Plymouth gunman

A surprisingly large number recently :(. But are you that if all the fairly recent gun deaths were accidental, That‘d be OK?

Compare the amount of car owners with the amount of intentional deaths with the amount of licenced gun owners,
bet the percentages are vastly different
Please explain what you mean that doesn't make sense


In the states where there are also a lot more gun deaths.

That said I suspect that the amount of legal gun owning people that go on a shooting rampage is also quite a small
percentage

Nobody can possibly answer that question, but certainly terrorists have done so quite often.

Terrorists also shoot a lot of people, but that is not what happened in Plymouth
 
Nobody can possibly answer that question, but certainly terrorists have done so quite often.

Terrorists also shoot a lot of people, but that is not what happened in Plymouth
Are sure about that? It may not be classed as a terrorist attack and we're all still playing guessing games about the reasons why the killer was allowed to possess a gun (although even more disturbing information about the killer's background has emerged today) but it seems to me that these unhinged spree shooters are in fact carrying out terrorist-style attacks, with the victims being ordinary, decent human beings who don't share their own perverted views.
That said I suspect that the amount of legal gun owning people that go on a shooting rampage is also quite a small
percentage
Quite small? In any one point in time there are more than 700,000 certificated gun owners in the UK, and in the last 31 years there have been a total of 3 incidents - so, I'm not a mathematician and maybe I've calculated it wrongly, but I think that's about 1 in every 10 million . . .
 
the first step is to ban the storage of guns in peoples homes and take it from there
only store them in recognised clubs and you have to book them out to an event or sporting occasion and provide evidence.
no random getting them out for s***s and giggles
 
It's a pointless comparison, how many people get in their cars with the intention of killing someone ?

How many legal gun owners take their gun out with the intention of killing someone?

and it’s not pointless, it’s a point that everything can carry some risk, whether it be a car, an aeroplane, a ship, an inflatable beach lilo, a peanut or a gun.

You cannot legislate all risk away unless you want to live in a padded room only eating gruel.

Oh crap, people have died choking on gruel, that would need to be banned as well…
 
the first step is to ban the storage of guns in peoples homes and take it from there
only store them in recognised clubs and you have to book them out to an event or sporting occasion and provide evidence.
no random getting them out for s***s and giggles

I think a person who actually has some shooting experience has already told you what a stupid idea that is the previous time you posted that.
 
I think a person who actually has some shooting experience has already told you what a stupid idea that is the previous time you posted that.

so? still my opionion
guns in private houses are stupid

also gun owners carry zero weight with me as all there interested is there own selfish needs and wants you only have to see the yanks for that.
 
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so? still my opionion
guns in private houses are stupid

also gun owners carry zero weight with me as all there interested is there own selfish needs and wants you only have to see the yanks for that.

Everyone has selfish needs. We drive more than we need, we could all be greener but we want to enjoy our lifestyle and hobbies. People buying holiday homes in Cornwall are selfish. For example, 1995-2006 saw 56 deaths in UK as a result of dogs, similar number to the 4 incidents Garry mentioned. So are dog owners being selfish - could banning dogs and prevent deaths and injury?
 
There's clearly been a failure here on the part of officers in the firearms dept ...wouldn't surprise me,though if that dept is staffed by civilians with maybe a sergeant supervising but I'm going to hazard a guess. Initial or further checks after the aggressive incident with two youths that involved the police weren't done thoroughly enough, as per protocol because the dept was under-staffed. It's possible that it's, at least, a contributing factor for what has turned out to be a catastrophic error of judgement in handing back the licence/gun. I assume,though that a licence/gun must be returned unless there are good grounds not to..like having been involved in a high level of aggression but we'll see when the findings of the investigation are complete. I see the police won't confirm if the shotgun he used was the one covered by his licence. Witnesses talk of a pump-action shot gun.

In the UK, single, double and tripled-barrelled shotguns as well as those which have a lever action, pump-action, semiautomatic and fixed magazine capacity of no more than three cartridges are legal with a valid Shotgun certificate and meeting the basic safety requirements for firearm possession in the UK. Types of shotgun ammunition, such a solid slug, can only be bought following the granting of a Firearm Certificate (FAC).

But in relation to pump-action shotguns.... banned are .. Semi-automatic or pump-action rifles which fire centre-fire ammunition

The thing that struck me was that Davison had attended an anger-management course in order to get his licence and gun back which the police seized last December...I've read a report that it was Septembert too... It's been reported that he'd had 'a row' with two youths. The level of aggression was such that the policee were involved. Seemingly, he doesn't have any previous convictions nor cautions so was eligible for a caution..I assume for at least common assault and this is the definition of that offence and as can be seen Davison didn't have to actually punch either of the youth for the offence to be complete.

Common assault is when a victim is made to feel that force will be used against them. No actual force needs to be applied, just the threat or fear that this may happen. This can also include threatening gestures such as fist shaking. This becomes battery when the actual application of force is involved.

Did he get a caution or was it a case of no further action ? Either way, I assume he applied to get his licence and gun back in July and to do so was obliged to attend an anger-management course. My opinion is that a person that has the capacity for such a level of anger that it involved the police should never have access to a shotgun or firearm. An anger management course should never be a condition for someone to have seizure revoked . I wonder who the two character referees were when he initially applied for a shotgun licence ? The police might not have disovered his membership of that Incel group..mysogynists..but he was on Facebook. His account on Facebook and Youtube have since been cancelled for 'breaching their policy' so he must have posted unsavoury comments on there. He was also posting on Reddit

These are grounds for refusing to issue a licence and in my opinion refusal to hand back a licence/gun following seizure too.

Evidence of alcohol or drug abuse, aggressive or anti-social behaviour, domestic abuse or patterns of disturbing and unusual behaviour can all lead to police determining a person is not fit to own a gun.
 
so? still my opionion
guns in private houses are stupid

also gun owners carry zero weight with me as all there interested is there own selfish needs and wants you only have to see the yanks for that.


You've had a bit of stick for these comments, Paul. I'd be happier too if we didn't have guns kept in peoples' homes because of the risk of burglary and access in the event of domestic violence or other violent scenarios, rare, as it is but it's a much lower risk than having a large number in one building....the shooting club. As Garry has clearly set out it's not practical nor wise to have a large number of guns in an isolated building out in the sticks. The UK has some of the strictest control measures in the world and it's the best you can hope for in a society that, rightly, allows people to indulge in their interests which sometimes involves guns . Guns have to be kept in a very secure cabinet..there are solid, strong, secure metal gun cabinets available to buy and guns to be kept separate from the ammunition. I may be wrong but I think with shotgun cartridges they don't have the same level of security as the shotgun and can be kept in the same cabinet but rifles and bullets have to be kept separately..Maybe somneon will put me right on that if it's not correct. Farmers and pest control people need guns.. I don't like grouse/pheasant shooting but clay pigeon shooting is fine A shooting sport that involves skill and doesn't kill wildlife for no reason other than so-called sport. Shooting in one form or another is an Olympic sport too. There's quite a variety of ways to shoot .Skeet shooting..ie at flying objects,..pistol shooting..sporting clays....ie walk around shooting at moving targets as opposed to clay pigeon where the shooter is static. Personally, I don't like guns but I can imagine any of these activities are quite challenging and enjoyable on a skills level.

An interesting fact . A Daily Mirror request under the Freedom of Information Act, (FOIA), revealed that there are nearly 1.4 million shotguns and more than 600,000 other firearms, mostly rifles, held legally in the UK.

This is a report from July..just gone. I've copied a section. but here's the link https://www.farsight.co.uk/blog/concerns-over-gun-security-following-data-breach/

As a leading remote CCTV and Alarm monitoring partner to farms across the country, we are acutely aware that crimes affecting rural communities, in particular farmers, are increasingly being targeted by opportunists and criminal gangs. Farm security is being tested, prompting farmers to rethink their security measures to combat this crime surge.

Recent news headlines demonstrate just how vulnerable many rural homesteads and farms are to burglaries and in some cases violent raids by gangs to get hold of their legal weapons:

> Shropshire / Staffordshire Border : Shotgun stolen from farmer’s truck – Express & Star / March 2021

> Isle of Wight: Unloaded shotguns stolen from outskirts of Tapnell Farm – IW Radio / July 2021

> Liverpool: Firearms stolen from farmer’s cabinet stolen after gang stormed his farm and shot him twice – Liverpool Echo / July 2021

> Lancashire: Appeal after shotgun was stolen from Eccleston – Lancashire Telegraph / Feb 2021

> Yorkshire: Burglary gang who stole shotguns and ammunition during raids – Yorkshire Evening Post / June 2021
 
Nobody can possibly answer that question, but certainly terrorists have done so quite often.
And then there are the uninsured, disqualified and otherwise unlicensed drivers - a massive number - who may not actually set out to kill but whose conduct strongly indicates that they don't care whether they kill or not.
And then there are all of the drunk and drugged-up drivers, same thing applies.

Now compare that with shooting incidents. 3 deliberate spree killings (3 too many) in the last 30 years, plus a very small number of "domestic" murders where a different type of weapon would probably have been used if there hadn't been a gun.

I don't count killings committed by criminals with illegally-held guns.

AFAIK it is extremely rare for accidental gun deaths to happen nowadays, at least among civilian shooters. The reasons for this are probably because shotguns are so potentially dangerous that everyone follows the correct procedures all the time, which means that guns are only ever loaded during the short time that they are pointing towards where the targets will appear, and also because every single shooter is wideawake at all times and constantly acts as a safety officer.

Although it's now very rare for me to shoot rifles at target ranges I've done a lot of it in the past and can confirm that the same obsession with safety applies to them too, and it's virtually impossible for a shooting accident to occur. Which makes shooting one of the very safest of sports.
Yes, and I wasn’t implying there were but challenging the claim that vehicle deaths don’t count because they are accidental.

There have course been some deaths from illegal guns where the ’wrong’ person was accidentally killed though I think that would be stretching it to say the least.
 
Apologies in advance as I have not read in detail all of the preceding posts but feel I would like to express my views.

Back in the 1970's I was a guest member of the Civil Service Shooting Club at the London premises just off Millbank area, that had an indoor range in one of the sub basements of a now demolished Civil Service building. It was my first experience of small bore rifle shooting and was something I did for I think about 9months. When my sponsor moved area my guest membership ceased.

What I learned was correct gun handling and a respect for the power of the weapon (I shot both Martini-Henry and Anschutz[not sure about the spelling] bolt action rifles) but though I am right handed I am left eye dominant so shot left handed and the Martini-Henry not being bolt action was more natural for me.

One thing I noticed early on was that the .22 ammunition had a warning "Lethal up to 1000yards" ~ a salutary reminder that (sporting) guns can kill if mis-used. NB I think I recall that a box 20 rounds was 50p!

I was curious about the protocols for those members who did competition shooting at the likes of Bisley, as to the laws governing ownership ~ as I recall I was told that they could carry them to & from the club but required to have a gun safe on their home premises AND they were not permitted to have ammunition at home at all. If found in possession of ammunition off of a registered shooting range, they would lose their Firearms Certificate.

A few years after I moved to Woking which is near Bisley but with work etc I never went to see if I could take up the sport again.....................somewhere I think I still have some of range targets and I did manage some very tight groups.

So that is my limited experience of sports shooting and as for the Plymouth shooting & what I have heard in the news from the Police Forces & the government tell me two things.

  1. That it seems that all Police Forces who enforce & monitor Firearms Certificate holders and their guns differently i.e. nothing consistent across the whole of the UK
    And that rather than being given Home Office advice there seems to be a call by the Police to have clear law and structure that is beyond mis-interpretation???

  2. Unfortunately, UK Governments of all stripes do not seem to be able to respond to events ending in deaths very coherently e.g. the Dangerous Dogs Act, that came across to me to be too much of 'kneejerk' legislation :(

I hope & trust that the vast majority of both 'work usage firearms' and sports shooters are highly responsible in both the ownership and usage of the weapons. As such (as mentioned above) there is much goodwill between such Certificate holders and the Police who have the force oversight of them.

IMO there does need to be changes in the law governing Firearms ownership but any new legislation needs to be done with the collaboration of all parties...................and within the legislation there needs to be a more coherent "structure" to the issuing of Certificates and the revocation situations.

Hence where, as in the case of Plymouth, it is highly questionable that a shooter should have a Certificate in the first place let alone be allowed to have it returned following the reported incident, then they should not have one!

The expression that comes to mind is that if someone applies for a Firearms Certificate they should be required to prove themselves to be a "Fit & Proper Person".

Furthermore, in the light of extreme views being expressed (in any reported circumstances) and/or mental illness developing, a little like drivers over 70 being required to renew their license every 3 years...............should not those that hold firearms be required (sorry if this happens already?) to have a yearly renewal with the same proof required as in the case of a new applicant???

