Pubdate: Mon, 9 Feb 2009 Source: Victoria Times-Colonist (CN BC) Copyright: 2009 Times Colonist Contact: http://www.canada.com/victoriatimescolonist/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/victoriatimescolonist/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/481 GUN EPIDEMIC PRESCRIPTIONS When a career criminal and self-described "reputed gangster" chooses to violate a weapons ban and arm himself with an automatic assault rifle, the public has every right to feel threatened. Gun violence has become epidemic, as three killings within 24 hours in Vancouver this week demonstrate. Efforts to deal with the problem have been ineffective and fragmented. On the same day as the shootings, Brian Lynn Morrison was sentenced to three years in penitentiary for weapons and drug offences. The B.C. Supreme Court in Victoria had heard Morrison posted videos on YouTube showing him blasting away at a couch with an AR-15 assault rifle. Knee-jerk get-tough-on-crime policies serve no purpose and are often counter-productive. The courts need the flexibility to make decisions that reflect the circumstances of a particular offence. But Morrison is 37. He has had 36 convictions since he turned 19. He has been under a lifetime firearms ban since 2003, when he was convicted of robbery after an armed raid on a Sidney jewelry store. His criminal career has continued since then. He is, based on a lifetime of evidence, dangerous. His willingness to ignore the firearms ban adds to the public danger. Under those circumstances, the three-year sentence is inadequate, especially as double credit for pre-trial detention -- considered hard time -- will reduce the total time in custody to something like 18 months. The Criminal Code allows imprisonment for up to 10 years for the offence. The Crown had asked for five to eight years. Given the deadly and increasing role guns are playing Canadian crime, this sentence warrants an appeal. The consequences of using firearms - -- especially after a lifetime ban has been imposed -- must be severe to deter serious criminals. Solicitor General John van Dongen promises other measures to deal with gun violence. Some are obvious, such as introducing a co-ordinated response to gang activity instead of the current fragmented and ineffectual efforts. Others, like increased sentences for gun crimes, are relatively simple changes that can be made at the federal level. It's also time for fundamental changes. It is difficult to see any justification for legal handguns in Canada's urban centres. While governments have talked about reducing the flow of illegal weapons across the border, police statistics show about half the guns used in gang and gun crime in Canada were stolen or diverted from legal ownership. As long as there are some 500,000 handguns in circulation, many will end up in criminals' hands. And it is time to recognize that gangs and guns are linked inextricably to the huge profits in the drug trade. Those profits are possible because of a failed, prohibition-based drug strategy. It's time to begin legalizing and controlling distribution as part of an entirely new approach to reducing the damage done by guns. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake