Posted on 01/02/2003 1:39:28 PM PST by FreeSpeechZone
Gun owners invite arrest Protesters tote firearms openly in defiance of new gun registry
CP / Jim Turnbull of Jarvie is arrested during an anti-gun registry protest on Parliament Hill on Wednesday.
Greg Southam, The Journal / Oscar Lacombe, former Alberta Legislature sergeant-at-arms, carries his unregistered rifle in protest on Wednesday.
From Parliament Hill to the Alberta legislature, gun-toting protesters taunted police to arrest them in defiance of the new federal gun registry.
"Here I am, Ottawa," said Oscar Lacombe, the Alberta legislature's former sergeant-at-arms, holding his plastic-wrapped, unloaded .22 rifle at a one-man protest in Edmonton.
"I'm the criminal you spent billions of dollars to catch. So if you believe in your law, come and arrest me, please."
Under the act, all Canadians were required to register or declare their intent to register their guns by midnight Tuesday.
Police didn't take any action against Lacombe, 74, during his protest, but later they stopped his car and seized a weapon.
On Parliament Hill, two protesters got their wish -- sort of. Police laid charges, but not for having an unregistered gun.
To chants of "shame, shame" officers ushered Jim Turnbull, a 70-year-old retired auctioneer and farmer from Jarvie, Alta., into a cruiser. The arrest was the culmination of a protest in front of the eternal flame, where a handful of the 150 demonstrators flouted the law by setting ablaze their gun registration forms, gun licences and Bill C-68 -- the contentious piece of legislation requiring owners to register all rifles and shotguns by Wednesday.
"I would never register," vowed Turnbull, head of the Canadian Unregistered Firearms Owners Association who says he owns 35 firearms. "I believe that's my personal property. Next thing they'll want me to register my refrigerator and my dishwasher."
The boisterous gun enthusiast was later charged with carrying a weapon to a public meeting, a Criminal Code offence punishable by up to six months imprisonment and a $2,000 fine.
Gun-control opponent Ed Hudson, of Saskatoon, was charged with the same offence after turning himself in at the police station. Turnbull and Hudson were later released.
Edmonton police who seized Lacombe's gun said charges would be considered under the Criminal Code, not the Firearms Act. Lacombe had no possession permit for it and his firearm acquisition certificate had expired.
Richard Fritze, Lacombe's lawyer, is awaiting the decision on charges. At that point, he may recommend a constitutional challenge, depending on the nature of charges laid.
During his protest, Lacombe -- resplendent in a fringed, mooseskin jacket adorned with rows of military medals -- stood on the terrace overlooking the Legislature building and declared he would not submit to "this unjust and dangerous law."
His protest drew a group of about 25 supporters.
The registry was created by Ottawa in response to the 1989 massacre of female engineering students at a Montreal school by a lone gunman.
Gun lobby groups contend, however, that it punishes legitimate gun owners while failing to stop criminals.
Two members of the Aboriginal Veterans Society of Alberta, who served overseas with Lacombe, showed up in military dress to support him.
"I'm backing him," said Herbert Bell, 70, sergeant-at-arms of the society. Lacombe, who referred proudly to his Metis heritage several times in his speech, is a member of the society.
Bell added in an interview that he has registered his own guns because "I'm not a law-breaker."
Several gun law opponents from Calgary came to the protest. They included University of Calgary academic Ted Morton, who was elected an Alberta "senator in waiting" in the province's Senate election a few years ago.
Morton said Lacombe represents thousands of Canadians "who have been turned into criminals today" by the gun law. "What is happening to this country?" Morton asked.
Newly elected Conservative MLA Doug Griffiths of Wainwright, who has also said he won't register his weapons, was at Lacombe's protest but kept a low profile.
Griffiths didn't speak but said in an interview later he has heard nothing from police or members of the Conservative caucus since making his statement that he wouldn't register his guns.
Griffiths said he doesn't want to make his point with rallies or loud protests. But he said he wants to follow Gandhi's road of peaceful disobedience and be "just not in compliance" with the gun law.
"It's a bad law," and Canada should follow the example of New Zealand, which decided to drop a similar law after concluding it was unenforceable, Griffiths said.
Lacombe, in his speech, cited his own Alberta heritage dating back to early pioneers Father Lacombe and Laurent Garneau, and his honours won in military service in Korea, Europe and elsewhere.
"I have devoted my whole life to protecting law and order and defending freedom. But today a new law takes effect which I cannot support in conscience ... In fact I have come here to defy it openly and in public."
Lacombe said he has used a gun since childhood and shot his first deer at age nine for food for his family. Even though he still only owns what he called a rabbit gun, "effective today, I am a criminal under Section 92 of the Criminal Code."
But he said he wouldn't submit, even if the price of rebellion is jail.
"Now the time has come to fight for freedom in our country," he said. "I won't register this gun and I won't hide.
Of course, if California were an independent nation, it would win hands down.
Still, Canada is making quite a showing these days.
For my part, I hope you and others like you might somehow stop the insanity. Canada is better than this, and the U.S. has better things to do than spend troops sealing the border between our nations.
Good luck, and God bless you.
Sorry to disagree. You have a Second Amendment just so you can keep and bear a loaded gun to protect you from this kind of overbearing government action. It is an individual right guaranteed. Many have died for these rights....
Except that the time for civil disobedience is over. That ended as soon as the cops confiscated the first gun. It's Lexington and Concord time... It's "From my cold dead hands time"...
Why this sudden love for 'civil disobedience'? You cannot use the tools of the left to defeat the left--you're playing on their terms. It is not time for good men to stand around being a nuisance. It's time for good men to fight.
However, civil disobedience will allow resisters to organize without being blown away by the authorities. The latter will get the subtle message of the large number of potential loaded/locked guns, without having a good excuse to start blowing people away. As the old saying goes: If you're going to attack the king (govt.), you'd better kill him. If you don't have yourselves fully organized, shooting off loaded guns will just give them a good excuse to pick you off before you can.
Yes, that's a good point.
These elderly vets are providing the right example. And if enough others join them, they can still defeat the gungrabbers without violence.
I'm not sure that is possible at this point. The gov is already seizing their weapons.
Armed insurrection is a last resort among civilized peoples.
True, but explain to me: how does one surrender their weapons? I don't understand how an individual just turns over their own weapons to the government....
I think civil disobedience is fine up to the point that they come to take your gun. Then all civil discourse is over, it is now a battlefield, and it is up to you to gain the tactical advantage.
Never, ever, ever, ever allow the government to take your guns. Never.
In the end, the Mohawks won and stood up to the tyrants who run the People's Republic of China Canada.
Calgary, Alberta is chockfull of immigrants who vote but they vote Canadian Alliance, no thanks to racist tripe you're posting. The result? Every MP from Calgary is an Alliance MP including Deepak Obrhai.
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