PS I think this was raised in another post ~ yes, if the Plymouth murderer was so deranged & intent on killing last week in the absence of a gun he could well have killed some people with knives but he did not.....he had a shotgun!

PPS If I have in any way misunderstood or misinterpreted anything I welcome any corrections as appropriate.
 
That said I suspect that the amount of legal gun owning people that go on a shooting rampage is also quite a small
percentage
Quite small?

As I said "I suspect", not a statement of fact

Let me put this another way, I very much doubt any decision on future gun laws will hinge on people killed/murdered
by other means, it will be based on those killed by the few running around shooting people deliberately with legally owned firearms..

Just to be clear, I am not anti gun licencing, it's just my opinion that people killed by cars,knives etc really won't make any difference in a gun licence debate when it comes to the law
 
so? still my opionion
guns in private houses are stupid

also gun owners carry zero weight with me as all there interested is there own selfish needs and wants you only have to see the yanks for that.

And there we have it. You can’t get over the fact that gun ownership and by extension safety is vastly different in the UK than the US. Imagine every gun owner has a 9mm in each hand and that is the position you come from in an argument.
 
There's clearly been a failure here on the part of officers in the firearms dept ...wouldn't surprise me,though if that dept is staffed by civilians with maybe a sergeant supervising but I'm going to hazard a guess. Initial or further checks after the aggressive incident with two youths that involved the police weren't done thoroughly enough, as per protocol because the dept was under-staffed. It's possible that it's, at least, a contributing factor for what has turned out to be a catastrophic error of judgement in handing back the licence/gun. I assume,though that a licence/gun must be returned unless there are good grounds not to..like having been involved in a high level of aggression but we'll see when the findings of the investigation are complete. I see the police won't confirm if the shotgun he used was the one covered by his licence. Witnesses talk of a pump-action shot gun.
Firearms Licencing Department(s) are run by the police but usually employ civillians, not police officers. The Home Office issues guidelines to the different police forces, some do things differently than others, so there probably are some police forces where police officers are involved. The civillians are frequently shooters themselves, they don't need to be but it helps if they can provide the public with information and advice based on real-world experience. Many of the civilian staff are either ex-police or ex armed forces.They need to be organised, careful people who are capable of judging character, and generally they do this extremely well.

I think that all police licensing departments are suffering from limited resources but this should NOT affect public safety in a negative way. What usually happens is that grant applications and renewals have to be dealt with more slowly, they are not dealt with less carefully.

We don't know what went wrong at Devon & Cornwall, but certainly - based on what appeared in the public domain within a few hours of this shooting - this individual should never have been granted a certificate in the first place. The person(s) responsible for both granting the certificate and returning it after seizure will have to live with the consequences of their actions for the rest of their lives.
In the UK, single, double and tripled-barrelled shotguns as well as those which have a lever action, pump-action, semiautomatic and fixed magazine capacity of no more than three cartridges are legal with a valid Shotgun certificate and meeting the basic safety requirements for firearm possession in the UK. Types of shotgun ammunition, such a solid slug, can only be bought following the granting of a Firearm Certificate (FAC).
Corrrect, but tripled-barrelled shotguns are a bit of a curiosity, personally I've never seen one. Solid slugs are available to FAC holders but they really just turn a shotgun into a poor rifle and are very much an American thing
But in relation to pump-action shotguns.... banned are .. Semi-automatic or pump-action rifles which fire centre-fire ammunition
These are rifles, not shotguns.
Did he get a caution or was it a case of no further action ? Either way, I assume he applied to get his licence and gun back in July and to do so was obliged to attend an anger-management course. My opinion is that a person that has the capacity for such a level of anger that it involved the police should never have access to a shotgun or firearm. An anger management course should never be a condition for someone to have seizure revoked . I wonder who the two character referees were when he initially applied for a shotgun licence ? The police might not have disovered his membership of that Incel group..mysogynists..but he was on Facebook. His account on Facebook and Youtube have since been cancelled for 'breaching their policy' so he must have posted unsavoury comments on there. He was also posting on Reddit
Someone on a shooting forum linked to his YouTube channel and I saw his posts before they were deleted. The content was horrific, and it seems strange that the police didn't seem to look at them before making their decisions.
> Shropshire / Staffordshire Border : Shotgun stolen from farmer’s truck – Express & Star / March 2021

