From: owner-can-firearms-digest@sfn.saskatoon.sk.ca (Cdn-Firearms Digest) To: cdn-firearms-digest@sfn.saskatoon.sk.ca Subject: Cdn-Firearms Digest V8 #638 Reply-To: cdn-firearms-digest@sfn.saskatoon.sk.ca Sender: owner-can-firearms-digest@sfn.saskatoon.sk.ca Errors-To: owner-can-firearms-digest@sfn.saskatoon.sk.ca Precedence: normal Cdn-Firearms Digest Thursday, November 17 2005 Volume 08 : Number 638 In this issue: CASH FOR GUNS WORKING PROJECT SUPERMAN: uncovered plans to traffic firearms. Four assault rifles stolen from The Proline Shooters charges against officer who shot suspect? Police seize drugs, guns, arrest 65; Column: Hunting accidents easily avoided Column: Parties vie for law-and-order high ground Ontario urged to hire 150 more Crown attorneys; Crime becomes a hot button: ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Thu, 17 Nov 2005 09:01:44 -0600 (CST) From: Breitkreuz@sfn.saskatoon.sk.ca, Garry - Assistant 1 Subject: CASH FOR GUNS WORKING PUBLICATION: The Toronto Sun DATE: 2005.11.17 EDITION: Final SECTION: News PAGE: 57 BYLINE: ROB LAMBERTI, TORONTO SUN WORD COUNT: 182 - ------------------------------------------------------------------------ CASH FOR GUNS WORKING SEVEN FIREARMS, NINE ARRESTS - ------------------------------------------------------------------------ The Toronto Crime Stoppers cash for guns campaign has received almost 100 tips about possible illegal weapons on the streets, said its co-ordinator, Det. Larry Straver. It will take time for the Toronto Police guns and gangs unit to work its way down the list, he said. "The majority of tips are still being investigated," Straver said, adding the seizures to date come from going through on a "very small number of tips. "That's the kind of results we're getting back and it's a matter of time," he said. "We're going to have a lot better results down the road." So far, the program has led to the seizure of seven firearms and two pellet guns. Nine people have been charged. ARMOUR-PIERCING Among the lethal weapons recovered was a .44-calibre Smith & Wesson revolver loaded with armour-piercing bullets. Four men who are suspected associates of the Doomstown Crips were arrested and small quantities of drugs were also seized. Another tip led the guns and gangs unit to an unloaded .40-calibre Glock handgun smuggled in from the U.S. and hidden in a Scarborough sewer, Straver said. The campaign was launched in October and it has been extended until the end of November. It pays up to $500 for information about illegal handguns and the suspects possessing them. "This is an unbelievable success," Straver said. "We are getting information on the guns that are used to commit crimes." He said Crime Stoppers is getting an average of two tips a day. ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 17 Nov 2005 09:02:19 -0600 (CST) From: Breitkreuz@sfn.saskatoon.sk.ca, Garry - Assistant 1 Subject: PROJECT SUPERMAN: uncovered plans to traffic firearms. PUBLICATION: The Toronto Sun DATE: 2005.11.17 EDITION: Final SECTION: News PAGE: 57 WORD COUNT: 94 - ------------------------------------------------------------------------ DRUG ARRESTS FOR SUPERMAN - ------------------------------------------------------------------------ A year-long drug probe netted more than $1 million in drugs, including high-grade cocaine, and seven people were nabbed in what Peel Regional Police are calling Project Superman. The five men and two women were arrested in raids between Remembrance Day and Monday. Const. Kathy Weylie said the project was launched after police noticed an increase in the supply of cocaine with a purity higher than normal. Cassandra Davis, 30, Delroy Lee, also known as David Gayle, 44, Mellord Lee, 40, all of Mississauga, and Shaunet Burke, 24, Tavel Nelson, 27, Dwight John, 27 and Marlon Campbell, 28, all of Toronto, face a number of charges. Weylie said detectives also uncovered plans by the group to traffic firearms. ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 17 Nov 2005 09:02:22 -0600 (CST) From: Breitkreuz@sfn.saskatoon.sk.ca, Garry - Assistant 1 Subject: Four assault rifles stolen from The Proline Shooters PUBLICATION: Calgary Herald DATE: 2005.11.17 EDITION: Final SECTION: Neighbours PAGE: N6 SOURCE: Neighbours ILLUSTRATION: Map: (See hardcopy for map) WORD COUNT: 486 - ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Crime & Communities: Thefts, break-ins and robberies in Calgary's neighbourhoods - ------------------------------------------------------------------------ District Reports District 1 Culprits made off with four assault rifles after breaking into The Proline Shooters in the 1400 block of 9th Avenue S.E. on Nov. 3 The semi-automatic weapons -- two AR-15 assault rifles and two HK-93 assault rifles -- are worth about $6,000. No ammunition was taken. Anyone with information is asked to call Det. Brian Kijowski or Const. Jeremy Wittman at 268-8601. ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 17 Nov 2005 09:02:33 -0600 (CST) From: Breitkreuz@sfn.saskatoon.sk.ca, Garry - Assistant 1 Subject: charges against officer who shot suspect? (Prince George Citizen) DATE: 2005.11.16 CATEGORY: Western regional general news BYLINE: FRANK PEEBLES PUBLICATION: cpw WORD COUNT: 238 - ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Crown considers evidence, charges against officer who shot suspect - ------------------------------------------------------------------------ PRINCE GEORGE, B.C. (CP) _ The death of Kevin Edmond St. Arnaud from a bullet fired by a Vanderhoof police officer is now in the hands of provincial Crown counsel to assess whether charges are warranted against the Mountie. Stan Lowe of the B.C. Criminal Justice Branch told The Citizen on Wednesday that a charge package had been presented by RCMP internal investigators. "It was handed in on Sept. 12, so it remains within our regional office in Prince George for a charge assessment," said Lowe. "It will likely go to a second level of review at Criminal Justice Branch headquarters before a determination is ultimately made." The fact a charge package was presented to Crown allows prosecutors to scrutinize the evidence and take steps independent of the internal investigation to pursue or close the file. "It really is hard to say how long it might take before the next level of review is done, if necessary," Lowe said. St. Arnaud, a 29-year-old Vanderhoof resident, was shot Dec. 18, 2004, after an attempted break-in at a Vanderhoof drug store. Police located a suspect and gave chase in a vehicle, then on foot. Police say St. Arnaud turned and advanced on the officer "in a threatening manner," the officer directed him to cease his threatening behaviour and when that instruction was disregarded, the Mountie fired three shots, killing St. Arnaud. RCMP explained at the time that standard training is for officers to always aim at the centre of mass _ the chest _ when forced to shoot at a suspect. The only exception, it was said, is specialized firearms training for Emergency Response Team snipers. ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 17 Nov 2005 09:02:49 -0600 (CST) From: Breitkreuz@sfn.saskatoon.sk.ca, Garry - Assistant 1 Subject: Police seize drugs, guns, arrest 65; PUBLICATION: The Toronto Star DATE: 2005.11.17 EDITION: MET SECTION: News PAGE: B5 BYLINE: Stan Josey SOURCE: Toronto Star ILLUSTRATION: Vince Talotta toronto Star Deputy chief Chuck Mercier ofDurham Regional police yesterday shows $250,000 worth of drugs, guns and cash collected over the past five months during the undercover operation Project "Burn." WORD COUNT: 464 - ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Police seize drugs, guns, arrest 65; Operations focus on east and west ends of GTA 20 street gangs found by police in Clarington - ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Major police undercover operations at the western and eastern ends of the GTA have taken more than $1 million in drugs and several guns off the street and led to 65 people being arrested for a wide range of offences. Peel Regional Police yesterday said they had recovered more than $1 million worth of drugs during project "Superman" while Durham Regional police displayed $250,000 worth of drugs, guns and cash collected during Project "Burn" over the past five months. The arrests included what Peel police term a "high-level drug dealer" in their area, and the son of a prominent Hells Angels biker in Durham. "These efforts by our police go a long way towards making our streets safer for everyone," said Doug Moffatt, chair of the Durham Police Services Board. The Durham investigation was based in the largely rural "apple country" area of Clarington on the GTA's extreme eastern border. Durham deputy chief Chuck Mercier said more than 20 street gangs, some with biker connections, had moved into the sleepy community of Clarington, thinking that they were beyond the gaze of police, operating in the urban areas of Durham. "We have shown them that they can't hide wherever they go," Mercier told a news conference at Durham police headquarters. The five-month Durham investigation resulted in 58 arrests of suspects ranging from 14 to 40 years of age, charged with offences including drug trafficking, assault, sexual assault, possession of restricted weapons and possession of property obtained by crime. Yesterday the police service laid out the evidence collected during the investigation on the conference table in a boardroom at Durham Regional headquarters. They included four pounds of cocaine worth $200,000, 253 ecstasy pills, 119 grams of marijuana, magic mushrooms, $20,000 in Canadian money and $767 in American money. The artillery included three handguns and a sawed-off rifle, complete with ammunition clips and many rounds to fit them. Clarington Mayor John Mutton praised police for acting quickly to "remove a criminal element that has moved into our community over the last year or so." He said his municipality, known for its apple orchards and farmers' markets, had become a haven for