Oakville Beaver, 27 Aug 2010, p. 8

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

w w w . o a kv ill eb ea ve r.c o m O A KV IL LE B EA V ER Fr id ay , A ug us t 2 7, 2 01 0 8 Oak-land Ford LincolnF ly wne & p r te r 40 e rs! D n n r ay towards a new Ford. $3,300 and get up to your 2003 or older vehicle Only lets you recycle www.oak-land.com 570 TRAFALGAR RD., OAKVILLE AT THE QEW 905.844.3273 LAST CHANCE! Now you pay what we pay. Get up to $12,000 in price adjustments for the best prices of the year on virtually our entire line-up.* 2010 EDGE FWD SEL When theyre gone 3.5 L V6, automatic transmission, reverse sensing system, powercode remote start, SYNC voice activated systems, engine block heater, rubber fl oor mats 2010 RANGER 4X2 SPT SUPERCAB 4L SOHC V6, 5 speed automatic overdrive transmission, sliding rear window, air conditioning, pickup box bedliner 2L DOHC, automatic, heated seats, SYNC voice activated systems, Drivers Group: leather wrapped steering wheel, cruise control, redundant audio controls 2010 FOCUS SEDAN * * * *Manufacturers rebates and delivery allowance applied. including the licensing and registration of all guns, costs approximately $15 million annually with the long-gun portion cost about $4 million. This pales in comparison to other police costs. Several major homicide investigations in Canada over the past 10 years have exceeded that amount. There have been disputes over the amount of times police access the registry. The system is accessed nationally some 11,000 times daily. We here in Halton do so on a regular basis. We are confident that most Canadians would agree that if it can prevent human injury or death, it would be worth it. If the registry can prevent injury or death or assist in solving a crime with information contained within the registry, would it not be worth maintaining it in its current, established form. This is a tool that police need. The registry is a valuable tool that assists law enforcement with investigation, prevention, tracing, accountability, and provided at the national level, is cost effec- tive and consistent across the country. In the past 10 years, 16 Canadian police officers have been killed on duty by a firearm. Fourteen of those involved a long gun. A case in point that demonstrates its use- fulness is that information obtained from the gun registry was crucial to linking the men accused and then convicted as acces- sories in the deaths of four RCMP officers in Mayerthorpe, Alberta. The gun registry did not prevent these tragedies, but did provide a tool to bring justice to this specific case. The Halton Regional Police Association represents over 900 uniform and civilian members and is a member of the Police Association of Ontario, which represents more than 33,000 police and civilian mem- bers in Ontario and a member of the Canadian Police Association, which is the national voice for more than 41,000 police personnel across Canada. ROBERT WALLER, PRESIDENT HALTON REGIONAL POLICE ASSOCIATION Police need gun registry Continued from page 6 Speak up! You can comment on any story in todays Oakville Beaver at oakvillebeaver.com.

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy