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June 10, 2019, 03:08 PM | #1 |
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Where Criminals Get Their Guns
I thought this to be of interest, not all of it good news.
The U.S. Department of Justice released a report earlier this year titled Source and Use of Firearms Involved in Crimes: Survey of Prison Inmates, 2016.. There are several interesting results but probably the most interesting is the result about where these prisoners got their guns. Keep in mind that the survey does not include criminals not in prison and that prison inmates may not be the most forthcoming.
The low rate obtained from flea markets or gun shows cuts against the argument for stricter regulation at these places. It's not entirely clear, but I believe this only includes purchases from merchants since it is lumped into the retail sales section. On the other hand, the fact that 1/4th of the guns were obtained from individuals is potential ammunition to more strictly regulate private transfers. There is no mention if the 10.8% purchased or given to prisoners were straw purchases. That would probably be hard to track in this sort of survey. Still, the fact that half the guns were obtained directly by theft or from an underground market (probably stolen) is proof that gun bans won't work to prevent criminal use of firearms. Last edited by Unclenick; June 11, 2019 at 03:43 PM. Reason: typo fix |
June 10, 2019, 03:55 PM | #2 |
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I once met a guy who had a friend who sold a gun (on a street corner, late at night) because he needed money. My acquaintance felt badly that his friend had to sell his gun, so my acquaintance put the word out, and a week or two later he bought the gun back, on a street corner, late at night. FWIW, face-to-face transfers of handguns were not legal in my state at the time (and are not legal in my state today).
A different friend is an FFL. His previous location was on the fringe of the inner city. One day he had a young man come in looking for 9mm ammunition. so my friend sold him a box of 9mm ammunition. The next day the young man came back with a friend and complained that the ammunition wouldn't go into his gun. He brought the gun, so my friend the FFL took it and tried to show the kid how to load it. The gun was a Beretta 92. And my FFL friend couldn't get the 9mm ammo to load in the magazine. He happened to look down at the gun and he saw on the side BRUNI MOD 92 kai 8mm k - made in Italy Right -- it wasn't a Beretta, it was an 8mm blank-firing gun that the kid had bought thinking he was getting a real Beretta. Needless to say, the kid took a lot of ribbing from his companion. But the story doesn't end there. Several days later a young man walked in looking for a box of 9mm ammunition ... https://blankgunarmory.com/bruni-8mm...iring-pistol/# Which is an amusing little story, but it illustrates where bad guys are getting their guns, and it shows why all the background checks in the world aren't going to make any difference. The people selling stolen guns on dark street corners late at night are NOT going to call NICS to get authorization for the transfer to be processed. |
June 11, 2019, 05:56 AM | #3 |
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Interesting....
Which begs the legal question of: What would be the criminal charge - if any - of selling a blank gun to someone & fooling them into thinking they are buying a real full auto M92? I can see where meeting up with some punk and ripping off a burst of blanks - full auto- and then quickly exchange the blank gun for $500 could be a real easy way to make money. |
June 11, 2019, 11:36 AM | #4 | |
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I used the story only to offer anecdotal but real-world evidence of the futility of expecting background check and waiting period laws to make any dent on the availability of guns used in crimes. As the article reports, criminals aren't buying guns in gun stores, or at gun shows. Anti-gun activists may dispute this, but if I -- just one person -- know personally of multiple "late night, dark street corner" purchases, in my small corner of the universe, how many such incidents must there be across the country as a whole? The blank gun story is amusing, but the important fact is it could just as easily have been a real Beretta 92. The two dudes (or duds) who bought it certainly thought it was. |
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June 11, 2019, 12:02 PM | #5 |
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Here is an answer the the question:
Police: 4 in custody after 7 break into Spring Branch gun shop, lead police on chase https://www.click2houston.com/news/p...olice-on-chase
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June 11, 2019, 01:54 PM | #6 | |
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June 11, 2019, 02:37 PM | #7 | |
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June 11, 2019, 03:38 PM | #8 | |
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June 11, 2019, 03:38 PM | #9 |
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Data regarding flea market would not curb anyone.
If it saves just one life is used often to refute real numbers. (everyone here knows that is half the story that is rarely told)
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June 11, 2019, 09:14 PM | #10 | |
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June 12, 2019, 12:14 AM | #11 | |
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From the article:
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Found it at the scene of the crime--7%. I'm not sure how this is different from stealing it. It wasn't their gun, they committed a crime and were found with the gun, claimed they "found it at the scene of the crime" and yet, somehow it wasn't actually "stolen"? If a crook commits a crime against me and then "finds" one of my guns at the scene of the crime and has it in their possession when they are apprehended, I'm pretty sure they stole it from me. I sure didn't give it to them. They didn't steal it ahead of time in preparation for the crime, but they surely stole it at some point. Obtained it from the street or underground market--43%. Let us think, for a moment, about all the ways a gun could get onto the "underground market" or be sold "on the street". I can think of some potentially legal ways for that to happen, but it's not hard to see that, as the link indicates, theft is clearly a large source of "underground market" guns. Obtained it from a family member, friend, or as a gift--25%. Again, how did these family members and friends get these guns? Some were, no doubt, legally purchased guns, but criminals often have criminal family members and criminal friends and it stands to reason that at least some of the guns being passed around between these people as "gifts" are stolen. Purchases from licensed dealers--7%. This is the one source for criminals' guns that we can be fairly certain does not include stolen guns. Anyway, when we start thinking about what the stats mean, instead of just looking at them, the picture is a little different. Maybe it's true that only 6% of criminals actually personally go out before a crime and steal the guns they intend to use in a crime. But the idea that the other sources don't involve stolen guns doesn't hold water. What it comes down to is that a much larger percentage of guns used in crime are stolen, not just 6%. Here's another article related to this topic: https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/...?noredirect=on Let's cut through all the crap and just look at the bottom line: "In the study, led by epidemiologist Anthony Fabio of Pittsburgh's Graduate School of Public Health, researchers partnered with the Pittsburgh Bureau of Police to trace the origins of all 893 firearms that police recovered from crime scenes in the year 2008.Frankly, I don't care if they stole it themselves before the crime, bought it on the black market from someone else who stole it, got it as a gift from someone else who stole it, or stole it at the scene of the crime. The bottom line is that criminals get their guns illegally, and 80% of the time (at least in the Pittsburgh study), the guns being used in crimes were NOT owned by the person using the gun in the crime. Other similar studies provide varying results, but it seems safe to say that somewhere around half of guns used in crime belong to someone other than the criminals using them. Maybe it's really important to some people to know that only 6% of criminals actually do their own gun stealing while a much larger percentage prefers to buy guns someone else stole, but I don't think it really makes much difference to most people.
