Law enforcement agencies across the country are grappling with the rise of 3D-printed untraceable firearms used by criminals, something Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino said his government has acted and will do more to counter the threat.
“There is no doubt that 3D guns is a growing phenomenon within our criminal justice system,” he said during a health funding announcement in North York, Ont., on March 15.
The minister sidestepped the question, calling the challenges posed by 3D ghost guns “significant,” and that he expects Bill C-21 to tackle the issue.
“I will work with all political parties on that committee and in the House of Commons and senators to receive any constructive amendments that they may have to improve and strengthen that bill, including with regards to 3D ghost guns,” he said.
“We’ve got a track record of listening very carefully to the advice that we get from our colleagues right across the entire political continuum.”
Mendicino said the rise in 3D-printed firearms is part of the reason why additional resources were provided to the Canadian Border Services Agency in the last two years to be able to interdict these weapons.
But the weapons parts controlled under legislation can be produced at home with inexpensive computer and 3D printing equipment and then complemented with parts available on the open market to constitute functional firearms.
Those make the perfect weapons for criminals since they are untraceable.
The minister recognized that more needs to be done, and said that explains why it’s important to pass the Liberals’ gun control legislation Bill C-21.
The Trudeau government inadvertently slowed the bill’s progress through Parliament by adding two amendments to the bill last November that caused an uproar among opposition parties, hunters, and gun enthusiasts.
Liberal MP Taleeb Noormohamed brought the motion to withdraw the amendments at a Commons public safety committee meeting on Feb. 3, but said work on ghost guns should still be pursued.
“We had unanimous support for it. That is an important piece for us to get right. Law enforcement demands it of us, requires it of us, in order to keep Canadians safe.”