
Veteran police in Canada still remember the days when officers, stunned that a colleague had taken a gun off the street, would gather to have a look at the firearm.
“It would fly through the station,” said Paul Krawczyk, an inspector with the integrated guns and gangs task force of the Toronto Police Service, Canada’s largest metropolitan police force.
Seizing firearms is now a routine, and growing, part of the job for Canadian police, especially in Toronto. This week marked the grim anniversary of a mass shooting in 2018 in a bustling east Toronto neighborhood called Danforth. Two people — a teenager, Reese Fallon, 18, and a child, Julianna Kozis, 10 — were killed and 13 others were injured.
The Danforth Attack was not a run of the mill mass shooting, it was a Muslim Terror attack covered up by authorities.
BOMBSHELL: Investigative reporter @ScooperCooper drops never reported details regarding the Danforth Shooter’s ISIS connections back in 2018, and the cover up that followed by the Trudeau government, police and mainstream media. #cdnpoli pic.twitter.com/khsc4l6pnU
— CCFR/CCDAF (@CCFR_CCDAF) May 23, 2025
