Wednesday, July 8, 2026
ADVT 
National

October Amnesty Will Take Aim At Illegal Weapons

Darpan, 16 Jun, 2016 01:52 PM
    British Columbians can unload old guns, ammunition – any unwanted firearms or weapons – and ensure they never end up in the hands of criminals during a provincewide amnesty Oct. 1-31, 2016.
     
    The month-long amnesty will apply to any documented or undocumented firearms and other weapons – including restricted and prohibited ones – that have not been used for a criminal purpose, as well as to any amount of ammunition.
     
    Police leaders remind interested firearms owners to call their local detachment or their department’s non-emergency line to arrange for officers to attend and retrieve the weapons. Under no circumstances should anyone deliver them to police.
     
    Firearms and ammunition surrendered during the amnesty will be destroyed. Police also anticipate receiving tips related to other unwanted and unauthorized firearms.
     
    In the past decade, two previous British Columbia firearms amnesties in 2006 and 2013 have yielded more than 5,000 firearms – including 900 handguns and two machine guns – plus approximately 127,500 rounds of ammunition. Among hundreds of other weapons surrendered were a rocket launcher, a military missile, historical rifles and antique bayonets.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Former Crown Prosecutor To Probe Police Handling Of Richard Oland Murder

    Former Crown Prosecutor To Probe Police Handling Of Richard Oland Murder
    The review was announced days after a jury found Dennis Oland guilty in the death of his father, whose body was found in his Saint John office in July 2011.

    Former Crown Prosecutor To Probe Police Handling Of Richard Oland Murder

    Bulk Carrier From Marshall Islands Is The First Ship To Reach Montreal In 2016

    Bulk Carrier From Marshall Islands Is The First Ship To Reach Montreal In 2016
    The Vigorous left from Sohar, Oman, on Nov. 30 and crossed the Montreal port's downstream limits at 5:21 Friday morning.

    Bulk Carrier From Marshall Islands Is The First Ship To Reach Montreal In 2016

    How Response To Syrian Refugee Crisis Went From 10k In Three Years To Months

    How Response To Syrian Refugee Crisis Went From 10k In Three Years To Months
    When the Conservative government promised, in January 2015, to resettle 10,000 Syrian refugees over three years, Liberal MP John McCallum didn't buy it.

    How Response To Syrian Refugee Crisis Went From 10k In Three Years To Months

    Woman Critically Injured Defending Toddler In Second B.C. Dog Attack Within Week

    Woman Critically Injured Defending Toddler In Second B.C. Dog Attack Within Week
    Officers in Richmond, B.C., responded Wednesday afternoon to multiple reports of a 21-year-old woman covered in blood, fending off a large Rottweiler cross on an outdoor field. Police had previously identified the animal as a Rottweiler-pit bull cross.

    Woman Critically Injured Defending Toddler In Second B.C. Dog Attack Within Week

    Canadians Go For Frosty New Year's Day Swim In Annual Polar Bear Plunges

    Canadians Go For Frosty New Year's Day Swim In Annual Polar Bear Plunges
    Canadians across the country are participating in a frosty New Year's Day tradition — the polar bear dip.

    Canadians Go For Frosty New Year's Day Swim In Annual Polar Bear Plunges

    Dog Attack: Richmond Woman Critically Injured By Dog While Defending 3-Year-Old Nephew

    Dog Attack: Richmond Woman Critically Injured By Dog While Defending 3-Year-Old Nephew
    RCMP say the boy's aunt is undergoing surgery after suffering more than 100 bites to her body, a broken arm and a detached bicep.

    Dog Attack: Richmond Woman Critically Injured By Dog While Defending 3-Year-Old Nephew