> Isle of Wight: Unloaded shotguns stolen from outskirts of Tapnell Farm – IW Radio / July 2021

> Liverpool: Firearms stolen from farmer’s cabinet stolen after gang stormed his farm and shot him twice – Liverpool Echo / July 2021

> Lancashire: Appeal after shotgun was stolen from Eccleston – Lancashire Telegraph / Feb 2021

> Yorkshire: Burglary gang who stole shotguns and ammunition during raids – Yorkshire Evening Post / June 2021
We have a small, remote rural farm and farmers are easy targets for thieves, who are generally after expensive machinery, not guns. I'm not excusing it, but some farmers are a little careless with their gun security, they are subject to the same safe storage rules as householders and all guns should be locked up at all times when not in actual use, it should be impossible to steal them from "the outskirts" or from a truck. I remember a case where someone was attacked by a bull, a tractor driver saved the mans life by shooting it with a rifle that he had wrongly left in his tractor, and his certificate was then revoked.
One thing I noticed early on was that the .22 ammunition had a warning "Lethal up to 1000yards" ~ a salutary reminder that (sporting) guns can kill if mis-used. NB I think I recall that a box 20 rounds was 50p!
Yes, even the tiny and humble .22 rimfire can be lethal at 1000 yards, probably at nearly twice that. But the typical point black range is around 67 yards, and their maximum effective range is about 100 yards, maximum. Presumably it's because rifles can kill at much greater ranges than shotguns that governments consider them to be more dangerous and that they are on a different type of certificate.
The expression that comes to mind is that if someone applies for a Firearms Certificate they should be required to prove themselves to be a "Fit & Proper Person".
Yes, that is the case for Firearms Certificates, where the applicant is also required to have good reason for possession. But it doesn't apply to shotgun certificates, where there is a presumption of entitlement and the police have to have good reason to refuse rather than the other way round, and the applicant doesn't need to have a good reason for wanting a shotgun. But, the most popular reason for wanting a shotgun is to shoot clays, and the vast majority of would-be shooters shoot under supervision at a licensed club before applying for their certificate, and the Firearms Licencing Officer then phones the club secretary to check, and to get his/her opinion re suitablility.
Furthermore, in the light of extreme views being expressed (in any reported circumstances) and/or mental illness developing, a little like drivers over 70 being required to renew their license every 3 years...............should not those that hold firearms be required (sorry if this happens already?) to have a yearly renewal with the same proof required as in the case of a new applicant???
It used to be 3 years and then became 5 years, and personally I think that a lot can change in such a long time. The shooting community strongly supports public safety and, when people belong to clubs, the police tend to get told about any concerns that may arise. The renewals are subject to exactly the same checks and the same criteria as the first application.
 
One of the points, which has been made in this discussion, is that cars and knives kill many more of our citizens than guns. While arithmetically true, the claim amounts (at best) to sophistry. The discussion therefor needs to start from first principles...
  • A car is a vehicle, which has many positive functions and its use is vital to many people.
  • A knife is a tool, which has many positive functions and its use is vital to most people.
  • A firearm is a weapon, which has only two obvious functions: to kill or to practice killing and its use is vital to very few if any civilians.
Cars are subject to licencing and knives are subject to age controls. Given their general availability and utility, these controls are probably the most practical that can be achieved at the moment.

Firearms are also subject to licencing but there is evidence that this can be improved. Also, given their special status as weapons, imposing additional controls to improve the safety of the public is not unreasonable.
 
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One of the points, which has been made in this discussion, is that cars and knives kill many more of our citizens than guns. While arithmetically true, the claim amounts (at best) to sophistry. The discussion therefor needs to start from first principles...
  • A car is a vehicle, which has many positive functions and its use is vital to many people.
  • A knife is a tool, which has many positive functions and its use is vital to most people.
  • A firearm is a weapon, which has only two obvious functions: to kill or to practice killing and its use is vital to very few if any civilians.
Cars are subject to licencing and knives are subject to age controls. Given their general availability and utility, these controls are probably the most practical that can be achieved at the moment.

Firearms are also subject to licencing but there is evidence that this can be improved. Also, given their special status as weapons, imposing additional controls to improve the safety of the public is not unreasonable.
(My bold) I do take your point, and let's not go too far off-topic into the realms of semantics but . . .

