window.dotcom = window.dotcom || { cmd: [] }; window.dotcom.ads = window.dotcom.ads || { resolves: {enabled: [], getAdTag: []}, enabled: () => new Promise(r => window.dotcom.ads.resolves.enabled.push(r)), getAdTag: () => new Promise(r => window.dotcom.ads.resolves.getAdTag.push(r)) }; setTimeout(() => { if(window.dotcom.ads.resolves){ window.dotcom.ads.resolves.enabled.forEach(r => r(false)); window.dotcom.ads.resolves.getAdTag.forEach(r => r("")); window.dotcom.ads.enabled = () => new Promise(r => r(false)); window.dotcom.ads.getAdTag = () => new Promise(r => r("")); console.error("NGAS load timeout"); } }, 5000)

Plymouth shooting inquest: Families call for tougher shotgun laws

Johanna Carr
BBC South West
BBC KeyhamBBC
Tributes to the victims were placed near the scene of the shootings in August 2021

Families of five people killed by a gunman are calling for tougher laws on shotgun licences, an inquest has heard.

Jake Davison, 22, used a legally held shotgun to kill his mother Maxine Davison and four others before killing himself in Plymouth in August 2021.

The inquest into their deaths heard licensing was less stringent for shotguns than for rifles.

Dominic Adamson, representing the families, said there was "no sensible justification" for the difference.

Unknown/The Anchorage/Handout Clockwise from top left: Maxine Davison, Lee and Sophie Martyn, Stephen Washington and Katherine ShepherdUnknown/The Anchorage/Handout
Jake Davison carried out the mass shooting in Plymouth in August 2021

Inquests are taking place into the deaths of Mrs Davison, 51, three-year-old Sophie Martyn, her father, Lee, 43, Stephen Washington, 59, and Kate Shepherd, 66.

They were shot and killed by Davison in the Keyham area of Plymouth where he lived.

Mr Adamson said it was the view of his clients there was "no good reason for the distinction to exist" between shotgun and rifle licensing.

The Home Office's head of firearms policy, Nicholas Hunt, told jurors at the hearing at Exeter Racecourse there were historic reasons for the differences.

Shotguns were primarily seen as a tool used by farmers while firearms like rifles were more for sporting and competitive reasons.

The Home Office was considering bringing the two in line with each other "subject to anything the coroner here might suggest", he said.

The inquest heard applications for a firearms certificate required two references, while shotgun licences only required one referee and the applicant did not need to show good reason for their application in the same way.

Flowers lie next to Biddick Drive sign
Davison's victims were aged from three to 66

The inquest heard while there was a requirement shotguns were safely stored, it was unlikely to be possible for police to put specific conditions on licences restricting where the weapon was stored.

Officers can impose conditions on where rifles and other firearms are stored.

The inquest previously heard how recommendations made in the wake of the Dunblane massacre for licensing staff training were not followed in the Devon and Cornwall force.

Mr Adamson said a quarter of a century later there was "still no accredited training in place".

He asked Mr Hunt: "Do you accept there were failures by successive governments to implement that recommendation":[]}