Ten years ago, my nephew, living in Temagami On. at the time was working in Alberta on the oil fields there.....One week before his return home, he gets a call from the O.P.P. That a neighbour had reported his house broken into and that aside from from his liquor cabinet being emptied, only his gun locker had been broken open with tools that the crooks had found in his workshop....and would he verify (and they had all the information from the registry) that all these guns were missing and that he didn't have them with him at the time since he had been living in Alberta for the past six months.
Over the telephone, he had to guide them to a wall with a so well hidden compartment, that it took them 15 minutes with his instructions, to open it......all his guns were there, intact.
Upon, his return, he finds that he has a summons for a charge of unsafe storage, because the firearms had no trigger locks on them, not by the officers who had answered the break-in call, but by the crown attorney.
He was going to act as his own lawyer but didn't have to, The judge, after the crown attorney was finished with the officers, asked them........If the guns had been in the gun locker, where they normally would have been........where would they be now???? after the officers said they didn't know, he dismissed the case and ordered the guns be returned to my nephew's house.
Some will say that justice was served, but my nephew just considers himself lucky to have got a judge with common sense.....plus he wasted a full day and an hour's drive to NorthBay and another hour back. And what for? Go to any Canadian Tire store, and look at all the trigger locks on the shelves...chances are...all the keys have the same number:roll: