'Ghost guns,' handguns growing concern in Saskatoon, police firearms report says - Action News
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Saskatchewan

'Ghost guns,' handguns growing concern in Saskatoon, police firearms report says

The Saskatoon Board of Police Commissioners discussed the force's first firearms report on Thursday, including the increasing problem of handguns and untraceable firearms.

Saskatoon police report increase in firearm incidents since 2017, says 2021-22 firearms report

closup of person holding a gun
Twenty-two of the 54 gunshot incidents reported in 2021 involved handguns, compared to 10 involving rifles and 12 involving shotguns, a Saskatoon Police Service report says. (Robert Short/CBC)

Handguns anduntraceable firearms are a growing concern in Saskatoon, the city'sBoard of Police Commissioners heard Thursday during a discussion of the Saskatoon Police Service'sfirst firearms report.

The report is connected to the development of a Saskatoon Police Service gun crime strategy.

"When you start looking at national trends with respect to firearms and firearms activity, being a major centre, we know that there's going to be firearms coming into our community and leaving our community," said Patrick Nogier, the service's superintendent in charge of the criminal investigation division.

Last year, police in the city recorded 168 incidents involving firearms.

While the number was the same as in 2020, it still reflects a 17 per cent increase compared to the five-year average of 143 occurrences, according to the report.

Saskatoon Police Service said they identified 168 occurrences in 2021 that involved a firearm. This is a 17 per cent increase when compared to the five-year average of 143 occurrences. (Saskatoon Police Service)

In 2021, officers responded to 54 gunshot incidents in Saskatoon, meaning incidents where someone actually pulled the trigger on weapon.

In 70 per cent of these events,there was a person who was shot, or being shot at.

The other 30 per cent include reports of gunshots that were not directed at a specific person or group, as well as shots fired at a home or business, the report says.

In 23 of the 54 incidents, police say they don't know the motivation behind firing the shots.However,28 per cent of the gun crime events weregang motivated or associated, they say.

The report further showed that none of the seven homicides in the city in 2021 came as a result of illegal gun activity.

Handguns pose 'significant threat'

In total, police seized 590 firearms in 2021. Of those, 66 per cent are considered "crime guns" and 34 per cent were firearms turned over to police by the public without any association to a criminal event.

Of the 392 crime guns, 21054 per cent were handguns, the report says.

In 2021, the Saskatoon Police Service seized 590 firearms. The majority of the weapons are classified as crime guns, while 33 per cent are firearms that were turned over to police for destruction, according to the report. (Saskatoon Police Service)

Those weapons are particularly dominant when it comes to crimes involving guns being fired, which Nogier said is concerning.

Twenty-two of the 54 gunshot incidents in 2021 involved handguns, compared to 10 involvingrifles and 12 involving shotguns, the report says.

"Being able to access a handgun and hide a handgun and predominantly use a handgun poses a significant threat in the community," said Nogier.

Gang firearms are often long guns such as sawed-off rifles or shotguns. Firearms seized through drug investigations are more likely to include handguns, according to the police service's firearms report. (Saskatoon Police Service)

"When you start seeing what's being taken and being reported as thefts from residences, we're not seeing a lot of handguns. So where are the handguns coming from?"

There were 39 stolen firearms reported in2021. The vast majority were long guns such as rifles, while only 13 per cent were handguns, according to the report.

That suggests that handguns arebeing transported into Saskatchewan or manufactured locally, said Nogier.

In 2021, 46 crime guns were analyzed as a part of the Saskatoon Police Service gun crime strategy, according to the force's firearms report. (Saskatoon Police Service)

Ghost guns an emerging problem

Another emerging concern across Canadaare "ghost guns," or untraceable guns, due to 3D printing becoming more readily available to the public, the report says.

In January, officers in the cityexecuted a search warrant for 3D-printed firearms and components.

"These are guns that do not show up and you cannot track or trace," said Nogier.

"We know that this is going to be a potential threat for us."

Looking south of the border, as an example, officers in California took roughly 35,000 firearms off the street in 2021, he said30 per centof which were ghost guns.

"Historically what we experience in Canada is roughly 10per cent of what they experience in the States with respects to gun activity," he said.

"In California, next year, they're anticipating that 50 per cent of the guns that they will be dealing with are ghost guns."

Nogier added this raises some alarms in regard towhat might happen in this community.

The findings in the report generally raise concerns for police officers, he said.

"There is more of an awareness from our front-line personnel that when they do pull a vehicle over that's been suspected of being involved in criminal activity, the likelihood of guns has never been higher now than it has been in the last two decades," said Nogier.

But in spite ofsome of the troubling numbers in the report, hetold CBC that it's not intended to create fear in the city.

"We want to make sure that we get in front of it rather than have to react to problems that might arise," he said.