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June 12, 2019, 01:01 AM | #12 | |
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June 12, 2019, 08:54 AM | #13 |
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There are so many guns in the US, probably many more than they try to estimate because NIC's checks do not necessarily constitute one sale (ie when I buy I tend to put in order together and routinely buy 3 to 5 guns via one check when the stuff all arrives, when people buy 10 stripped lowers etc.. etc..), and there are many guns from before there were checks etc.. etc..
Once the guns float into the grey market, ie become "cold steel" where somebody died and an estate was liquidated (legally or illegally), they are stolen, or otherwise get into circulation - they tend to stay in circulation - and this has been going on a long long freakin time. I don't know when they started tracking serial numbers to the point where they can go back to where guns were originally transferred but that hasn't been going on forever either. The really bad guys have ways to get piles of guns, imported if needed. There are probably bad guys building/finishing receivers and selling them at a 4X premium by the case to other bad guys.. Meanwhile many states, ie NH is one, you can't legally sell a pistol to somebody you do not know who lacks a permit. Sure, a felon might be able to buy a rifle but those aren't what show up in crimes.. If they really cared about private sales potentially supplying felons it would be very easy for police to setup a sting - ie procure 10 shotguns, rifles, whatever, list them private sale - buyer is surprised by police upon meeting the seller, if the buyer checks out they get a gun, if they don't they get arrested - that would net up all those bad guys trying to get guns private sale and make the rest think twice. I guess in short, even if gun shows or private sales were the source, which they aren't, there are so many guns in circulation you can't treat them like some rare thing that's hard to obtain on the street - they are out there and will always be. And then catching criminals trying to buy guns private sale would be very easy. Attempting to close all "loopholes" in the law hurts everyone, is very difficult, and won't work anyway. |
June 12, 2019, 03:07 PM | #14 | |
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June 25, 2019, 06:58 PM | #15 |
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I think we need to keep in mind that there is a fungiblilty, a whack-a-mole, phenomena as well. I do some work with a major federal regularly agency on behalf of a couple of clients, and there are quite powerful substitution effect forces in such environments.
In other words if we determine a given channel or mechanism that is the source of 30% of guns used in crime; even completely shutting down that channel would not mean a 30% overall reduction, and may well result no reduction at all in acquisition and use by criminals, because the same criminal will simply use another acquisition method when one is shut down. For the channels that are illegal, eg straw purchase, I'd like to see data on average time served as well. Last edited by TDL; June 27, 2019 at 02:27 PM. |
June 26, 2019, 03:07 PM | #16 | |
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June 26, 2019, 10:07 PM | #17 | |
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This is part of the argument for universal background checks. Face to face sales are legal and quite common in GA and most southern states. The argument we hear is that easily obtained guns sold in the SE are making their way into places like Chicago and other northern cities.
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June 27, 2019, 10:05 AM | #18 | |
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June 27, 2019, 11:50 AM | #19 | |
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I can't remember having seen any statistics, either for my state of for NYC (since this was one of Bloomberg's claims when he was mayor), for what percentage of recovered crime guns come from out of state and were obtained through face-to-face sales as opposed to theft as opposed to having been stolen locally or from neighboring states that also prohibit face-to-face sales without background checks. It also ignores the fact that a great many gun owners "self-police" themselves. I suspect we have all seen discussions on this forum and on other forums about what identification we would require a prospective buyer to show when making a face-to-face sale. Certainly, not all gun owners participate in such forums, but my impression is that everyone who enters such discussions wants to ensure that the sale is legal. The point of contention isn't whether or not to ask for some sort of documentation, but rather whether or not the seller should be allowed to make a record of the buyer's personal information. I understand both points of view, which is why I long ago decided that any sales I make would be by consignment through an FFL. I've only made one exception to that -- I once sold am M1 Garand to a co-worker. But he had a pistol permit, so I was satisfied that he was legal. |
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June 27, 2019, 12:10 PM | #20 |
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Recently three perps were arrested for the murder of a young man in Cache, OK. A female friend of the three perps said all were armed with hand guns. One was arrested while armed with a hand gun.
This past Monday two hand guns were recovered using a huge magnet on wheels after a brush hog cut the tall grass near the murder scene. Locally there is a huge black market in handguns. Two of these perps mentioned above were 19 years old, the other was 20: None were old enough to legally purchase a handgun. https://www.kswo.com/2019/06/14/auth...hooting-cache/ After the perps were arrested numerous apparent friends of the perps were seen searching the grassy area near the murder scene. |
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