London Shotgun licenses issued to children


Between 2008 and 2010, licenses were granted to 281 children aged 11 and under — including one as young as seven. Five licenses were granted to eight-year-olds, 25 to those aged nine, and 92 to ten-year-olds. Another 158 licenses were given to children aged 11.

The figures shows, about 4,771 licenses were granted to children aged 16 and under — an average of four a day.


A commons debate on whether children under ten should be banned from being granted shotgun licensees put things in perspective.

Children may not be given licenses for other firearms, such as rifles, until they are 14, but there is no lower limit for shotguns.

The choice to grant a license rests with a senior police officer, and all under-18s must have an adult over 21 with a firearms license to vouch for them.

Labors MP Thomas Docherty is introducing a Bill to ban the use of shotguns by children under ten, the age of criminal responsibility. He said the current law was so badly drafted that a captain constable could turn down an application on only two grounds.

The first was whether an applicant had past criminal convictions. Docherty pointed out those children this young did not have convictions.

"The second is whether the chief constable feels there is no reason to grant an application," he said.



"The second is whether the chief constable feels there is no reason to grant an application," he said.