Why? it still meets all the criteria of S38, it doesn't meet either of the exclusions.
I'm stymied as to how I can ask this in a different way without repeating myself, but what is it that makes you believe that falling under one act means that it can't also fall under another?
Section 38 still references ‘imitation’ so I still would assert that an air weapon is a firearm and therefore a firearm that looks like another firearm is still a firearm in its own right.
I don’t claim that coverage in one act exempts from another, only that an air weapon firearm isn’t an imitation.
I do believe that paintball guns can fall within both firearms and the VCRA - that was also the opinion of the Association of Chief Constables when they made a study enquiry with RAP4 UK. They considered the RAP4 realistic range to be RIFs which was an obvious conclusion but also that any of the Black Paintball guns could be considered RIFs. On the feedback advice they were given RAP4UK introduced their own free scheme and a two tone option. This caused ripples across Paintball retailers and slowly was forgotten about until a few years ago and MagFed importing retailers asked the question again via the UKPSF.
With one RIF airsoft gun and one airgun the prosecution of two counts under the VCRA would be wrong - guilty of one, not guilty of the otherScenario: you sell a scally an airsoft gun that looks like an MP5K, and an airgun that looks like an MP5K. They use them for intimidation in a robbery - dual wielding, bruv - and are caught. You are fingered for selling them those two objects.
The police decide to charge you for two counts of supplying a realistic imitation firearm under S36, using the definition in S38. CPS prosecute. You're in the dock. You have no S37 defence. What do you say?
....... is more dangerous.......
The more dangerous element of an airgun isn’t a matter of the VCRA
The violent crime element is the act by the scallies, but the VCRA sections are there for the specifics of selling a RIF