drug dealers from Oshawa, Toronto, Peterborough and other points east of the GTA such as Port Hope and Cobourg. "With the excellent co-operation of the police, we gave them a good lesson that drugs are not a crop we want harvested or sold in our municipality," said Mutton. Mercier said more than 20 loosely structured street-level gangs were doing business in Clarington through hotels and other entertainment venues. One of those arrested in Durham was Harley Davidson Guindon, 20, the son of Oshawa Hells Angel Bernie Guindon. The younger Guindon is charged with sexual assault with a weapon, forcible confinement, extortion using a firearm, assault with a weapon, assault causing bodily harm and aggravated assault. In Peel Region, police say seven suspects arrested on drug and weapons trafficking offences included Delroy Lee, also known as David Gayle, 44, who they allege is one of the main suppliers of cocaine to the GTA. ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 17 Nov 2005 09:03:13 -0600 (CST) From: Breitkreuz@sfn.saskatoon.sk.ca, Garry - Assistant 1 Subject: Column: Hunting accidents easily avoided PUBLICATION: Calgary Herald DATE: 2005.11.17 EDITION: Final SECTION: Sports PAGE: F4 COLUMN: Bob Scammell BYLINE: Bob Scammell SOURCE: For The Calgary Herald WORD COUNT: 668 - ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Hunting accidents easily avoided - ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Fortunately, we have few hunting accidents in Alberta, but every one makes hunters' blood run cold, probably none more than the recent shooting in the Waiparous area, 23 kilometres north of Highway 1A and west of the Forestry Trunk Road. The stark story is that a rifle hunter shot a bow hunter in the side of the abdomen. Mercifully, at last report, the victim was in critical, but stable condition. Many years of analysing hunting accidents convinces me that understanding and learning come from the details. In this case it helps to know that, at the time this incident took place, the area was being heavily hunted both by rifle and archery hunters. The most chilling reported details are that the bow hunter, allegedly in full camouflage, was setting up a full-size deer decoy when he was shot. The distraught shooter who came to help apparently did not have binoculars and was using a rifle that had no scope. These are proven details for a disaster in the field but, as journalists say, have not yet been proven in court. Among my cherished collection of case reports of hunting accident lawsuits are two where hunters were mistaken and shot for moose, one while driving a huge, clanking, tracked Bombardier, the other while a passenger in a motor boat. The Waiparous accident is less outrageous, more subtle, with both sides initially admitting some responsibility. Brian Reardigan, hunting companion of the victim, is reported to have said they did something very stupid, presumably thinking of the bow hunters' safety rule that you never use a decoy in a rifle zone. Reardigan reports that "Stan," the admitted shooter, kept repeating "I'm so stupid, I'm so stupid." That judgment could be for many reasons, which would all distill down to one of the general rules of firearms safety as expressed in the Alberta Hunter Education manual: "Be sure of your target -- and beyond. Identify your target, then look past it to be sure it is safe to shoot." But the manual does not suggest how hunters might avoid becoming the target, nor does it deal with the situation where a camouflaged hunter stands right beside, or very close to, a life-size replica of the very target another hunter expects, at least hopes, to see. Good binoculars should be mandatory for all hunters. There is such an abundance of very good, inexpensive, binoculars on the market that if you can't afford them, you can't afford to hunt. Few hunters today still use open sights on their rifle as reports suggest Stan was, most choosing to spend their money on a scope but, as the AHE manual warns: "Never use a scope sight as a substitute for binoculars." Far too many hunters ignore that rule and thus violate the great unwritten rule of all gun safety: Never point a firearm at something you do not intend to kill. One season several years ago, I was "scoped" on three different occasions by hunters while I was wearing full blaze orange. The last time, with son John, the kid draped head to foot in one of my blaze orange shrouds, we were scoped twice by a hunter down the draw. We ducked very low behind the aboriginal rock blind we were using and I yelled down: "Do that again and you're dead!" The miscreant scuttled away up a side draw. Just kidding, of course, I assured John, but I did make some serious decisions about how to avoid becoming a target ever again. I now try to hunt my big game where I seldom see another hunter. Despite that, I now hunt big game garbed, head to foot, in full camouflage clothing, on the theory that they won't scope what they can't see. To my knowledge I have never been scoped since