Western Morning News (Saturday)

Coroner’s call for gun law crackdown

- ROD MINCHIN wmnnewsdes­k@reachplc.com

BRITAIN’S gun laws need “root and branch” reform to protect the public, the Government has been warned, in the wake of the Plymouth mass shooting in which five people were shot dead.

Ian Arrow, the senior coroner for Plymouth, said the 50-year-old Firearms Act was at “odds with public safety and the fundamenta­l principle that owning a gun is a privilege and not a right”.

In just eight minutes, Jake Davison,

22, killed his mother Maxine, 51, and then shot dead three-year-old Sophie Martyn, her father Lee, 43, Stephen Washington, 59, and Kate Shepherd, 66.

He then turned the weapon on himself as he was confronted by an unarmed police officer on August 12 2021 in Keyham, Plymouth.

Last month jurors at a long-running inquest in Exeter ruled each victim was unlawfully killed.

They were critical of the failings within the firearms licensing unit, which handed the apprentice crane operator back his shotgun five weeks before the killings.

The jury also found there was a “serious failure” at a national level by the Government, Home Office and National College of Policing to implement the recommenda­tion from Lord Cullen’s Report in 1996 following the Dunblane killings.

In a series of reports sent to Home Secretary Suella Braverman, Home Office minister Chris Philp, the National Police Chiefs’ Council, all chief constables in England and Wales, the College of Policing and Lord Burnett, the Lord Chief Justice, Mr Arrow raised a series of concerns around the Firearms Act, the training offered to police staff assessing

licence applicatio­ns and training given to judges hearing licence appeals.

Mr Arrow called for the legislativ­e distinctio­n between Section 1 firearms – such as rifles – and shotguns to be ended.

“I am concerned the public would be better protected if the legislatio­n provided that a certificat­e ‘shall not be granted’ unless the applicant has satisfied the relevant chief officer of police that they are safe to hold a gun of any type,” he wrote.

“I am concerned that whilst the criteria for issuing shotgun licences remain less stringent than those for holding Section 1 firearms, a misleading impression of potential fatality of each type of weapon will continue to affect the perception of and attitude to risk amongst police firearms and explosive licensing units and public safety will be compromise­d.”

Mr Arrow said that “numerous recommenda­tions” arising from previous tragedies and reviews had highlighte­d a lack of nationally recognised training for police staff involved in firearms licensing decisions. If any lessons had been learned in the aftermath of earlier tragedies, they have been forgotten and that learning had been lost,” he wrote.

“Over the past 27 years, there has been an abject failure to ensure that nationally accredited training of firearms licensing staff has been developed and its currency maintained.”

Davison legally held a shotgun certificat­e and weapon having been obsessed with firearms from a young age due to a trait in autism of developing a “special interest”.

He applied for a shotgun certificat­e in July 2017 aged 18, saying he wanted to go clay pigeon shooting with his uncle.

Davison had declared his autism and Asperger’s – but when police sought relevant informatio­n from his GP, the doctor declined to provide any as it was not mandatory. The police granted the applicatio­n in January 2018 to last five years.

Later that year, he bought a black Weatherby pump-action shotgun which he kept at home in Biddick Drive.

Police were already aware Davison had a history of violence at school and aged 17 he was involved in a domestic verbal argument with his father Mark and was also suspected of an assault outside a Tesco store in 2016.

In September 2020, Davison was captured on CCTV punching a 16-year-old boy up to nine times in a skate park and slapping his 15-yearold female friend after another boy insulted him. Detectives put him on the deferred charge Pathfinder scheme instead of prosecutio­n and two months later when a concerned Pathfinder worker alerted police the shotgun and certificat­e were seized. But just five weeks before the killings, they were handed back to Davison.

Luke Pollard, Labour MP for Plymouth Sutton and Devonport, welcomed the coroner’s report. “We need a top-to-bottom review of gun laws and gun licencing to prevent a tragedy like Keyham and Ford’s from ever happening again,” he said.

Devon and Cornwall Police have invested £4 million in the firearms licensing unit since the tragedy, with 100 staff handling the highest number of gun licence applicatio­ns of any force in England and Wales.

The Home Office said it would carefully consider the coroner’s report and respond in due course.

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