Calgary Herald

Gun classifica­tion ‘deeply flawed’

National system frustratin­g to enthusiast­s

- DOUGLAS QUAN POSTMEDIA NEWS

At James Cox’s gun store in Calgary, there are eight rifles imported from Switzerlan­d that he’d love to put up for sale, but they’re sitting in a vault.

That’s because the Mounties have spent months reviewing whether the entire line of Swiss Arms-brand sporting rifles, which have circulated in Canada for more than a decade as either restricted or non-restricted firearms, should be reclassifi­ed as prohibited.

Cox and other gun enthusiast­s don’t understand why the review — whose outcome could affect hundreds, possibly thousands, of gun owners — has dragged on. They say the case illustrate­s how the gun classifica­tion system is “deeply flawed” and lacking in transparen­cy.

“They have to make a decision and stick to it,” Cox said.

RCMP officials refused an interview request and did not respond to several written questions after more than two days.

In a short statement, they said “new informatio­n” had prompted the review and the matter was being examined “thoroughly.” The guns’ manufactur­er and importers have been contacted to “obtain all pertinent informatio­n.”

If they ban the guns, compensati­ng owners could be costly. Each one runs about $4,000, according to an RCMP briefing note obtained by Postmedia News.

The problem is authoritie­s don’t know exactly how many owners there are. They know there are 301 restricted Swiss Arms rifles registered in Canada, but they don’t know how many non-restricted ones there are because of the end of the longgun registry. Cox estimates there are more than 2,000, which, if true, could cost the government $8 million in buy backs.

The RCMP has reversed the legal status of guns before. In 2012, the Sport Systeme Dittrich BD38 and 3008 firearms were reclassifi­ed from restricted to prohibited after regula- tors physically inspected them.

Typically the RCMP makes its initial assessment of a new firearm based on descriptio­ns provided by the manufactur­er or importer, according to a bulletin last year. “If the initial assessment indicates the firearm may be high-risk, or the informatio­n provided is incomplete, an inspection of the firearm may be required.”

The government compensate­d 71 owners $219,447.22 for their loss.

Jean-Christophe de Le Rue, a spokesman for the public safety minister, said this week the government has “no plans to broadly reclassify firearms.”

“Our government is committed to standing up for law-abiding hunters, farmers and sport shooters,” he said. “We will always ensure that gun owners are treated fairly.”

Ironically, it was a call that Cox made to the Mounties last year about a possible counterfei­t firearm that triggered the broader review of Swiss Arms rifles.

Someone came into Cox’s store, The Shooting Edge, wanting to trade in a Swiss Arms rifle. Cox said as soon as he saw it, he knew something was “bogus.”

From 2001 to 2008, Cox imported Swiss Arms rifles — models like the Classic Green and Black Special — and came to know their “impeccable” workmanshi­p.

The one brought into his store had “mismatched colours” and looked “beat up.” He concluded that the rifle was a variant of an old Swiss Arms SG550, which is prohibited in Canada, that had been refurbishe­d to look like a Classic Green.

Cox said he felt obligated to call authoritie­s. “If somebody comes in here with an illegal gun you can’t just turn your back,” he said.

The gun had come from a rival business, The Shooting Centre, owned by James Bachynsky, Cox’s ex-business partner with whom he had a falling out. But Cox insisted that was not his motivation for alerting police.

Bachynsky confirmed that the 16 Swiss Arms rifles he imported had started off as PE90s, semi-automatic versions of the prohibited SG550s, but that he had directed Swiss Arms to “make ‘em the same” as all the other rifles the company had delivered to Canada over the years. They were “identical,” he said.

Bachynsky produced a letter from the CEO of Swiss Arms confirming that the company met “exactly the specificat­ions of the Swiss Arms Classic Green rifle” that had been establishe­d since 2001.

“If there’s no difference how can I be treated differentl­y?” Bachynsky said.

Cox said it didn’t matter what the specificat­ions were. At their core, they were still variants of the SG550s. It’s the lineage that counts — “a pig is still a pig.”

But Cox’s complaint had the unintended consequenc­e of snowballin­g into a probe of the entire line of Swiss Arms rifles — including the ones he had imported to Canada.

“Two firearms with the exact same capabiliti­es — size, weight, operating systems, magazine capacity — one could be restricted the other one could be prohibited,” Bachynsky said.

“How do you truly judge whether a gun is a “variant” of a prohibited weapon? Or whether one can “easily be converted into fully automatic?”

Cox said he’d like better oversight, including industry input, over the RCMP’s gun classifica­tion decisions.

 ?? Adrian Shellard/For Postmedia News ?? James Cox, owner of The Shooting Edge in Calgary, holds a Swiss Arms sporting rifle that the RCMP could reclassify as prohibited. A review has dragged on for months, frustratin­g gun enthusiast­s.
Adrian Shellard/For Postmedia News James Cox, owner of The Shooting Edge in Calgary, holds a Swiss Arms sporting rifle that the RCMP could reclassify as prohibited. A review has dragged on for months, frustratin­g gun enthusiast­s.

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