January 30th, 2008, 15:26 | #46 | |
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January 30th, 2008, 15:28 | #47 | |
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If you purchased a gun after 1998 you comitted an Illegal ACT the gun is still legal to posses regardless of when you got it. ALL replica firearms are legal to own.. but according to the law you are not supposed to buy any after 1998.. No one can seize your guns just because you have them.. If they wanted to charge you with the ACT of illegal transfer they would need more than the basis that "you must have purchased it after 1998" A judge would laugh that out of court. The fellow that got the Scare in PQ was videoed selling guns from the trunk of his car at games... they had him.. and even then they only threatened charges if he did not cease and desist. There are lots of people in this community that would loose their livelyhood if they were convicted of a Criminal Firearms Charge.. Myself amoung them.. and I don't give it a second thought.. I have weighed the risk.. and it is vanishingly small.. I would likely win the lottery first...
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Brian McIlmoyle TTAC3 Director CAPS Range Officer Toronto Downtown Age Verifier OPERATION WOODSMAN If the tongue could cut as the sword does, the dead would be infinite |
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January 30th, 2008, 15:36 | #48 |
Part man, part machine
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I should have clarified that more in the Q&A and i shall amend it. Brian is correct.
The problem lies in the fact that replicas were grandfathered, but there is no strong basis to prohibit ownership. A prohibited weapon that has been grandfathered requires a prohib PAL - you can't have one without the other. But without any sort of licensing for replicas, you can't grandfather them and make their possession illegal at the same time. And as Brian pointed out, trying to charge you on the basis that you may or may not have bought a toy gun after 1998 is not exactly priority business for the courts. |
January 30th, 2008, 15:47 | #49 |
aka daijivu
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nice read, thanks HoJo..
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January 30th, 2008, 15:57 | #50 | |
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I'm in the same boat that a firearms conviction of any kind would instantly lose my security clearance at work, and my job along with it. I don't give it a second though either. The only way airsoft is ever going to get me into legal trouble is if I go do something stupid with my guns. And if I do that, then I deserve whatever I have coming to me for being an idiot. And the chances of that ever happening are even slimmer than winning the lottery.
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Last edited by Crunchmeister; January 30th, 2008 at 16:02.. |
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January 30th, 2008, 18:37 | #51 | |
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I do not believe the situation with replica firearm possession was the result of grandfathering versus legality of possession, but rather the inpracticality of prohibiting all replica firearms in Canada. That was something far beyond what C-68 set out to do. Heck, what we have right now is still beyond that. I don't think it was a well publicized fact that the government wrote in a law that, should they choose, would stop everything that looked like a gun from coming into Canada and significantly reshape future Canadian generations. Essentially, if you think the zero tolerance policy as school is strict, think of a zero tolerance society (the irony being that legal ownership of real firearms would probably still exist).
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"The Bird of Hermes is My Name, Eating My Wings to Make Me Tame." |
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January 30th, 2008, 23:00 | #52 |
We have detached from the source. nNw we start the slow, gentle glide back to earth.
Keep your guns, enjoy the ride.
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There are no such things as dead bodies. There are only zombies who are too afraid of Bruce Campbell to get up. |
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January 31st, 2008, 19:47 | #53 |
On the whole 1998 law thing, I'm wondering something. May be this is not the spot to be asking this but, the paintball shop downtown of where I live, sells basicly "airsoft".. It ranges from 150$ ish to 300$ ish I've seen. The guns usually have metal bodies, are 1:1, and mostly have crap to okay internals. How on earth does this work? Like, how do they manage to get their guns in or where from? For example, I've seen the Kirenex in there, a Lycan MP-5, and some other aftermath brands. Now I understand some provinces have stores which get the odd Kraken AK which is clear, does that make a slight difference? Wee bit confuzed on this one, and sorry if this is entirely the wrong place to be asking this.
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Johann Hansen. 1./SS-Pz-Gren. Rgt. 20. 9th SS Hohenstaufen. Ontario's Largest WW2 re-enactment. OP Woodsman. Join us! |
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February 1st, 2008, 12:32 | #54 | |
Part man, part machine
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The problem comes down to whether they are treated as toys or replica guns. In some cases businesses have been importing them for so long, permits or not, that neither they nor the customs officials who might process their imports realize there's a problem - yet. In due time I would expect they will get the attention of the powers that be, but it can take a very very long time. Clear guns are ok to import, and are considered imitation firearms. |
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February 1st, 2008, 12:52 | #55 | |
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anyways, who can i write letters, send E-mails and things like that, so that airsoft can switch from gray to green? and all the blah blah blah that comes with it? I want names, address's and E-mails.
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"Lieutenant John Chard: The army doesn't like more than one disaster in a day. Bromhead: Looks bad in the newspapers and upsets civilians at their breakfast." - ZULU (1964) |
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February 1st, 2008, 13:06 | #56 | |
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If you want to have the best effect.. join the gun lobby, add your money and voice to an already heard chorus. Repealing the prohibitions on replicas would likely have the best chance of happening piggy backing on larger changes to the Firearms Act and the related Criminal Code statutes.
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Brian McIlmoyle TTAC3 Director CAPS Range Officer Toronto Downtown Age Verifier OPERATION WOODSMAN If the tongue could cut as the sword does, the dead would be infinite |
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February 1st, 2008, 14:25 | #57 | |
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Johann Hansen. 1./SS-Pz-Gren. Rgt. 20. 9th SS Hohenstaufen. Ontario's Largest WW2 re-enactment. OP Woodsman. Join us! |
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February 1st, 2008, 15:05 | #58 |
Not an Age Verifier anymore
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tank for this post HonestJohn. this is very good information
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R.I.P - HellRanger |
February 2nd, 2008, 15:52 | #59 |
i understand that Bass Pro can't import airsoft because most of our guns are prohibited and restricted. but what about legal guns such as an M24 (Remington 700)? why couldn't they import that since the real steel is legal to own in canada? im probably going to get flamed for this, but i just want to ask questions from every angle so as to expand my knowledge base.
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February 2nd, 2008, 15:58 | #60 |
It would still be a replica. Get this, you could have a replica of a pellet gun, a pellet gun like what's used for airgun competition shooting that shoots over 500 fps (ie. it is considered a firearm and needs to be registered) and 5.7J. That replica is a prohibited device, even though it replicates a pellet gun.
The law does not differentiate whether the replica replicates a non-restricted, restricted or prohibited firearm. If the gun is not considered a firearm, it's replica is not prohibited.
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Age verifier Northern Alberta Democracy is two wolves and a sheep discussing what's for dinner. Freedom is the wolves limping away while the sheep reloads. Never confuse freedom with democracy. |
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