Traded for a murder weapon

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Oldgringo
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Re: Traded for a murder weapon

#16

Post by Oldgringo »

Hmmm, it kinda' sounds like our un-registered guns are uh,...er,...registered, or is just me? :headscratch
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jbarn
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Re: Traded for a murder weapon

#17

Post by jbarn »

Oldgringo wrote:Hmmm, it kinda' sounds like our un-registered guns are uh,...er,...registered, or is just me? :headscratch
When you buy from a Pawn Shop they keep the 4473 just like a dealer. When they buy guns they also report the serials to the PD. The PD runs the serial numbers and if the gun comes back stolen then the police can obtain the seller's name from the Pawn Shop. They can also trace forward from there just like they could with an FFL.

So gun comes back stolen. PD requests sellers info from Pawn Shop to trace back the stolen gun. PD also, in an attempt to locate stolen gun, obtains buyers info from Pawn Shop. PD contacts buyer. If buyer has info on who he sold it to he can provide to PD. If not, then the trace ends.

Pawn Shops have to keep data. Private buyers and sellers do not. If they do, a de facto registration is created. ;)
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Re: Traded for a murder weapon

#18

Post by Frankie »

I have a buddy who purchased a .22 rifle from a pawn shop in IL. After the stupid wait time, he went to pick it up and the guy pulled it out of the rack and asked another employee to fetch the case. Guy come back with a ruff looking soft case with red evidence tape all,over the thing. Even has the case numbers and other case info on it.
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Oldgringo
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Re: Traded for a murder weapon

#19

Post by Oldgringo »

jbarn wrote:
Oldgringo wrote:Hmmm, it kinda' sounds like our un-registered guns are uh,...er,...registered, or is just me? :headscratch
When you buy from a Pawn Shop they keep the 4473 just like a dealer. When they buy guns they also report the serials to the PD. The PD runs the serial numbers and if the gun comes back stolen then the police can obtain the seller's name from the Pawn Shop. They can also trace forward from there just like they could with an FFL.

So gun comes back stolen. PD requests sellers info from Pawn Shop to trace back the stolen gun. PD also, in an attempt to locate stolen gun, obtains buyers info from Pawn Shop. PD contacts buyer. If buyer has info on who he sold it to he can provide to PD. If not, then the trace ends.

Pawn Shops have to keep data. Private buyers and sellers do not. If they do, a de facto registration is created. ;)
I know all that, how does anyone know which gun killed whom if the gun is not available at the scene for ballistic/fingerprint tests, etc.? Not that I'm planning on killin' anybody...anytime soon.
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WildBill
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Re: Traded for a murder weapon

#20

Post by WildBill »

Oldgringo wrote:
jbarn wrote:
Oldgringo wrote:Hmmm, it kinda' sounds like our un-registered guns are uh,...er,...registered, or is just me? :headscratch
When you buy from a Pawn Shop they keep the 4473 just like a dealer. When they buy guns they also report the serials to the PD. The PD runs the serial numbers and if the gun comes back stolen then the police can obtain the seller's name from the Pawn Shop. They can also trace forward from there just like they could with an FFL.

So gun comes back stolen. PD requests sellers info from Pawn Shop to trace back the stolen gun. PD also, in an attempt to locate stolen gun, obtains buyers info from Pawn Shop. PD contacts buyer. If buyer has info on who he sold it to he can provide to PD. If not, then the trace ends.

