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Martin Wirth (courtesy AP)

“Investigators say a man who fatally shot a Colorado sheriff’s deputy and wounded two others trying to serve an eviction notice used a rifle he legally purchased four years ago,” the AP reports. “The Colorado Bureau of Investigation said Friday that Martin Wirth [above] bought the .45-caliber rifle from a private seller in February 2012. Authorities say the 58-year-old killed Cpl. Nate Carrigan and injured two other officers Wednesday at his foreclosed home near Bailey, about 45 miles west of Denver.” I’m thinking Hi-Point. I’m also thinking . . .

no matter where a “crime gun” came from, gun control advocates can’t lose. If the gun was purchased legally, they say “See? Anyone can become a killer! We need to tighten background checks!” If the gun was purchased illegally, they say “See? The background check system isn’t good enough! We need to tighten background checks!”

In case you’d forgotten, “tightening background checks” is code for prohibition. Anyway, if you really press a gun control advocate on background check failure top prevent crime (e.g., Chicago), they remain undaunted.  “If a background check saves one life, it’s worth it!”

Not true. Unconstitutional gun control laws (which is all of them) create barriers to gun ownership that prevents people from exercising their gun rights (especially lower income Americans). Lives are lost as a result.

Clear thinking people balance the number of lives “saved” by background checks (a number as difficult to assess as “jobs saved” by the now-forgotten $787b Stimulus Package) with the number of lives lost because people were disarmed ahead of a violent attack (equally unfathomable).

[Note: for the sake of argument, we’ll ignore the millions of lives saved because armed Americans forestal a fascist dictatorship.]

Actually, you know what? Forget it. Given that the right to keep and bear arms is protected by the Second Amendment, that right is not subject to arguments about social utility. So, once again, let’s just condemn the killer and be done with it. And continue the fight to protect our firearms freedom.

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26 COMMENTS

    • Yeah, I am going with lever-action rifle chambered in .45-70 Government … that should be able to punch through level IIa ballistic vests with lighter bullet offerings. And even if it did not punch through the vests, the impact alone to someone’s chest could potentially stop their heart.

      • News reports say both the dead officer and the seriously injured one were each shot “multiple times”, leading me to think semi-auto rather than lever action.
        There are a number of .45 ACP carbines.

    • Yep, he was a crackpot leftist who shot another guy over a game of chess 20 years ago killing him. Big surprise of course that the mass killer was a way left of center communist.

  1. Prior to 1 June, 2013, private sales were not documented, nor were they required to be. So not sure how they came to the conclusion that he got it from a private sale unless he kept his own records. Or the guy that sold it to him 4 years ago remembered his face from TV.

    • Likely:
      They have the rifle, so they can run the number, find out it went to so and so dealer. Ask dealer to check their A&D, and that it was sold to (second party here). FBI contacts the second party, and he says, ‘Oh yeah I sold it to that guy back in 2012.’

  2. Didn’t Marlin sell a semi-auto in .45acp that took 1911 mags? I know they did in 9mm that took S&W mags.
    Camp carbine?

  3. Gun traces are of no utility except when you have a crime scene and a gun, but no criminal. When you have the criminal and the gun, proving how he got it adds nothing to the criminal case; it is only necessary that the accused possessed the firearm, not that he owned it. Otherwise criminals with stolen guns would walk. Why do they bother wasting resources on this question? To find someone else to charge for this guy’s illegal conduct? Frankly, I just don’t get it.

    • Provenance may be important in a criminal case. Best practices dictate following all possible leads, even for a dead perpetrator.

  4. The fact that he bought it legally is a mark for gun control. If he had bought it illegally it would show that laws don’t stop criminals.

    However, just because someone does something illegal doesn’t mean I think we should restrict everyone’s rights.

  5. Probably a lever gun in 45colt. MY goal is a pistol caliber rifle. 357 lever sounds ideal…I promise I won’t shoot any cops.

    • I have a pre-Remlin lever in .38/357. Absolutely love it. Feeds any .357 mag I put it in. Kinda finicky with .38spl, but still lots of fun.

      Bought it in a private transaction before 1 July 2013, so stuff it, Hickenlooper!

    • Somehow they will associate the rifle he used to a military AR in the possession of a civilian. “…with a rifle similar to an AR in that it was an automatic…” is what I see coming anti-gun media sources.

  6. ‘no matter where a “crime gun” came from, gun control advocates can’t lose. If the gun was purchased legally, they say “See? Anyone can become a killer! We need to tighten background checks!” If the gun was purchased illegally, they say “See? The background check system isn’t good enough! We need to tighten background checks!”’

    And it’s not like this effect wasn’t common knowledge three decades ago:

    http://cl.ly/1T190t1v2l1p

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