In fighting gun crime, Canada has an American problem
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[July 27, 2022]
By Steve Scherer and Anna Mehler Paperny
OTTAWA/TORONTO (Reuters) - A Texas man
bought dozens of guns from licensed dealers in the state before
illegally reselling at least 16, U.S. officials say. Twelve were traced
to crimes committed in America. The other four were traced to crimes in
Canada.
The case of the 31-year-old, indicted last month on charges that could
see him jailed for years, illustrates the leading role the Lone Star
State now plays in the smuggling of guns used for violence in Canada,
and how firearms tracing can help combat that trade.
Canadian police chiefs say such cases also show the limits of their
government's domestically focused policies to fight gun violence, such
as a freeze on handgun purchases, when it has the world's largest
civilian gun market on its doorstep.
"We really think that restricting lawful handgun ownership doesn't
meaningfully address the real issue, which is illegal handguns obtained
from the United States," said Evan Bray, police chief in Regina, capital
of Saskatchewan province.
Canada's gun homicide rate in 2020 was an eighth of the rate in the
United States, where rules on buying firearms are looser, but it's
higher than the rates of many other rich countries and has been rising,
according to data from Statistics Canada.
Exclusive data obtained by Reuters for Ontario, Canada's most populous
province, shows that when handguns involved in crimes were traced in
2021, they were overwhelmingly - 85% of the time - found to have come
from the United States.
Furthermore, 70% of all traced guns used in crimes in Ontario came from
the United States, while so far this year the U.S. share has risen to
73%, according to the data from the Ontario police's Firearms Analysis
and Tracing Enforcement (FATE) program.
Ontario is the only province with a special tracing program that seeks
to identify the source of all guns used in crimes, said Scott Ferguson,
head of FATE. The rest of Canada traced only 6%-10% of guns involved in
crimes, according to 2019 data from the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP),
a federal agency.
On Monday, the Canadian Association of Chiefs of Police called on the
federal government to make the tracing of crime guns mandatory across
Canada.
"I'm confident that we'll be making steps in that direction," said Bray,
who co-chairs the association's special committee on firearms.
Alexander Cohen, director of communications for Public Safety Minister
Marco Mendicino, said the government is aware of the importance of
tracing guns. "We know that more must be traced, which is why budget
2021 invested C$15 million ($11.7 million) to improve the RCMP's
gun-tracing capacity," he added.
Yet the method has its own limitations: The Ontario data shows police
were unable to trace almost half the firearms they tried to track last
year, for reasons including obliterated serial numbers and the lack of a
national registry for long guns.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's government introduced new legislation in
May to fight gun violence, including the freeze on handgun purchases and
a ban on sales of large-capacity magazines. But mandatory tracing is not
part of it.
The announcement came in the wake of mass shootings south of the border
- in Uvalde, Texas and Buffalo, New York. The toll of gun violence was
felt closer to home this week when an attacker shot four people in
British Columbia, killing two.
Mendicino told Reuters the government had Canada's specific
circumstances in mind with the May measures, citing "alarming statistics
around increases in handgun violence," specifically the rising firearm
homicide rate.
"We came to the judgment that a national handgun freeze would be the
fastest and most effective way to reverse that trend," Mendicino said.
TEXAS CONNECTION 'SHOCKING'
The Canadian firearms homicide rate has been rising: 2020 and 2017 are
tied for the highest since at least 1997, according to Statistics
Canada. In 2020, gun murders accounted for close to 40% of the country's
743 homicides, while more than 60% of gun-related violent crime in urban
areas involved handguns.
Canada's 2020 firearm homicide rate was 5.6 times that of Australia,
according to each country's government statistics. The Canadian rate was
also five times that of Germany in 2010, and 2.5 times the rate of the
Netherlands, according to a 2016 comparative study published in the
American Journal of Medicine.
Ferguson's team at FATE takes serial numbers and runs them through
databases in Canada and, if nothing comes up, in the United States.
