restricted or prohibited weapons could be brought into Canada -- either intentionally or otherwise -- under the guise of unrestricted guns.

Blair Hagen, a spokesman for the firearms association, said eliminating the registry will not mean looser controls on guns at the border.

"Just because there is not an individual registration assigned to that firearm any more does not mean it is not controlled and that there's not a record of it entering Canada. There will still be a record of it entering Canada if it's done legally," he said.

"I think they're alleging that some people will try to fudge it a bit to get illegal guns into Canada and, frankly, that's offensive."

The Public Safety memo also says elimination of the registry would "significantly compromise" law enforcement's ability to trace firearms in Canada -- for instance, linking a weapon left at a crime scene with an individual owner -- or to support foreign police forces trying to do the same.

"In such a scenario, Canada would no longer meet its international commitments relating to firearms tracing and record keeping."