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Gun buyback program launched by Toronto police to combat firearm violence

Toronto Police Chief Mark Saunders and Mayor John Tory launched the three-week program at Police Headquarters on April 26, 2019. Toronto Police

Toronto police have launched a gun buyback program they hope will reduce the number of unwanted firearms in the city.

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Chief Mark Saunders says he believes the program, which will run until May 17, will help combat violence.

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Mayor John Tory says the initiative is in response to a marked increase in gun violence last year and notes that a buyback program in 2008 brought in 2,000 guns.

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Tory has repeatedly called for a handgun ban in the city, particularly in the wake of a shooting rampage in Toronto’s Greektown neighbourhood that left two people dead last year.

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Saunders said in December that officers had recovered more than 500 handguns in 2018 – 222 more than the previous year – and the number of homicides caused by shootings had gone up by nearly 30 per cent.

The buyback program offers $200 for a long gun and $350 for a handgun. The firearms will be picked up by police and participants will not face a charge for possessing or unsafely storing a firearm.

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