Some guns are weapons, most handguns and most rifles were designed for warfare, no doubt about that.
Some shotguns (notably the side-by-side design) were designed for shooting birds, rabbits etc so - as far as these animals are concerned - are also weapons)
But the shotguns that we use for clay pigeon shooting are designed specifically for that purpose. Clay shooting DID originate as a practice session for shooting birds out of season but has developed far beyond that and the vast majority of clay shooters are NOT practising killing and only shoot clays. You can see this, in practice, at any clay shoot - a few birds fly into the target zone and everything stops until they've flown safely away.

The specialised rifles used for target shooting are again not designed as weapons, they would make pretty crap ones, with their very slow, single round loading:)

The Firearms Act 1968 uses the term "weapon" but most people agree that guns are only weapons if used as such, so this includes military, police and criminal use and excludes people who use them for target sports. For us, they are the equivalent of a golfer's club - a sporting tool that, if misused, can be used as a weapon.

I haven't seen any evidence that the licencing system can be improved. There is however evidence that some police forces don't always follow their own procedures, that's very different.
 
What usually happens is that grant applications and renewals have to be dealt with more slowly, they are not dealt with less carefully.

At my last renewal one of the moderators here provided one of my references. It was made clear to her (in no uncertain terms) that if I did anything then she would be asked to explain her reference.
 
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The specialised rifles used for target shooting are again not designed as weapons, they would make pretty crap ones, with their very slow, single round loading:)


Indeed, I'm sure thats why they're allowed. Anything which is an obvious choice as a weapon is already illegal (as I know you know)
 
One of the points, which has been made in this discussion, is that cars and knives kill many more of our citizens than guns. While arithmetically true, the claim amounts (at best) to sophistry. The discussion therefor needs to start from first principles...
  • A car is a vehicle, which has many positive functions and its use is vital to many people.
  • A knife is a tool, which has many positive functions and its use is vital to most people.
  • A firearm is a weapon, which has only two obvious functions: to kill or to practice killing and its use is vital to very few if any civilians.
Cars are subject to licencing and knives are subject to age controls. Given their general availability and utility, these controls are probably the most practical that can be achieved at the moment.

Firearms are also subject to licencing but there is evidence that this can be improved. Also, given their special status as weapons, imposing additional controls to improve the safety of the public is not unreasonable.

Sport or hobby - some like to take pics, some like to play football, some like to fish, others like to go out and shoot targets (archery, clay pigeon, etc...).
 
but most people agree that guns are only weapons if used as such,
I think we'll have to agree to disagree there.

However: the situation that we are now in is that a firearm, legally licenced, has been used to kill several people and there will be demands to tighten procedures.

Rather than fighting such demands, it seems to me sensible for the shooting fraternity to get ahead of them, by proposing such improvements themselves. The most logical change would be that firearm certificates be issued annually following an examination and approval by a police psychologist. This, of course, would increase the cost of certification but I suspect the alternative will be worse.
 
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I think we'll have to agree to disagree there.

However: the situation that we are now in is that a firearm, legally licenced, has been used to kill several people and there will be demands to tighten procedures.

Rather than fighting such demands, it seems to me sensible for the shooting fraternity to get ahead of them, by proposing such improvements themselves. The most logical change would be that firearm certificates be issued annually following an examination and approval by a police psychologist. This, of course, would increase the cost of certification but I suspect the alternative will be worse.

But you could/should do the same for other people - like driving license re-tests every 5 years, a mandatory 10 year jail term for drink & drug driving, that would cut road deaths by a lot more than some tweaks to gun ownership.
 
I think we'll have to agree to disagree there.

However: the situation that we are now in is that a firearm, legally licenced, has been used to kill several people and there will be demands to tighten procedures.

Rather than fighting such demands, it seems to me sensible for the shooting fraternity to get ahead of them, by proposing such improvements themselves. The most logical change would be that firearm certificates be issued annually following an examination and approval by a police psychologist. This, of course, would increase the cost of certification but I suspect the alternative will be worse.
As has already been said here (more than once), it's not the processes that need to be tightened but rather the implementation.
 
As has already been said here (more than once), it's not the processes that need to be tightened but rather the implementation.
And that, sadly, can never be perfect because people make mistakes or money is not forthcoming and so on.

All this is pretty pointless (though a lot of “educational” information has been posted by eg Garry) since the facts are not yet known (maybe never will be :() just some scattered media reports, and we know how reliable those are :(.

