No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeTopicsCrimeLawmakers Seek Solutions As Heavy Firearms Flood Costa Rica

Lawmakers Seek Solutions As Heavy Firearms Flood Costa Rica

Costa Rican legislators are urgently working to address the alarming proliferation of heavy firearms now circulating through criminal elements across the country. Members of the influential Security and Drug Trafficking Commission characterize current regulations around arms possession and use as dangerously weak.

Legislators Gloria Navas and Gilberth Jiménez co-sponsored comprehensive reform bill 23.095 intended to tighten controls and sentencing around prohibited firearms. The initiative follows research indicating over 50% of weapons in the nation have illegally entered circulation without oversight or documentation.

“After a thorough regulatory review, we concluded Costa Rica’s framework around firearms, components and ammunition lacks adequate rigor,” the deputies indicated in the legislation. “Preventing and reducing firearms violence and its deadly impacts hinges on reining in this unlawful market.”

Figures suggest nearly 493,000 weapons now populate the Central American country, over half without purchase or import paperwork. The proposed overhaul specifically takes aim at arms frequently utilized by organized crime and trafficking groups terrorizing communities.

The reform package would stiffen sanctions across the board while creating new penalties for possession of illegal weapons. Owning unlicensed guns allowed under existing law could carry one to three year prison terms if passed. Intensified restrictions for prohibited hardware deemed “weapons of war” are also under consideration.

The bid follows an unsuccessful executive effort in April hoping to eclipse the current statute passed in 1994. Though the previous attempt fizzled, backers believe escalating public security threats will galvanize lawmakers around more sweeping change.

Experts cite shifting migration dynamics flooding Central America with firearms once confined to Colombia and Mexico. But contraband smuggling, corruption and home burglaries also contribute to street proliferation.

With homicides spiking this year, the initiative channels urgent calls from business leaders, tourism officials and everyday Ticos to get tough on crime threatening Costa Rica’s stability and reputation. Backers plan to push hard for speedy consideration while spotlighting the human impacts from brazen shootouts and executions.

Trending Now

Motorcycles Account for the Majority of Road Deaths in Costa Rica

Motorcycles continue to take the heaviest toll on Costa Rica's roads. In January and February this year, 63 people died while riding motorcycles. Those...

Cities in Honduras and Guatemala ban Therian Meetups

At least eight cities in Honduras and Guatemala have announced over the past week that they are banning gatherings of so called “therians,” a...

El Salvador Hands Down Sentences of Up to 300 Years

A court in El Salvador sentenced 39 members of a criminal gang to prison terms of up to 300 years for murder and multiple...

Inside Venezuela’s Bull Tailing Culture in the Llanos

When the bull bolts out into the ring, a mad scramble begins as the riders vie to grab its tail and knock it to...

Chaves Says He Would Run for President Again If Costa Rica Needs Him

President Rodrigo Chaves said he has not ruled out running for the presidency again once his current term ends. In a recent interview with...

What’s in a name? Naming nuance in Costa Rica

We tend to assume the way names function in our home country is simply “normal.” Or at least I definitely did. As it turns...
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Travel

Latest News from Costa Rica