I made the change. But I always wear blaze orange when hunting upland birds and was pleased recently when Ed Houck of the Canadian Pheasant Company told me blaze orange is a mandatory safety requirement on their hunts. scam@telusplanet.net ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 17 Nov 2005 09:03:29 -0600 (CST) From: Breitkreuz@sfn.saskatoon.sk.ca, Garry - Assistant 1 Subject: Column: Parties vie for law-and-order high ground PUBLICATION: GLOBE AND MAIL DATE: 2005.11.17 PAGE: A10 BYLINE: MURRAY CAMPBELL SECTION: Column EDITION: Metro WORD COUNT: 747 - ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Parties vie for law-and-order high ground - ------------------------------------------------------------------------ It may not be surprising, given the recent rash of gunplay in Toronto, but it still comes as something of a shock that one-third of Ontario residents feel they or a family member will be physically attacked. This sad finding is one of a number in a poll this week by the Police Association of Ontario that suggest people in the province are feeling very threatened these days. And when, for example, four out of every five people surveyed say that gun violence has worsened in the past five years, the pressure on governments to do something becomes intense. It may be, as Progressive Conservative Leader John Tory said this week, that "in a perfect world, some issues would remain outside politics," but the polished corridors of Queen's Park do not represent this ideal. That's why the opposition parties have been all over the government of Dalton McGuinty for its alleged shortcomings in dealing with crime. Mr. Tory argues that Ontario has "fallen victim to excessive gang-related crime" and that there has been no co-ordinated strategy from the government for dealing with the young and disaffected. He charges that Mr. McGuinty and Attorney-General Michael Bryant were "missing in action" this summer when gun homicides became almost routine in Toronto. The New Democrats are similarly critical, saying the government has failed to show any urgency over the level of violence. The charges threaten to put the Liberals back into the hole out of which they have only recently climbed. In opposition, the party used to be hopelessly uncertain about how to treat crime and justice issues, and it was easily outflanked by hard-line Conservatives under Mike Harris. In the 1999 election, the Tories characterized Mr. McGuinty as being "soft on crime," and the usually neutral Ontario Provincial Police Association endorsed Mr. Harris. But then Mr. Bryant and Mr. McGuinty decided it was time to stop ceding justice issues to the Tories. The platform the Liberals ran on in 2003 would have made any Tory quite happy. In government, the Liberals have built on that by hiring more Crown attorneys and judges, establishing new units to deal with gangs, seeking stiffer sentences for gun crimes, and taking on bikers. (Not to mention pit bulls.) The government's momentum -- or at least the perception of it -- has been stalled by Toronto's horrid summer, however. Senior officials may not have been "missing in action," but the government didn't initially seem to share in the rising alarm about daylight gunfights in the city. The Premier, in particular, was off key in August when he said "the overwhelming majority of residents in the community are peace-loving, hospitable, warm, engaging people." Well, yes, but so what? When Mr. McGuinty uttered those words, 31 people had been shot to death in the previous eight months. Community Safety Minister Monte Kwinter was closer to reality when he noted last month that rampant gunplay had left Toronto "under a blanket of fear." Mr. Tory, by contrast, has leaped on to this issue. He has toured -- often without press -- a number of areas hit by violence, and has issued nearly weekly news releases to call for more police, tougher jail sentences and stricter bail conditions. This week, he was unsuccessful in getting the legislature to pass a motion that would "spur this government out of its slumber." He rejects the suggestion that he is simply trying to regain the law-and-order high ground for his party, saying he is simply reiterating long-held beliefs. He notes that he was excoriated during his 2003 Toronto mayoral bid for advocating the hiring of 400 more police. The Attorney-General rejects the criticism that he is standing still, pointing to government initiatives to set up teams of prosecutors and police to deal with gangs, to hire a thousand new officers and to lobby the federal government for tougher mandatory sentences in gun crimes. Mr. Bryant says he is confident this effort will produce results that the public will recognize. Until then, however, he will face criticism any time someone is shot to death. He will also have to deal with the inevitable cries that the allocation later this month of a thousand new police falls short of what police departments asked for. That's the political reality. It's not a perfect