Act in haste repent at leisure is a useful thing to remember and it particularly applies to Acts of Parliament, especially those spurred by cries of tighten things up !
 
As has already been said here (more than once), it's not the processes that need to be tightened but rather the implementation.
But... as we know: the implementation is seldom tightened up, because there will be too much inertia to overcome. The default is to change the process, because that can be pointed to as positive action.
 
But you could/should do the same for other people - like driving license re-tests every 5 years, a mandatory 10 year jail term for drink & drug driving, that would cut road deaths by a lot more than some tweaks to gun ownership.
I can't help but feel this discussion is between those "with skin in the game" and those who don't have any direct interest in the issue. In any case, to equate a practical suggestion with a deliberately impractical one isn't going to move the debate on.

As I wrote earlier, the best strategy for shooting enthusiasts is to be seen to come up with measures which at least increase the apparent security surrounding their sport, rather than copying the NRA and attempting to block progress. While that works in the U.S., it won't go down well with the gun averse British.
 
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Has a post been deleted? Where is the post with personal attacks?
There have been several from the people who want to ban guns that are close to personal attacks and some of those posts have been edited later without marking* any edit. I notice because I was sure I’d read something that has now vanished, or perhaps I was mistaken :(.

*Not necessarily making any accusation … do it myself sometime if I “post“ instead of “preview” etc.
 
I notice because I was sure I’d read something that has now vanished, or perhaps I was mistaken :(.
There has been no staff intervention, a couple of posts were edited by the poster to correct typo's,
or to reword something.

Has a post been deleted? Where is the post with personal attacks?
As above, and I think I know to what post / poster that refers to..
Usual strongly worded response from one person.
 
There has been no staff intervention, a couple of posts were edited by the poster to correct typo's,
or to reword something.


As above, and I think I know to what post / poster that refers to..
Usual strongly worded response from one person.
Definitely didn’t think there had been and as I say my memory could be at fault, or what I remember was in a different thread! :(.

But possibly I was right and something was reworded after I read it :). Because of the semi-instant format people often write something they didn’t mean, as one does in spoken conversations. That’s why I’m a bit suspicious of the dragging up from people’s ancient internet posts or maybe school debates and damning them forevermore on what they said or wrote back then :(.
 
(My bold) Ah! You’re a politician :(.
I am not and never have been a politician, sir.

I demand satisfaction - Nikons at twenty paces! :naughty:
 
Patient confidentiality?
 
How wasn't this known before he got his lIcence back ?

Simple, one or more people didn't do their jobs properly, there can be no other explanation because systems are in place that should have ensured that the police were aware of any mental health problems.

Just as a simple explanation of this, the police notify GP's whenever someone applies for or renews any kind of firearms certificate, which means that it's on the NHS records. Therefore, the NHS should have notified the police that he had sought treatment for a mental health problem and the police should have made their own enquiries.

But there's so much more too. From a shooting forum "Reported in The Telegraph today is that Davison, who had autism, ADHD, and depression, went to Mount Tamar School, a special needs school for children who cannot be dealt with in mainstream education. Jonathan Williams, one of his teachers there, said that “he would have had an education health care (EHC) plan, which should have seen him monitored by the authorities until the age of 25. Someone simply didn’t do their homework on the firearms certificate issue, he warned. The so-called multi-agency approach to safeguarding appears to have failed.”

And that's leaving aside all of the other things that the police either knew or should have known - his deeply disturbing social media posts, his connections to groups with extreme views, his obsession with violent video games, the reports that his parents had specifically warned them about the dangers of him having a gun.

All of the systems are in place. Every time I go through airport security they know that I'm a certificate holder because that info is encoded onto my passport. It's also on my DVLA driving licence record and the police computer system. A few years ago I was stopped by police when towing a trailer with my son's Land Rover on it (not unusual for broken-down landy's to be recovered on trailers:) ) and they stopped me to check that I had a trailer licence and that the Landy wasn't stolen. I sat in the police car when the officer checked my driving licence details and the control room came back immediately with my name, address and the clear warning "Firearms Certifiate Holder". And a few months ago a detective phoned me as a possible witness in a historic sex offences case, where they had arrested a man who I once knew, 20 years previously I had contacted the police about this man and they had lost their own records on that, but he has now been arrested again, my name came up from somewhere and the police officer had found me because I'm on their system because I'm a certificate holder. Generally, the systems work extremely well and safeguard the public, but not this time.

