News (Media Awareness Project) - UK: Guns Pose Bigger Risk Than Drugs, Say Police |
Title: | UK: Guns Pose Bigger Risk Than Drugs, Say Police |
Published On: | 2002-07-07 |
Source: | Independent on Sunday (UK) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-23 00:38:22 |
GUNS POSE BIGGER RISK THAN DRUGS, SAY POLICE
The head of the Metropolitan Police's gun crime task force is calling for a
minimum five-year jail sentence for the increasing numbers of young men who
carry guns as a "fashion accessory".
Commander Alan Brown, head of Operation Trident which targets black-on-black
gun crime, said wielding a gun had far more lethal consequences than
drug-dealing but carried a much softer penalty. The current "derisory"
nine-month sentence for gun possession was partly to blame for the rise in
the number of muggings carried out at gunpoint.
"I'm not condoning drug-dealing, but if you look at the potential damage and
harm that can do and the potential damage a young man with a firearm can do
in public place, there is no comparison," Commander Brown said. "Yet the
person supplying drugs is going to receive a considerably longer prison
sentence."
The demand for tougher sentencing comes on the eve of new crime figures
which are expected to reveal a rise in gun-related offences.
This upward trend has been fuelled by a rise in street crime despite efforts
by the Home Office and senior police officers to make it their top priority.
Of increasing concern is the number of muggings in which real or imitation
firearms are used. In the first eight months of last year, armed muggings
rose by 53 per cent in London alone, from 435 between April and November
2000 to 667.
The rise is due in part to criminals using replica firearms such as starting
pistols which they have converted into lethal weapons using power drills
bought from DIY stores.
Last year, the Government pledged to push through new legislation to ban the
sale of replica guns but laws have yet to be passed.
Commander Brown said gun shootings could be cut by 30 per cent if harsher
penalties were introduced which would curb the use of guns by young people
as "fashion accessories". "I don't want to put people in prison -- it's a
question of building in a deterrent," he said.
Without harsher penalties, Commander Brown warned carrying guns would become
acceptable within certain sections of the community and shootings would
increase.
"In some sections of society, if you don't have a firearm you don't have
respect," he said. "Stiffer penalties for carrying guns would reduce
offences where a dispute takes place in a club or someone's foot gets
trodden on in a dancehall. And that results in someone getting shot."
The Home Office said the Government had already shown it was committed to
tackling gun crime by banning handguns.
The head of the Metropolitan Police's gun crime task force is calling for a
minimum five-year jail sentence for the increasing numbers of young men who
carry guns as a "fashion accessory".
Commander Alan Brown, head of Operation Trident which targets black-on-black
gun crime, said wielding a gun had far more lethal consequences than
drug-dealing but carried a much softer penalty. The current "derisory"
nine-month sentence for gun possession was partly to blame for the rise in
the number of muggings carried out at gunpoint.
"I'm not condoning drug-dealing, but if you look at the potential damage and
harm that can do and the potential damage a young man with a firearm can do
in public place, there is no comparison," Commander Brown said. "Yet the
person supplying drugs is going to receive a considerably longer prison
sentence."
The demand for tougher sentencing comes on the eve of new crime figures
which are expected to reveal a rise in gun-related offences.
This upward trend has been fuelled by a rise in street crime despite efforts
by the Home Office and senior police officers to make it their top priority.
Of increasing concern is the number of muggings in which real or imitation
firearms are used. In the first eight months of last year, armed muggings
rose by 53 per cent in London alone, from 435 between April and November
2000 to 667.
The rise is due in part to criminals using replica firearms such as starting
pistols which they have converted into lethal weapons using power drills
bought from DIY stores.
Last year, the Government pledged to push through new legislation to ban the
sale of replica guns but laws have yet to be passed.
Commander Brown said gun shootings could be cut by 30 per cent if harsher
penalties were introduced which would curb the use of guns by young people
as "fashion accessories". "I don't want to put people in prison -- it's a
question of building in a deterrent," he said.
Without harsher penalties, Commander Brown warned carrying guns would become
acceptable within certain sections of the community and shootings would
increase.
"In some sections of society, if you don't have a firearm you don't have
respect," he said. "Stiffer penalties for carrying guns would reduce
offences where a dispute takes place in a club or someone's foot gets
trodden on in a dancehall. And that results in someone getting shot."
The Home Office said the Government had already shown it was committed to
tackling gun crime by banning handguns.
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