world. mcampbell@globeandmail.ca ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 17 Nov 2005 09:03:43 -0600 (CST) From: Breitkreuz@sfn.saskatoon.sk.ca, Garry - Assistant 1 Subject: Ontario urged to hire 150 more Crown attorneys; PUBLICATION: The Toronto Star DATE: 2005.11.17 EDITION: ONT SECTION: News PAGE: A20 BYLINE: Peter Small SOURCE: Toronto Star WORD COUNT: 326 - ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Ontario urged to hire 150 more Crown attorneys; Action needed to cut court backlogs, prosecutor group says Problem is much wider than Toronto, spokesman contends - ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Ontario's Crown attorneys are urgently demanding the province increase their numbers by 150 to clear court backlogs and delays they say are endangering the public. James Chaffe, president of the Ontario Crown Attorneys' Association, said there are growing backlogs not only in Toronto but Peel, Whitby, Ottawa and other centres. It is only the second time in its 60-year history the association, representing 817 front-line criminal prosecutors, has made such an urgent public appeal on safety issues, he said. "It's reached such a difficult point with prosecutors in major urban centres that we couldn't be quiet any longer," Chaffe added. The call comes in the wake of an announcement by federal Justice Minister Irwin Cotler last week that Ottawa plans to help the province fund certain prosecutorial programs to respond to urban violence in Toronto and other cities. It also follows an announcement earlier this month by Ontario Attorney General Michael Bryant that 32 more Crown attorneys would be hired to address gang prosecutions in Toronto. But Chaffe said the problem is much wider than Toronto and both announcements barely scratch the surface. In many Ontario cities, Crown attorneys are so overworked they have little or no time to prepare cases against those charged with serious offences, Chaffe said. "Our people are breaking their backs to carry this load and they've been doing it for years and we're reaching the point of physical impossibility," he said. It's becoming a public safety issue, he added. Domestic violence cases are not meeting the critical goal of bringing alleged abusers to trial within three months, he said. An additional risk is "culling" of property offences through diversion and plea bargaining to ease the backlog, the association said. The backlog is affecting major cases, the Crowns said. The association welcomed the province's announcement that it will hire 1,000 more police officers but said without hiring more judges, assistant Crowns and court support staff, it will strain an already overburdened court system. A spokesperson for Cotler said the Ontario attorney general should address the issue of additional hiring. Brendan Crawley, a spokesperson for Bryant's ministry, said it hasn't seen any empirical data to support the need for hiring 150 new Crowns, and so cannot comment on that request. "More than anyone we want to ensure that the criminal justice system operates effectively and efficiently," Crawley said. ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 17 Nov 2005 09:04:07 -0600 (CST) From: Breitkreuz@sfn.saskatoon.sk.ca, Garry - Assistant 1 Subject: Crime becomes a hot button: PUBLICATION: Vancouver Sun DATE: 2005.11.17 EDITION: Final SECTION: News PAGE: A6 BYLINE: Maurice bridge SOURCE: Vancouver Sun ILLUSTRATION: Photo: (The Burnaby Citizen's Association has a $29-millionrejuvenation plan for the lake); Photo: A Burnaby RCMP officer at work.; Photo: An aerial view of North Burnaby, looking south from Burrard inlet.; Photo: Ward Perrin, Vancouver Sun / Burnaby resident Sunliung Jong recalls how two men broke into his home and beat him in September. NOTE: Municipal Elections - BURNABY: An overview of the City andits top issues WORD COUNT: 667 - ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Crime becomes a hot button: Team Burnaby says mayor's soft on crime -- mayor says crime down 17% - ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Team Burnaby went back on the offensive against incumbent Mayor Derek Corrigan over crime and safety Wednesday. Corrigan called it "a pure, American-style attack campaign" and the worst he has seen in Burnaby in 25 years. Team Burnaby mayoral candidate Andrew Stewart and council hopeful Gary Eyre held a morning news conference to highlight the case of east Burnaby resident Sunliung Jong, who was beaten with a crowbar during a home invasion in early September. Jong, 52, said two young men broke into his home shortly after midnight and attacked him. His arm was broken, his hand was damaged and required surgery, and it took five stitches to close a wound to his scalp. He has been off work for more than two months, and said he still does not have normal movement in his right arm and hand. His blind, elderly uncle, who lives with him, was frightened but unharmed. After attacking Jong, the men searched the house briefly, threatened him and left. They have