There are some people on CGN who think they have it all figured out. But let me spell out my case for why keeping a gun in your vehicle could lead to you getting charged. If you are a reasonable, logical adult, you will see my point.
Let me first point out that it is my belief that a gun owner should be able to keep a gun in their car without having to worry about getting charged. Ok? That's my personal opinion. As long as you are taking care to make sure your car is locked, I think it should be legal. But unfortunately, based on our current laws, there is cause to worry about getting charged; and here it is:
This is what the criminal code says in Section 86. (1):
86. (1) Every person commits an offence who, without lawful excuse, uses, carries, handles, ships, transports or stores a firearm, a prohibited weapon, a restricted weapon, a prohibited device or any ammunition or prohibited ammunition in a careless manner or without reasonable precautions for the safety of other persons.
So let me give you a scenario: You live in a city in a cookie-cutter neighbourhood and at night you park your car in your driveway which is approximately 8 steps from your front door. You keep a non-restricted, trigger-locked shotgun in your trunk and it very rarely ever goes inside your home. You don't hunt with it, but you like to go to the range every now and again, and just prefer to leave it in the car.
One night a couple punks break into your car and steal the shotgun. Upon waking up in the morning to go to work, you discover what has happened. You call the police to report the theft.
So........here is where it gets sketchy. It is totally up to the officer whether they want to lay a careless storage charge against you or not. Let me make that clear: If the cop wants to charge you, the cop can charge you. If i'm wrong about this, and there is absolutely NO chance of a police officer (and I do mean a 0% chance of an officer laying a charge) doing this, then hopefully a LEO who is a member here can correct me; but I am pretty confident that I am right.
The officer could take the opinion that you should be storing your firearm in your house, especially since your home is in such a close proximity to your vehicle and would have been easy to do to reduce the chances of it falling into the wrong hands. The point is, there is the off chance that the officer could be the biggest anti-gun, pro-gun control person you've ever met. They could also be very, very pro-gun and not care at all that your gun was in the trunk. The point I'm trying to make is that it is up to the officer. If they are of the opinion that what you did was careless, you're in trouble. Especially if you forgot to lock your vehicle and the crooks didn't even have to break anything to get the gun. No broken glass, no drilled out keyhole, just an unlocked car with a gun inside. And if you are one of those people who keeps a gun in your vehicle, the chance obviously exists that you will, at some point, even if it's only once out of a 100 days, forget to lock your vehicle when you go in for the night.
And if there is reason enough for the cop to lay the charge, there is a chance that you will get convicted of it. Even if you don't you could spend a nice, big chunk of change to defend yourself in court.
Again, I have no problem with the idea of people storing guns in their vehicles. If every single person on my street stored a gun in their car, it wouldn't bother me at all. BUT.......I am of the logical, and reasonable opinion that doing so, with present laws, could land you in hot water legally speaking, and the logic for it above is perfect. If you still want to argue with me, it just proves that you cannot accept the logic. It doesn't mean the logic is wrong.
I don't care if you live out in the country and your driveway is 2 km long and you keep your car in a locked garage, you keep the car locked, and you keep a shotgun in a locked hard case inside the car. Don't start giving me alternate scenarios where you think you wouldn't get into any trouble. Deal with the scenario I gave above and argue based on that. But based on that scenario, you have to either:
A) accept that it is possible that the gun owner could be charged
or
B) admit you have given up on common sense
To end this I would ask that those who have told people on CGN that keeping a gun in your car is legal should STOP saying such things. You have no idea what you are saying, and you are giving out very bad advice. There are scenarios that could lead to someone being charged. Stop telling people it's ok.