long_range_rob
Well-Known Member
Weren’t they supposed to have a nationally available firearms register after the Dunblane enquiry?
Knowing the age of some of the people in the club I'm a member of, I don't doubt that. But to solve the vulnerabilities in an antiquated paper certificate system, you either need to increase restrictions, or get with the times and move to something more modern.I know a surprising number of shooters who do not use the internet.
As much as we would all like to believe it the police service is no longer a 24 hour/365 day service. There are many departments that only work limited office hours, and in some areas you even have to make an appointment to visit a police station as they don't operate a manned desk where you can walk in and talk to an officer.The police say the details weren't checked immediately because the seller notified them out of working hours. I wonder when the police did check, before or after the crime? I think there may be some deflecting from the chief constable. Although in fairness the system as it is deffo has holes.
I think that legitimate firearms users could (and should) be doing a lot more to normalise responsible firearms ownership in the eyes of the public. There's far too many amongst us who behave like they've got some kind of sinful secret to hide, and this sort of furtive behaviour only makes the public more suspicious and nervous of us.I think the public need to accept that people have guns whether they like it or not.
Police failings shouldn’t have a detrimental effect on us .
The same faults are there. A forged paper certificate with the variation on, and a face to face sale??I suspect that you will shortly have to go through the same process to get a shotgun that you currently do to acquire a firearm.
There’s no logical reason to treat a shotgun differently.
I made the same comment on here a few years back, and was ridiculed for it.I suspect that you will shortly have to go through the same process to get a shotgun that you currently do to acquire a firearm.
There’s no logical reason to treat a shotgun differently.
True, but there will be far fewer certificate holders and far fewer firearms when you need a good reason for having each and every one.The same faults are there. A forged paper certificate with the variation on, and a face to face sale??
Ah yes I see what you mean now.True, but there will be far fewer certificate holders and far fewer firearms when you need a good reason for having each and every one.
and that will improve public safety how exactly? How often is a fake certificate used? Once since 1968?I suspect that you will shortly have to go through the same process to get a shotgun that you currently do to acquire a firearm.
There’s no logical reason to treat a shotgun differently.
I have sent this, just now, to my MP. Others are welcome to perhaps construct similar?
I hope, ask, please that you will forward this to the Home Secretary for her response, after you have read it. I am writing about concern raised this week over a forged Shotgun Certificate being used to enable a series of wicked murders and intended murders.
My comments are based on having held a Firearm Certificate since 1976 and a Shotgun Certificate since 1978 or thereabouts and having been a Registered Firearms Dealer for some twenty plus years until 2002.
The old system that existed previous to the requirement that all transactions be "face to face" was in fact more safe in preventing the acquisition of a weapon by means of a forged document. At distance a seller was always able to make a telephone call, during office hours, to the buyer's police force and check the bona fides.
With face to face, especially if bought outside office hours one presently cannot.
So what's the answer? Maybe a 24/7 contact number (which could indeed be the usual number to the relevant police force's control room) whereby on giving the supposed FAC's or SGC's unique number its validity can be confirmed?
These records can be accessed 24/7 even if the force's Firearms Licensing Department is closed after 4pm or on weekends. As anyone who has an FAC or SGC will know if they have ever been stopped by the police, at any hour, when driving their motor vehicle.
The vendor calls in and asks to verify the validity of the buyer's FAC or SGC. This is required to be done out of earshot of the potential buyer. So for example by the vendor taking the document into the vehicle they have travelled in to meet the buyer. Or by asking the buyer to wait in their vehicle outside the vendor's house.
The vendor is asked, straightaway, their name, address and their present location from where they are making the telephone call from. That may be the vendor's home, a game fair, a clay pigeon shooting ground, or indeed their car at the place where the buyer is at if the vendor has travelled to meet the buyer.
The vendor is then asked to give, simply, the unique number that is printed on each FAC or SGC and the bearer's name. The force control room will then tell the vendor the address and date of birth that the document should be carrying. And even perhaps a description of the photograph that each FAC and SGC carries of its holder. Such as "They are wearing a red shirt in the picture."
The force control room can then conform withthe vendor that this is a genuine document. If it is not because the location where the vendor was calling from was stated at the start of the call then the force control room can initiate a police response.
I hope that this is of help and use to the Home Secretary and to yourself.
We both know that “ public safety “ is merely the excuse. The agenda is to reduce the number of firearms in public hands to the absolute minimum.and that will improve public safety how exactly? How often is a fake certificate used? Once since 1968?
Meeting an unknown buyer in a car park to sell a gun is never a good idea, you have no idea who will turn up, local drug dealers to violently take the gun from you. legal yes, but It was a little nivea to do so at best.
Everything can be faked. If the reward is worth the effort. I've seen forged French ID cards that have holograms and chips that are fake.Don’t think i would have sent that, bottom line is the certificates should be such that they are hard to fake, like an easy to see hologram for example as per passports.
Thanks for sharing.You can now generate a "check code" for your driving license, you can give the code to someone and its good for 3 weeks, they can just go online, type the code in and check your license is valid, see what types of vehicles you can drive (HGVs, motorbikes, etc) and if you have any endorsements. My employer requires it once a year and my car insurance wanted it too this year.
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View or share your driving licence information
Find out what information DVLA holds about your driving licence or create a check code to share your driving record, for example to hire a carwww.gov.uk
it's a pretty simple system, something like that would work well for firearms transactions. If you could generate a one use code, give that to the seller and they can type that code in on the gov website which checked it against the NFLMS to verify that you had a valid certificate with the appropriate open slot
I suspect that you will shortly have to go through the same process to get a shotgun that you currently do to acquire a firearm.
There’s no logical reason to treat a shotgun differently.