Firearms Act, 1995 Explained

Short Title:Firearms Act
Legislature:Parliament of Canada
Long Title:An Act respecting firearms and other weapons
Citation:Firearms Act (S.C. 1995, c. 39), last amended on 2022-05-18
Enacted By:35th Canadian Parliament
Date Assented:December 12, 1995

The Firearms Act, 1995[1] (French: Loi sur les armes à feu) is the law in Canada that regulates firearms possession, means of transportation, and offenses. It was passed after the École Polytechnique massacre.[2] [3]

Purpose

According to the Purpose section of the Act, its purpose under law is to regulate the licensing of firearms, authorizing the manufacture of firearms, and authorizing the transfer of, including importation, etc. of firearms. The Act does not apply to the Canadian Armed Forces.

More specifically, under the Act, the Government of Canada (the federal government) regulates licenses and authorizations for firearms, including prohibited or restricted firearms; the possession of prohibited or restricted weapons and any prohibited devices or ammunition; and licenses for the sale or transfer of cross-bows. The Act also authorizes the federal government to regulate the manufacturing of prohibited or restricted weapons, firearms, devices and ammunition; the transfer of such items; and the importation of those items and items related to automatic firearms.

See also

Similar international Acts

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Firearms Act . March 14, 2011 . December 5, 2006 . https://web.archive.org/web/20061205013200/http://laws.justice.gc.ca/en/F-11.6/ . dead .
  2. Book: Rathjen . Heidi . Charles . Montpetit . 1999 . December 6: From the Montreal Massacre to Gun Control . Toronto . McClelland & Stewart . 0-7710-6125-0 . registration .
  3. News: Montreal Massacre: 14 women honoured 24 years after shootings. CBC News. December 12, 2016.