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Firearms confiscated at the Windsor border are displayed during a
demonstration of technology that can scan truck trailers for
compartments that could be used to hide guns, at the Canada Border
Services Agency (CBSA) point of entry at the Ambassador Bridge in
Windsor, Ontario, Canada June 28, 2022. REUTERS/Emily Elconin
Texas has become the top U.S. source of crime-involved guns traced
in Ontario, with 150 firearms counted last year - five times the 30
identified in 2018, according to the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol,
Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF), citing FATE numbers.
Florida, Georgia, Ohio and Oklahoma round out the top five.
The southern U.S. state has some of the most lenient gun-purchasing
laws in America, according to the ATF's Texas office in Dallas.
Tracing by Canadian authorities provides key intelligence to the
ATF, which can then investigate and prosecute buyers of firearms
that are subsequently sold illegally or smuggled, said Chris Taylor,
ATF attache at the U.S. embassy in Ottawa.
The agency opens about 120 investigations per year in the United
States on the basis of guns traced from crimes in Canada, with more
than 90% originating from Ontario, Taylor said. The number of cases
is rising, with the ATF opening more than 180 probes since October
thanks to Canadian tracing, he added.
Jeff Boshek, ATF special agent in charge of the Dallas field
division, said he and colleagues were stunned when tracing data
started showing that Canada was a growing destination for guns from
Texas.
Boshek said that an estimated 30% of all guns purchased in Texas and
then traced to crimes committed abroad are linked to Canada, "which
is shocking to me" because only a few years ago 100% were linked to
crimes in Mexico. Boshek said the Dallas ATF office is currently
investigating many traces Canada flagged.
Where Texan smugglers might double their money on a handgun sold in
Mexico, they earn 10 times the price of the handgun in Canada, the
agent added.
A GLOCK FOR C$8,000
Gun smuggling can be lucrative: A typical Glock handgun trafficked
from the U.S. costs between C$6,000 ($4,603) and C$8,000 in the
Toronto area, Ferguson said, some 10 times more than its $500
purchase price south of the border.
It is also busy: The number of firearms Canada seized at the border
more than doubled last year to 1,110 from 495 in 2020 - the highest
total since at least 2016, according to numbers provided to Reuters
by the Canada's Border Services Agency.
This year is on track to be almost as high, with 523 firearms seized
as of the first week in June.
Gun violence in Toronto, Canada's most populous city, reached a
15-year high in 2019, with 492 incidents involving firearms,
according to police data. That number fell the following two years
but 2022 is on track to rise once again.
In Winnipeg, which had the highest firearm homicide rate of any
major Canadian city in 2020 - at 1.32 per 100,000 - police have a
firearms investigation and analysis section to trace guns involved
in crimes.
They can use bullet casings to trace a gun from a Winnipeg shooting
to crimes elsewhere, according to Winnipeg Police Inspector Elton
Hall, who called the technique a "game-changer."
AN 'UNWINNABLE FIGHT'
Tracing is far from infallible, though: Last year 1,173 guns - about
47% of all those Ontario tried to track - could not be traced at
all, up from about 28.5% in 2018. Apart from Canada's lack of
registry for long guns, 3D-printed guns and those with serial
numbers that are too damaged cannot be traced.
Toronto Police Detective Sergeant Andrew Steinwall, who has been
investigating gun crime in Toronto for more than 15 years, sees
efforts to combat gun smuggling as an "unwinnable fight."
"We don't have the resources to seize every gun in this country
that's come in illegally," he said.
Smugglers are resourceful: In May, a drone carrying handguns
believed to be from the United States got caught in a residential
backyard tree in Ontario's Port Lambton, just across the St. Clair
River from Michigan.
"A drone, a gas tank, an unsuspecting mule ... these guys will find
a way to get these guns over the border," Steinwall added. "The
demand is here."
($1 = 1.2874 Canadian dollars)
(Reporting by Steve Scherer in Ottawa and Anna Mehler Paperny in
Toronto; Editing by Denny Thomas and Pravin Char)
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