Not stalking you old fruit, but I am always (when I can be bothered), going to respond to posts on a public forum, with which I fundamentally disagree.
I think, I may even have agreed with one of your posts, once about something...but that just goes to show, that even I can be wrong.
You are of course, at liberty to do the same.
The whole process stinks.
It seems to go as follows.
A complaint, allegation or statement is made or acting on other information a review into someone’s suitability to hold a FAC or SGC is initiated.
The review takes place “in camera”. There are no independent witnesses, press or public record.
The person under review is not informed of the review, not represented at the review, not offered the opportunity to elaborate on, explain or rebut the information which triggered the review. They remain totally unaware of, and outside the process.
The police will also routinely refuse to divulge what triggered the review when challenged, which makes defending yourself damn near impossible.
If the review is completed and no action is taken the person is not informed that their suitability to hold a firearm has been questioned and investigated. That review never happened.
If the decision is made to revoke, the first the FAC holder hears of it is likely to be a knock on the door with armed police demanding the immediate surrender of all guns and ammunition, during this phase its standard practice to refuse the owner access to their own firearms to remove valuable items, scopes etc, which are not actually covered by the firearms acts and which the police have no right to confiscate.
The only available recourse is an appeal to the courts which will run to 4 or 5 figures, money which most of us just don’t have to throw away on a hobby. The appeal is also likely to take a period of time measured in years rather than days or weeks, so by default the police action generally goes unchallenged.
How the courts can stand over this process is totally incomprehensible, it seems to wilfully trample over the presumption of innocence, your right to a defence.
The reality that you may have your right to legally hold your own property removed without due process is, quite frankly, the stuff of nightmares.
You need to challenge this.