Pawn Shops have to keep data. Private buyers and sellers do not. If they do, a de facto registration is created. ;)
I know all that, how does anyone know which gun killed whom if the gun is not available at the scene for ballistic/fingerprint tests, etc.? Not that I'm planning on killin' anybody...anytime soon.
From my experience they take you into a small room, put you under hot lights, show you the murder weapon, don't give you a cigarette, and question you for hours and hours until you confess to murder. :rules:
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Re: Traded for a murder weapon

#21

Post by Pawpaw »

WildBill wrote:From my experience they take you into a small room, put you under hot lights, show you the murder weapon, don't give you a cigarette, and question you for hours and hours until you confess to murder. :rules:
You left out the part about the rubber hose. :lol:
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wheelgun1958
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Re: Traded for a murder weapon

#22

Post by wheelgun1958 »

G23WAX wrote:(even polished the barrel!)
Unfortunately this may be in the thugs favor.
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WildBill
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Re: Traded for a murder weapon

#23

Post by WildBill »

Pawpaw wrote:
WildBill wrote:From my experience they take you into a small room, put you under hot lights, show you the murder weapon, don't give you a cigarette, and question you for hours and hours until you confess to murder. :rules:
You left out the part about the rubber hose. :lol:
That is called "Plan B". :smash:
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sjfcontrol
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Re: Traded for a murder weapon

#24

Post by sjfcontrol »

WildBill wrote:
Pawpaw wrote:
WildBill wrote:From my experience they take you into a small room, put you under hot lights, show you the murder weapon, don't give you a cigarette, and question you for hours and hours until you confess to murder. :rules:
You left out the part about the rubber hose. :lol:
That is called "Plan B". :smash:
More like plan "RH" :biggrinjester:
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Re: Traded for a murder weapon

#25

Post by MasterOfNone »

If the OP had sold the gun already and could not give any information about the buyer (perhaps a gun show sale), does anyone think the police would have tried to get a warrant to search his house using his "refusal to cooperate" as their probable cause?
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jmra
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Re: Traded for a murder weapon

#26

Post by jmra »

MasterOfNone wrote:If the OP had sold the gun already and could not give any information about the buyer (perhaps a gun show sale), does anyone think the police would have tried to get a warrant to search his house using his "refusal to cooperate" as their probable cause?
Unless the police had cause to suspect that he wasn't being forthcoming I don't see how they could obtain a warrant.
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Jumping Frog
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Re: Traded for a murder weapon

#27

Post by Jumping Frog »

MasterOfNone wrote:If the OP had sold the gun already and could not give any information about the buyer (perhaps a gun show sale), does anyone think the police would have tried to get a warrant to search his house using his "refusal to cooperate" as their probable cause?
Not what I would expect.

When the topic of selling a firearm comes up and why a receipt is not necessary, I've read of a number of people on firearms forums who received a call from police doing a firearms trace. Their response of "sorry, I sold that gun at a gunshow and do not know who I sold it to" was always the end of discussion. The firearms trace dead ends at that point.
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MasterOfNone
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Re: Traded for a murder weapon

#28

Post by MasterOfNone »

Jumping Frog wrote:
MasterOfNone wrote:If the OP had sold the gun already and could not give any information about the buyer (perhaps a gun show sale), does anyone think the police would have tried to get a warrant to search his house using his "refusal to cooperate" as their probable cause?
Not what I would expect.

When the topic of selling a firearm comes up and why a receipt is not necessary, I've read of a number of people on firearms forums who received a call from police doing a firearms trace. Their response of "sorry, I sold that gun at a gunshow and do not know who I sold it to" was always the end of discussion. The firearms trace dead ends at that point.
It's good to see that the incidents of which you've heard ended correctly. I guess I have come to expect a leave-no-stone-unturned mentality if there is any chance of finding evidence.
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Jumping Frog
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Re: Traded for a murder weapon

#29

Post by Jumping Frog »

Of course, if the firearm was recovered at someone's mother-in-law murder scene, the old "sold it at a gunshow" story might receive a touch of skepticism. . . :smilelol5: "rlol" :evil2:
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Re: Traded for a murder weapon

#30

Post by jmra »

Jumping Frog wrote:Of course, if the firearm was recovered at someone's mother-in-law murder scene, the old "sold it at a gunshow" story might receive a touch of skepticism. . . :smilelol5: "rlol" :evil2:
"rlol"
That's when you say you sold it to your father-in-law.
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