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Original Articles

Transnational organized crime and gun violence. A case for firearm forensic intelligence sharing

Pages 83-95 | Published online: 27 Feb 2012
 

Abstract

A threat to the safety of citizens in any country, the criminal misuse of firearms presents a wider danger to a nation's security, peace, stability and development. Firearms and their related evidence know no borders. It is not uncommon to find the murder weapon from a shooting in one city ending up in another city, country, or continent. No country remains unaffected by firearm violence. This paper describes how transnational organized crime and gun violence are interrelated, and makes the case for the international sharing of firearm forensic intelligence through Interpol's IBIN Program as an integral component of an intelligence-led policing strategy to combat cross-border gun related crime. With such a strategy in place, internationally mobile criminals who use firearms to further their illicit activities can no longer escape detection.

Notes

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Gagliardi, P.L. 2010. Transnational Organized Crime and Gun Violence: a Case for Ballistic Intelligence Sharing. White Paper of Forensic Technology, Largo, USA, 19-20.

Council of the European Union. 2011. General Report on Europol's Activities 2010. Brussels. Retrieved from http://register.consilium.europa.eu/pdf/en/11/st10/st10244.en11.pdf, 9

Gagliardi, P.L. 2010. The 13 Critical Tasks: An Inside-Out Approach to Solving More Gun Crime, 33. Cote St-Luc, Canada: Forensic Technology Inc.

Gagliardi, The 13 Critical Tasks, 33.

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