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courtesy USA Today

Brady Background Check has Failed to Live Up to its Promises

You mean the system is flawed?…

“ATF agents did not consider most of the prohibited persons who had obtained guns to be dangerous.”

Those words, quoted last year by USA TODAY, explain why the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives and local governments are not prosecuting most gun buyers who get denied by FBI background checks.

It’s because these people are largely not the “bad guys.” Rather, they consist of hundreds of thousands of veterans who didn’t know they had been stripped of their constitutional rights without due process.

Or they’re people subject to bench warrants who didn’t realize their unpaid traffic tickets made them outlaws.

Or they were people like Navy veteran Jeff Schrader, whose 45-year-old misdemeanor conviction for a street fight prevented him from buying a gun.

courtesy New York Post

Lion King Prop Maker Busted for Trying to 3D Print Gun

Sing it with me: “…it means no worries, for the rest of your days…”…

Things weren’t very Hakuna Matata at Broadway’s iconic “The Lion King” on Friday afternoon, when cops stormed the theater to arrest a props worker for allegedly trying to make a gun with a 3D printer, The Post has learned.

Cops from the Midtown South precinct arrived at the Minskoff Theatre on West 45th Street at 12:30 p.m., and went backstage to collect Ilya Vett, 47, the assistant supervisor for the prop department.

Vett, of Windsor Terrace, Brooklyn, was in the midst of 3-D printing “a hard black plastic object which, based on my training and experience, is shaped like a revolver,” a cop swore in Vett’s criminal complaint.

“I brought the 3-D printer in [to the theater] from my workshop because my workshop is too dusty,” Vett told cops, according to the complaint.

Surveillance Cameras Show Gas Station Shootout

From Chris Eger over at Guns.com…

Two armed felons at an East St. Louis, Illinois gas station caused thousands in property damage in the course of a pre-dawn shootout.

The incident occurred at the Gas Mart on Missouri Avenue at about 1 a.m. on Sept. 12. when the two men began exchanging gunfire in the parking lot. During the ensuing back and forth gunplay, with one suspect in a car and another at times on foot, gas station patrons can be seen diving for cover as windows break, one even sliding under a nearby SUV until the coast is clear.

Live in Colorado? Consider voting for Mike Coffman…

A new ad targeting Rep. Mike Coffman (R-Colo.) for his gun-friendly policies features a hypothetical text conversation between a mother and child during a school lockdown.

The ad was released by a PAC run by former Rep. Gabrielle Giffords (D-Ariz.). According to Politico, the PAC intends to spend almost $1.5 million on TV and digital ads against the vulnerable congressman.

Democrats are optimistic about their chances in November against Coffman, who is facing Jason Crow in Colorado’s 6th district. Cook Political Report rates the race as a “toss-up.”

The ad warns viewers that the pro-gun National Rifle Association supports Coffman and has given more money to him than any other member of Colorado’s congressional delegation. The ad mainly features a text conversation between a fictional mother and child during a lockdown.

“Someone has a gun and they can’t find him,” the fictional child, Emily, texts.

courtesy Ammoland.com

Second Amendment Organization (SAO) Appoints Rob Pincus Executive Vice President

Reported by the guys at Ammoland, Pincus on SAO Board of Directors…

Second Amendment Organization is pleased to announce that Rob Pincus has joined our Board of Directors and has accepted the role of Executive Vice President.

Rob brings over twenty years of experience in the Gun Industry and a lifetime as a shooter. Rob is one of the industry’s most vocal leaders. He is both an advocate and an educator. His work with the United States Concealed Carry Association, National Rifle Association, National Shooting Sports Foundation, Second Amendment Foundation, Personal Defense Network, I.C.E. Training Company, and countless other Pro-Gun-Rights Organizations has influenced millions of American Gun Owners. He has frequently spoken on behalf of responsible gun owners in national and international media. His views are sometimes controversial and often confrontational as he has combated ignorance and negligence around firearms and firearms rights.

 

courtesy mline.com

Negligent Discharge Takes a Life

There’s a reason we have the four golden rules of gun safety, people…

A man in his early 20s is dead and one in custody following a shooting Saturday night inside an Argentine Township residence.

Officers with the Argentine Township Police Department were called out around 7 p.m. Sept. 22 to a residence the 16000 block of Seymour Road for a report of a shooting.

Argentine Township police Detective Sgt. Doug Fulton said witnesses told investigators that the two friends were “playing” with a handgun when it fired, striking the victim once in the chest and shoulder area.

Witnesses told police it was “a habit” of the friends to unload the firearm and dry fire it at each other, Fulton said. Dry firing a gun involves removing the ammunition before pulling the trigger.

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46 COMMENTS

  1. ‘…it was “a habit” of the friends to unload the firearm and dry fire it at each other…’

    Congratulations! Here’s your Darwin Award.

  2. “Witnesses told police it was “a habit” of the friends to unload the firearm and dry fire it at each other, Fulton said…”

    Operative word being “was.”

    • I researched this further. The trigger man was convinced that the handgun was unloaded because he or his buddy had removed the magazine. Of course they failed to empty the chamber.

      Pro-tip: always remove the magazine AND THEN CLEAR THE CHAMBER before pulling the trigger for dry-fire practice.

      And cycle the action two or three times after clearing the chamber just to be absolutely certain the firearm is unloaded.

      • Rule #1 applies, even after you clear the gun and you would bet your life that it’s clear. There is no such thing as a safe gun.

