thanx for your thoughts guys I kinda figured that it might come down to cops and court, not willing to find out what the out come might be
Printable View
thanx for your thoughts guys I kinda figured that it might come down to cops and court, not willing to find out what the out come might be
Where you live,you'll have no trouble with a shotgun or rifle on an ad hoc range as long as you have permission if on private property. On crown land,as long as you're right off the beaten track and being safe,again,likely without a problem. When you put restricted or prohibited firearms into the mix,all bets are off. This lawyer can say all he wants. What matters is what the Judge says,after the evidence is heard. Is that a chance you really want to take? I don't. This thread is over five years old.Since then,quite a few things have changed and not for the better. Oh,BTW,welcome to the forum.
And thanx trimmer21 for the welcome
This is not something I would test out, even if someone broke into the house I would go for the non-restricted first, there was a fight a number of years back of a guy who had people trying to burn his house down with him in it, he grabbed his restricted as well as his non-restricted, the way it ended up was that if he has only grabbed his non-restricted the prosecution would not have a leg to stand on but they decided to charge the guy for protecting himself with a handgun.
I think it is stupid, why can you not have a legal range on your own property, you used to be able to shoot a handgun on your own property but you also used to be able to use one for hunting.
I would never take the advise of someone who could make a lot of money off being wrong.
It was the Crown having questions about the storage of the firearms AND the ammunition. It was all about the time it took to grab AND load them.
"Mr. Thomson was charged with four crimes: careless use of a firearm, pointing a firearm and two charges of careless storage of a firearm, one for each of the pistols he had removed from his gun safe (the second, a 9mm pistol, was never fired during the incident). The first two charges were dropped — it’s hard to imagine a more cut-and-dry case of lawful self defence than firing on men trying to burn down your home while you’re inside it. But the Crown insisted on pursuing the charges of careless storage.
On Friday, an Ontario judge acquitted Mr. Thomson of both those charges."
http://news.nationalpost.com/full-co...elf-with-a-gun
https://firearmrights.ca/en/ join.. get the legal defense insurance ($80 a year) and if you get caught your covered.
Sent from my SM-G920W8 using Tapatalk