B.C. says new regulations effective this fall will curb extortion-related violence
VICTORIA — Provincial gun regulations that have been nine years in the making will come into effect in British Columbia this fall, shutting down what ministers calls loopholes in federal laws that have helped allow extortion crimes to proliferate.
The new regulations include a ban on firing from vehicles, which has been a feature of a wave of extortions involving shooters firing from cars at homes and businesses, then posting videos of the attacks online.
Public Safety Minister Nina Krieger said Monday that the new regulations resulting from the Firearm Violence Prevention Act will help police crack down on such offences, and are “really about closing gaps, prevention and accountability.”
Attorney General Niki Sharma, who jointly announced the new rules at the legislature in Victoria, said police fighting gun crimes currently rely primarily on the Criminal Code and the federal Firearms Act — but both had limitations.