        Want to pretend you’re shooting someone? That’s what Nerf guns are for.

        This is a Darwin Award presented by committee.

        • No such thing aye? Hold my drink while I get the angle grinder… or disassemble the weapon, or take the firing pin out…

        • Would you trust someone who pointed a gun at you and said, “Don’t worry. I took the firing pin out?” Congratulations. Here’s your Darwin award.

      • I can’t tell you how many old timers I’ve heard saying “this is why god gave us pinkies” as they shove their digit in the chamber. There’s reasons they’re old timers right?

        • The way I was taught was check the ammunition source (e.g. mag well), breech face, and chamber both visually and physically. Sure, you’re talking about mitigating some pretty low probability events here. How often does a cartridge get stuck on an extractor? But if you always check for all the possible failures as a matter of routine, you will catch the common ones that usually happen, as well as the rare ones that almost never do.

        • I was taught to remove the mag, lock the bolt to the rear, and visually inspect both the chamber and mag well. It’s a procedure I use every single time I pick up a weapon. And I do it again even if I only set it down for a second and I’m the only one in the house.

      • And cycle the action two or three times after clearing the chamber

        I never saw the point in this, and don’t do it. If the extractor was broken the first time, it’ll still be broken the next two or three times. Instead, clear the chamber properly: look in the chamber, on the face of the bolt or slide, down the magazine well. Feel inside with your finger if the light isn’t good.

        When I start my car, I hear the sound of the engine, I see the tach rise, the battery light goes out. I don’t then go and crank it several more times to make sure it’s started, I check the right way the first time.

        • It’s not about the extractor. It’s actually a check on yourself. The proper order is drop the mag, clear and open the action, and check the ammunition source, breech face, and chamber.

          If you add in racking the slide a few times as part the clear and open, the “forgot to drop the mag” error will be evident as a stream of rounds is ejected. Fix that, then continue (maybe picking up those rounds off the floor at some point), and make the rest of the checks.

        • If you forget to drop the mag AND you neglect to check for the mag when you clear the chamber I don’t think you’re going to be observant enough to see rounds ejecting.

        • Cycling the slide more than once is just silly. Lock the action open, check it, and be done. There’s no point to running the slide back and forth. If it didn’t eject the round the first time, you’ve got a mechanical problem and should address it.

          A buddy of mind (very experienced, like you have no idea) had the habit of cycling the slide like you describe. Once he ejected a live round, but it didn’t clear the ejection port. When the slide came back it detonated the round out of battery. He’s got a scar on his hand from the burns, and he’s lucky it didn’t blind him.

        • I rack the slide several times because it’s a gun and I like to fool with it! And if you think that’s bad, when I unload a revolver, I work the action several times, as well, for the same reason. Dry firing is more rare.

      • Broke IT, CarlosT, and DaveL,

        I purposely avoided discussing the nuances of ensuring that a firearm is unloaded. I did that in the hope that people will at least remember that only ejecting a magazine is not enough to unload a firearm. As long as that sticks, people will then think to themselves, “Now that I dropped the magazine, what else do I have to do to ensure that my firearm is unloaded?”

        Think of this as an extension of the model of the four rules of firearm safety. Each of the four rules are concise so that people have a good chance of remembering them.

        Yes, the best way to ensure that a firearm is unloaded is to empty/drop the magazine; lock the action open; visually inspect the magazine, chamber, and bolt face; and stick your finger or a suitable object into the magazine and chamber to ensure that there are no cartridges stuck in there. (Note that this process alone includes just as many elements as the entire set of the “four rules” of firearm safety.)

        And while cycling the action two or three times does nothing if your extractor is broken, it might help if your extractor or cartridge are sticky. And it certainly does not hurt anything.

  3. You’re doing a helluva job ATF…no misdemeanor should EVER disqualify you. 3 felonies a day boyz. We’re all lawbreakers😦

  4. The ATF doesn’t go after the vast majority of people who fail background checks because they’re not dangerous — but we need MOAR background checks because safety.

    Okay, got it.

  5. ….Constitutional Infringements….The 2 “Felons” shooting it out recklessly in a gas station should have met up with “a hot lead bullet wall of public safety” discharged by armed concerned U.S. citizens!

  6. ….And ALL constitutional infringements are deliberate failures to protect and uphold the U.S. Constitution/Bill of Rights…And should be a “capital crime”! Where failures of the Government Representatives, or it’s agents *(Police/Lower level politicians/public servants…)* go to jail, or get the gulliotine!

  7. “There’s a reason we have the four golden rules of gun safety, people…:

    True enough, but now is a fine opportunity to remind people that there is a reason why sone private property owners ban guns on their property., which is fine with me. Don’t like it? Don’t shop there.

    • Boy, lemme tellya what! The employee who tackled that customer deserves a freaking MEDAL! The whole vicinity was blown to shit seconds later, right where the customer was standing.

  8. Technically speaking, wouldn’t arresting Mr. Vett while he was in the process of printing a hard plastic object that looked like a revolver be prior restraint of the First Amendment? Up until the point where the frame could be assembled into a gun, it’s just a blob of plastic – like an 80% AR lower receiver.

    I assume we’ll see this “story” quietly disappear, when the prosecutor decides that no offense actually occurred.

    • Agreed, except I think that until it is fully ready to be loaded, it is not a firearm, therefore there has been no crime. OTOH, I also realize that some states are so screwy they would consider a spent .22 case the same as a loaded machine gun.

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