And there's another weird thing, which may be something or nothing . . . I don't know when Davison's shotgun certificate was issued and even children can obtain one in specific situations, but it's unusual for young people to get one unless they have parents who shoot. It seems strange that someone so young and who (according to media reports) had no friends, a negative history and no relationship, was deemed to be a fit and proper person

Patient confidentiality?
No. Every applicant has to sign away their confidentiality right when applying.
 
I sat in the police car when the officer checked my driving licence details and the control room came back immediately with my name, address and the clear warning "Firearms Certifiate Holder"

In January this year my wife was caught by a speed camera whilst she was driving my car some 60 miles from home. The first I knew about this was rather than receiving an NIP instead

a phone call from the Met firearms team asking why I was so far away from home during lockdown.
and even children can obtain one in specific situations, but it's unusual for young people to get one unless they have parents who shoot.

My daughter has one, purely so she can come clay shooting with me - only cause the local ground will only let certificate holders shoot unless with one of their instructors.The majority of certificate holders seem to be 40+ chaps who are a bit geeky really.
 
I was curious about the protocols for those members who did competition shooting at the likes of Bisley, as to the laws governing ownership ~ as I recall I was told that they could carry them to & from the club but required to have a gun safe on their home premises AND they were not permitted to have ammunition at home at all. If found in possession of ammunition off of a registered shooting range, they would lose their Firearms Certificate.

I'm not sure if its changed or not then. Under the terms of my FAC I'm allowed to store a specified amount of ammunition in a separate safe (from my rifle)at home . Every time I purchase ammunition the dealer records it on my FAC. (which is different from a SGC) I'm also a full member at Bisley, they're very strict about who they let onto their full bore ranges, just holding a FAC isn't enough.
 
I've been asked about the power and pellet spread of shotguns and thought that I may as well answer publicly on this thread, as a lot of people won't know and may be interested.

A standard 12 bore shotgun with a typical cartridge has about 6x the energy of a standard 9mm bullet, so very powerful. Most clay shooters use 28 gr (1 ounce) cartridges and the typical load will be around 300 tiny lead pellets, but much heavier cartridges are available, for example the ones used for shooting foxes, and the ones that our American friends seem to like are far heavier still.

But the small pellets lose power over distance very rapidly. Fortunately, there are very few shotgun deaths in the UK and there isn't much data available, but it seems to be the case that if someone is shot from a distance of 30m or less then their chances of survival are almost non-existent, but at a distance of 40m the chances of survival are good. At the theoretical maximum travel range (which can be as great as 275m) the pellets would just feel like raindrops.

It also depends on the choke fitted to the shotgun. A choke is a simple constricting tube that reduces the spread of the pellets. The photo below is of the rear of a pattern plate, used for testing accuracy and pellet pattern, and was shot from 30m away with cylinder choke, which doesn't restrict the spread at all. With "full choke" fitted, they would only spread out to about half the size, which means that if someone is hit from a gun with full choke, they will probably be hit with far more pellets at any given distance.

There is zero pellet spread for about the first 5 metres.
pattern plate.jpg

And I've included a mini clay in the pic, this measures just 60mm across and is the smallest size that we normally shoot at, it requires great accuracy and very fast reactions, because it's really shifting.

Here's a closeup of the clay, which has been hit by at least 3 pellets, but not by enough to break it.
clay.jpg
Fortunately, two of Davison's victims survived. Either he was a very poor shot or they were a long way away.

I know nothing about illegal (sawn off) shotguns but the laws of physics tells us that the pellets will spread far more and the short barrel will substantially reduce the power.

I'm not sure if its changed or not then. Under the terms of my FAC I'm allowed to store a specified amount of ammunition in a separate safe (from my rifle)at home . Every time I purchase ammunition the dealer records it on my FAC. (which is different from a SGC) I'm also a full member at Bisley, they're very strict about who they let onto their full bore ranges, just holding a FAC isn't enough.
I agree. Back in the day I used to shoot at Bisley (which is army land) and I had to pass a very tough 2-day military safety officer training course. Back to shotguns though, shotgun certificate holders can buy and store virtually unlimited quantities of ammo and most serious shooters do, because of the cost savings. But people don't actually need to buy ammo if they shoot at clay grounds because the clubs sell it, at higher prices.
 
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