not been arrested, and Jong doesn't know why they broke into the home his family has owned for 16 years. "I have no idea," he said, "They didn't take anything." Stewart speculated the attack might have been a "grow-rip" gone wrong -- a home invasion based on the mistaken assumption the house contained a marijuana-growing operation. "This is an especially frightening trend of violence," he said in a written statement issued at the news conference. "The lack of previous publicity given to this case can only make you wonder how many similar crimes aren't publicized." Team Burnaby's street signs say "Crime is the issue," and Stewart and Corrigan have been battling over crime statistics throughout the campaign. Stewart says Burnaby's crime rate is worse than that of Surrey, and if elected, he would hire an additional 36 police. He said he was inspired to run for office by break-ins at the Burnaby autobody-repair company he manages. "As I began to investigate more and more what had been happening at city hall, I saw a trend of complacency and felt it was time to act," he said. By early afternoon, Corrigan had called a news conference to refute Team Burnaby's charges. "Nothing could be more ridiculous than their claim that I'm not hard on crime," he said in a telephone interview. "I've done more than probably any mayor in the history of Burnaby to deal with the crime issue. "Crime is down 17 per cent in our city, according to the RCMP, as a result of our targeted policing and enforcement. Armed robberies are down 47 per cent, commercial break-and-enters are down 45 per cent." Responding to Stewart's complaint that breaks-ins at his business had not resulted in an immediate police presence, Corrigan said police have to judge how best to utilize their resources. "Obviously, going out and having a police officer attend at a theft that occurred some time before isn't the most useful way for them to spend their time." As for Jong, when asked if he would support Team Burnaby at the polls on Saturday, he laughed and said, "I don't know. "I have no idea." mbridge@png.canwest.com - - - - 1. CRIME: The opposition TEAM Burnaby says crime has been increasing at a faster rate than in neighbouring municipalities and blames the Burnaby Citizens Association majority on council for not hiring enough police officers. Not so, says BCA Mayor Derek Corrigan, who cited statistics showing that crime in Burnaby has declined over the past year. TEAM Burnaby's mayoral challenger Andrew Stewart wants to hire 36 additional police officers. BCA Mayor Derek Corrigan says Burnaby has hired 24 new officers during his term. 2. SOCIAL SERVICES: TEAM Burnaby mayoral candidate Andrew Stewart argues that the city has enough money to fund a homeless shelter and double the funds for social service providers. He says that providing more police, a homeless shelter and doubling social spending would amount to less than one per cent of Burnaby's reserve of $430 million. Mayor Corrigan says that TEAM Burnaby's proposals would drain the reserve, which is needed to finance future infrastructure and facility needs. 3. BURNABY LAKE: The Burnaby Citizen's Association has a $29-million rejuvenation plan for the lake. Victoria promised $10 million in funding earlier this year and the BCA is waiting for Ottawa to contribute its share for the clean-up. The BCA also wants to establish a world-class rowing facility on the lake. Team Burnaby wants to dredge Burnaby Lake for wildlife and recreation, but not for international rowing. ------------------------------ End of Cdn-Firearms Digest V8 #638 ********************************** Submissions: mailto:cdn-firearms-digest@sfn.saskatoon.sk.ca Mailing List Commands: mailto:majordomo@sfn.saskatoon.sk.ca Moderator's e-mail address: mailto:akimoya@cogeco.ca List owner: mailto:owner-cdn-firearms@sfn.saskatoon.sk.ca FAQ list: http://www.magma.ca/~asd/cfd-faq1.html and http://teapot.usask.ca/cdn-firearms/Faq/cfd-faq1.html Web Site: http://teapot.usask.ca/cdn-firearms/homepage.html FTP Site: ftp://teapot.usask.ca/pub/cdn-firearms/ CFDigest Archives: http://www.sfn.saskatoon.sk.ca/~ab133/ or put the next command in an e-mail message and mailto:majordomo@sfn.saskatoon.sk.ca get cdn-firearms-digest v04.n192 end (192 is the digest issue number and 04 is the volume) To unsubscribe from _all_ the lists, put the next five lines in a message and mailto:majordomo@sfn.saskatoon.sk.ca unsubscribe cdn-firearms-digest unsubscribe cdn-firearms-alert unsubscribe cdn-firearms-chat unsubscribe cdn-firearms end (To subscribe, use "subscribe" instead of "unsubscribe".) If you find this service valuable, please consider making a tax-deductible donation to the freenet we use: Saskatoon Free-Net Assoc., P.O. Box 1342, Saskatoon SK S7K 3N9 Phone: (306) 382-7070 Home page: http://www.sfn.saskatoon.sk.ca/ These e-mail digests are free to everyone, and are made possible by the efforts of countless volunteers. Permission is granted to copy and distribute this digest as long as it not altered in any way.