Thursday, December 25, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. Man who wielded fake gun gets conditional sentence

Cam Fotems, Kamloops This Week The Canadian Press, 21 Oct, 2014 12:21 PM
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. - A Kamloops, B.C., man whose actions caused police to lock down a neighbourhood and issue a public warning about the use of imitation firearms has been handed a three-month conditional sentence.
     
    Raymond Volpatti will be under house arrest for the first two months of his sentence.
     
    “There was real fear by your neighbour — and rightly so,” provincial court judge Stella Frame told Volpatti, who pleaded guilty to possession of a firearm contrary to an order.
     
    He has a prior criminal record and was given a 10-year firearm ban in 2009.
     
    Crown lawyer Monica Fras said a neighbour of Volpatti’s saw him outside his home on the afternoon of June 16, waving a handgun and attempting to fire it in the air.
     
    RCMP responded and cordoned off the area.
     
    The gun turned out to be a BB pistol, a replica nine-millimetre handgun.
     
    Volpatti and two other men were arrested — one for possession of drugs and the other for possession of what police called a stun gun.
     
    Following the incident, Mounties held a news conference warning they are forced to treat any toy weapon as the real thing in an emergency and that could lead to fatal consequences for the person wielding it.
     
    Jay Michi, an articling student representing Volpatti, said the 46-year-old former logger has not worked since suffering a head injury more than 20 years ago.
     
    “Mr. Volpatti is an alcoholic, a rather severe alcoholic,” Michi said.
     
    “On this occasion, he invited trouble into his life.”
     
    Volpatti is forbidden from drinking alcohol during his 90-day conditional sentence, but Frame did not extend the ban on alcohol or drugs to his one-year probation period that follows. (Kamloops This Week)

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Activists plan court challenge to 'anti-democratic' Fair Elections Act

    Activists plan court challenge to 'anti-democratic' Fair Elections Act
    OTTAWA - The Council of Canadians and the Canadian Federation of Students will ask the courts to overturn parts of the Harper government's Fair Elections Act.

    Activists plan court challenge to 'anti-democratic' Fair Elections Act

    Conservative changes to EI could cost Canada jobs, Budget watchdog warns

    Conservative changes to EI could cost Canada jobs, Budget watchdog warns
    OTTAWA - The Harper government's $550-million small-business job credit will create just 800 net new jobs in 2015-16, while a freeze in employment insurance premiums could cost the economy 10,000 jobs over the same period, Canada's parliamentary budget office says.

    Conservative changes to EI could cost Canada jobs, Budget watchdog warns

    RCMP investigating suspected extremists heading abroad, returning from fights

    RCMP investigating suspected extremists heading abroad, returning from fights
    OTTAWA - The RCMP has about 63 active security investigations on 90 suspected extremists who intend to join fights abroad or who have returned to Canada, said Bob Paulson, commissioner of the national police force.

    RCMP investigating suspected extremists heading abroad, returning from fights

    Ex-premier Danny Williams sues newspaper alleging he was defamed in editorial

    Ex-premier Danny Williams sues newspaper alleging he was defamed in editorial
    ST. JOHN'S, N.L. - Former Newfoundland and Labrador premier Danny Williams is suing the Telegram daily newspaper in St. John's for defamation.

    Ex-premier Danny Williams sues newspaper alleging he was defamed in editorial

    Canada to step up border checks for Ebola; will use targeted temperature screens

    Canada to step up border checks for Ebola; will use targeted temperature screens
    TORONTO - Canada will step up border screening to try to prevent an Ebola importation to this country, federal Health Minister Rona Ambrose said Wednesday.

    Canada to step up border checks for Ebola; will use targeted temperature screens

    Investigation continues into fiery train derailment; reeve glad no one was hurt

    Investigation continues into fiery train derailment; reeve glad no one was hurt
    WADENA, Sask. - As residents of a tiny hamlet in central Saskatchewan returned to their homes Wednesday following a fiery train derailment, a local politician said the community was fortunate that no one was hurt.

    Investigation continues into fiery train derailment; reeve glad no one was hurt