Ah we where supposed to register them.
We all destroyed ours, and so did the RCMP. No way they would have kept those records for future.
Show me in the Firearm Act or CC that says individuals must retain such records.The old registration card plus the seller transfer notice will go al long way in court if you had to prove the gun was sold, and not in your possession !
Show me in the Firearm Act or CC that says individuals must retain such records.
Nothing to do with being a "cool dude". But if you like to keep useless papers for nostalgic reasons, be my guest.Somewhere down the line it might make life simpler to those who doe keep the records, even if that doesn't make one a "cool dude".
Nothing to do with being a "cool dude". But if you like to keep useless papers for nostalgic reasons, be my guest.
I would bet that people who had any of the now prohibited guns such as the M14 registered to them will be getting a phone call looking for that firearm with that serial number if the person you sold it to decides to keep it.
This has already happened to a friend of mine who sold a PTRD to a guy on buy and sell. The firearm was confiscated at an airport trying to get it out of country and they had no one to arrest and showed up at my buddy’s house saying he was the one who registered it.
They wanted to know who he sold it to. He gave a description of the fellow but had no exchange of information(PAL)
Charges were not laid on him as it is not a requirement to keep anyone’s info as he is not a business.
What I found disturbing was that they still had the record of last ownership and came to him. I understood the records to be destroyed. They are not.
May be a interesting exercise for someone (I can't be bothered) to submit a FOI request. A list of all non-restricted firearms that were registered to you at the termination of the long gun registry. This also may be of interest to someone that has a firearm that went from non-restricted to prohibited on May 1st.



























