The aim is to speed up the processing and examination of firearms linked to crimes, and the lab will serve police agencies across the province.
Insp. Elton Hall, with the Winnipeg police, says the change means more work will be done within a matter of hours, instead of shipping firearms to a national lab—a process he says can take up to a year.
The announcement is the latest in a string of anti-crime promises made by the Progressive Conservative government in the lead-up to the provincial election scheduled for Oct. 3.
“There are (currently) delays in producing and processing ballistic leads and forensic examination of ballistic evidence, hindering timely investigations,” Justice Minister Kelvin Goertzen said Thursday.





