Toronto Star

Police bust gun-manufactur­ing ring

GTA crime group allegedly made firearms from existing parts

- PETER EDWARDS

Ontario Provincial Police say they have busted an organized crime group that was manufactur­ing illegal handguns and selling them to street gangs in the Greater Toronto Area, Niagara Region and elsewhere.

“This is a GTA-centred group,” Supt. Bryan MacKillop of the OPP organized crime enforcemen­t bureau said in an interview Tuesday. “They were involved with street gangs.”

The eight-month operation, dubbed Project Renner, targeted a multi-ethnic organized crime group that had been producing restricted and untraceabl­e firearms by using unregulate­d parts. The group doesn’t have a name, but is considered an organized crime group because of its ongoing criminal activity, police said.

“Traffickin­g in illegal firearms and firearms-related violence continue to threaten public safety in communitie­s across Ontario,” OPP deputy commission­er Rick Barnum said in a prepared statement.

“By taking down a criminal operation of this magnitude, we’ve prevented illegal guns from killing more even people in communitie­s throughout the Greater Toronto and Golden Horseshoe areas,” Barnum said.

The investigat­ion culminated with 39 co-ordinated raids last week involving more than 400 officers from multiple police forces, police said.

Police said they seized 14 handguns, six long guns including a machine-gun and an assault rifle, grenades, silencers, a stun gun and body armour. The guns were manufactur­ed in Ontario using existing parts and then sold to southern Ontario criminals, police said.

“These are all completely illegal firearms,” MacKillop said.

The guns were sold for an average of $2,500 each to various criminal groups throughout the province, including several in the GTA and Golden Horseshoe region, including Hamilton, police said.

“These are not mass-produced firearms,” MacKillop said. “We were actually able to trace the untraceabl­e firearms back to the manufactur­er.”

Unlike legal firearms, these guns had no serial numbers.

The OPP said officers also seized 1.2 kilograms of cocaine, 30 grams of methamphet­amine, 13 grams of heroin, 66 fentanyl tablets and $85,000 in cash during the raids.

Police said 23 people have been charged in connection with the gun manufactur­ing and distributi­on racket.

Police allege the ringleader­s are Bruce McKinnon, 47, of Rockwood near Guelph, Ont., and Jon Rasmussen, 29, of Smithville, between Hamilton and Niagara Falls. McKinnon and Rasmussen are alleged to have manufactur­ed and trafficked more than120 handguns, police said. McKinno n is charged with offences including five counts of conspiracy to commit an indictable offence and eight counts of traffickin­g firearms. Rasmussen faces charges including 16 counts of traffickin­g firearms and five counts of conspiracy to commit an indictable offence.

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