Anyone aged over 18 can possess a crossbow but, following a review, the Home Office has launched a call for evidence – a request for public feedback – over whether people should need a licence to have one.
It represents a significant moment for Ms Sugden, who has been campaigning on the issue since Shane’s death.
“There’s nothing I would love more than to see some kind of guidance brought in around crossbows,” she said.
“It’s scary to think that anybody can just get hold of them over the age of 18 and I feel like it’s the last thing that I can do for Shane, to try and push for them to be brought in line with firearms.”
After the inquest into Shane’s death, the coroner raised his concern about the lack of controls on crossbows in a Prevention of Future Deaths Report to the Home Office.
The Home Office responded that the current laws struck the correct balance.
The prospect of legislation has alarmed those who use crossbows for legitimate sporting reasons. Archery is one of the fastest-growing sports in the UK.
Raynor Pepper, a competitive archer who helps run courses and sales at Phoenix Archery in Burnley, Lancashire, said: “You’ve probably got some garden tools that are far more dangerous.
“Anything in the wrong hands is going to be a weapon and perceived as such. So where does it stop?”
She said a growing number of people sought exercise and social contact through archery.
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