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Legal Canadian gun owners selling their weapons illegally on the rise: police

Click to play video: 'Danforth shooting suspect identified as 29-year-old Faisal Hussain'
Danforth shooting suspect identified as 29-year-old Faisal Hussain
On Monday, Special Investigations Unit identified 29-year-old Faisal Hussain as the shooter in Sunday's mass shooting in Toronto's Greektown area – Jul 23, 2018

Editor’s note: A commentary by Global News columnist Matt Gurney and a Dec. 2018 report by the Canadian Press reveal inaccuracies in this story, specifically the claim that there have been a “surge” in crimes guns sourced in Canada.  

TORONTO – The number of guns obtained legally in Canada but are then sold to people who use them for criminal purposes has surged dramatically in recent years compared to firearms smuggled from the United States, Toronto police say.

In recent years, they say, investigators have noticed a stark shift in where guns used to commit crimes are coming from.

Before 2012, about 75 per cent of the firearms were trafficked from the United States. By 2017, however, about half originated from domestic sources, putting an end to the idea that most of Canada’s illegal guns come from across the border, Det. Rob Di Danieli of the
guns and gangs unit said.

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Legal Canadian gun owners are selling their weapons illegally, Di Danieli said, noting that police have seen more than 40 such cases in recent years.

READ MORE: Toronto Danforth mass shooter identified as Faisal Hussain

The allure of a quick sell at a high profit margin is one reason legal owners might sell their guns. One man sold 47 guns and made over $100,000 in a five month period, the detective said.

“They go get their licence for the purpose of becoming a firearms trafficker,” Di Danieli said. “A lot of people are so ready to blame the big bad Americans, but we had our own little problem here.”

VIDEO: Toronto launches plan to combat escalating gun violence in city

Click to play video: 'Toronto launches plan to combat escalating gun violence in city'
Toronto launches plan to combat escalating gun violence in city

The comments come as Toronto reels from a Sunday night handgun attack on a busy east-end street that left three people, including the gunman, dead and another 13 injured. The parents of the gunman, 29-year-old Faisal Hussain, said he struggled with psychosis and depression his entire life.

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Overall, understanding the source of guns used criminally has also taken on a new urgency in light of the city’s 220 shootings this year and 27 deaths as of July 9.

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READ MORE: Witnesses described ‘carnage’ after Toronto mass shooting, says gunman was ‘zigzagging the Danforth’

Mayor John Tory said domestic trafficking must be addressed in light of what he called the city’s “gun problem.”

“You’ve heard me ask the question of why anybody would need to buy 10 or 20 guns, which they can lawfully do under the present laws,” Tory said on Monday. “Why does anyone in this city need to have a gun at all?”

Two weeks ago, Tory urged measures to allow better tracking of firearms in a way that is “not unduly intrusive.”

Toronto police Chief Mark Saunders said recently it would be helpful if information could be shared between levels of government about suspicious purchases.

VIDEO: Former Toronto guns and gangs detective discusses recent gun violence

Click to play video: 'Former Toronto guns and gangs detective discusses recent gun violence'
Former Toronto guns and gangs detective discusses recent gun violence

“The government would know that I have two kids, two cars,” Di Danieli said. “But if I bought 10 shotguns, they wouldn’t know that I had 10 shotguns.”

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Earlier this year, the federal government introduced Bill C-71 aimed at tightening controls on handguns. Under the legislation, businesses would have to maintain inventory and transfer records for non-restricted firearms, allowing police to better trace firearms, a spokesman for Public Safety Canada said in a statement.

READ MORE: How the Danforth shooting played out in Toronto

Jooyoung Lee, an associate professor at the University of Toronto who specializes in examining gun violence, said findings from recent years show many guns used to commit crimes in Canada have originated within the country. If civilians are able to buy firearms legally, there is always the possibility they will enter an illegal market, Lee said.

“Any time you have a legal market for civilians to own concealable firearms … there is always a possibility that those kinds of firearms purchased legally can flow into the hands of people who want to use them to commit carnage,” he said.

Although it is still unknown how the man behind Sunday’s mass shooting obtained the gun, Lee added that Bill C-71 would allow for more detailed background checks that would go further back into people’s history.

VIDEO: Map on where the Danforth shooting unfolded

Click to play video: 'Map on where the Danforth shooting unfolded'
Map on where the Danforth shooting unfolded

“A person who has a long history of mental health issues, including psychosis and depression, should not have access to firearms,” he said of Hussain. “I think that’s something that people on the left and people on the right agree upon.”

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Domenic Saverino, owner of Al Flaherty’s Outdoor Store in Toronto, said his shop is instructed to notify police if they feel uncomfortable about a gun purchase and have done so numerous times.

Saverino said the RCMP already has checks and balances in place to track suspicious purchases and implementing more measures won’t help.

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