Showing posts with label gun. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gun. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 30, 2024

Kim Ye-ji fan art







Monday, January 22, 2024

A federal appellate court ruled that Mexico's lawsuit against U.S. gun manufactirers may proceed

Axios:

The suit, first filed against six gun manufacturers including Smith & Wesson and Glock in 2021, alleged the makers' loose controls allowed for the weapons to be illegally trafficked into Mexico and noted that U.S.-made guns were more likely to be used to kill Mexican citizens than Americans.

...

An October 2022 ruling found that U.S. law under the Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act protects gun makers from being sued.

Mexico's government argued in its appeal of that dismissal that the PLCAA does not provide immunity for harm caused abroad, or where gun companies violate the law.

[The appellate court concluded] that the Mexican government "plausibly alleges a type of claim that is statutorily exempt from the PLCAA's general prohibition."

Sunday, December 10, 2023

The firearms collected by law enforcement in gun buybacks are actually being resold instead of destroyed

NYTimes:

When Flint, Mich., announced in September that 68 assault weapons collected in a gun buyback would be incinerated, the city cited its policy of never reselling firearms.

...

But Flint’s guns were not going to be melted down. Instead, they made their way to a private company that has collected millions of dollars taking firearms from police agencies, destroying a single piece of each weapon stamped with the serial number and selling the rest as nearly complete gun kits. Buyers online can easily replace what’s missing and reconstitute the weapon.

...

A Missouri business called Gunbusters, which patented a “firearms pulverizer,” was responsible for dealing with the Flint weapons. The company says it has taken in more than 200,000 firearms over the past decade from about 950 police agencies around the country, from Baton Rouge, La., to St. Louis to Hartford, Vt.

At least a half-dozen other firms do similar work.

...

Gunbusters and its five licensees across the country, for example, recently averaged more than $90,000 a week in combined online sales of hundreds of disassembled guns from government clients.

...

The disposal of unwanted guns has emerged as yet another front in America’s culture wars.

Red state lawmakers have pushed to prohibit law enforcement agencies from destroying firearms in their inventories

Much more in the article. Riverside, California is one of the cities discussed.

Saturday, December 17, 2022

Sig Sauer executive alleged to have "surreptitiously overbill[ed] the Indonesian police, military, and intelligence services by up to 600 percent over several years"

TDB:

Sig Sauer has been the subject of scrutiny in recent years, given how the company’s flagship P320 pistol in 2017 replaced the Army’s previous go-to sidearm, the Beretta M9—only for the public to discover an undisclosed fatal flaw. Dozens of pistols have fired on their own across the country, sparking lawsuits by injured police officers and the family of a woman killed in Colorado—yet the company refused to issue a recall.

[T]he feds say [he] took advantage of the intense international interest in the 9mm semi-automatic P320 to dupe his Indonesian buyers into vastly overpaying for the pistol 

...

[He] was thought to be funneling the dirty money through a series of shell companies

...

The newly unsealed warrant affidavit means [he], a member of the Worcester Polytechnic Institute’s “Athletic Hall of Fame,” has now been accused of criminal wrongdoing at two of his previous three employers.

Thursday, June 9, 2022

Kawasaki's goat-shaped delivery bot; 3D-printed firearms; Imagining a VR horror game by Kojima; Catastrophic factory failure looks like a portal to hell opening




Saturday, May 14, 2022

A federal operation called "Silent Night" has seized over 40,000 illegal gun silencers smuggled from China

"links to websites that sell them circulate among gun enthusiasts who often meet through web forums and sites like Reddit."

Saturday, March 12, 2022

Owner of online ammunition company confirmed for Tennessee's Board of Education

Tennessean:

The company has been linked to the selling of ammunition involved in two mass shootings.

...

"There are nearly 7 million people in Tennessee surely to God the governor could have found one state board of education nominee who's not in ongoing litigation about illegally selling ammunition used in a deadly school shooting,"

...

The Senate voted along party lines 26-6 to confirm [his permanent] appointment to the state board of education. The House will vote on [the] nomination on March 14. 

Monday, November 29, 2021

Forcing an employee to use his accrued vacation time exposed a spiraling scandal at the LAPD's gun store

LAT:

As the store’s closing supervisor, he was there each night to lock up — and hand count the inventory.

If someone else had been assigned that count, they might have discovered that dozens of guns were missing and that [the store manager] was stealing them and selling them for cash, prosecutors wrote in the memo. But since he was always there, the Los Angeles Police Revolver and Athletic Club was apparently none the wiser.

This went on for years, prosecutors wrote, facilitated by a lack of oversight and safety protocols that are considered standard in other gun stores.

Then, in February 2020, [the manager's] bosses told him he had accrued the “maximum allowable leave hours” and had to take time off, prosecutors wrote in the memo. When he did, another manager finally made the startling discovery: Boxes meant to have guns in them were actually empty.

...

Top commanders, meanwhile, have been accused by the captain who initially oversaw the investigation of purposefully impeding the work of her detectives and assisting those in their crosshairs

...

One officer ... is accused of tipping off [one of the investigation's targets] that his police locker was about to be searched, while another ... is accused of issuing a veiled threat to investigators working on the gun case

Saturday, February 29, 2020

Los Angeles high school cancels active-shooter drill that was going to include 11-minutes of simulated gunfire

LAT:
San Marino High School was ready for its active-shooter drill Friday morning. City police officers planned to fire blank cartridges over 11 minutes to familiarize students with the sound of gunfire.

...

the American Civil Liberties Union intervened and asked [the principal] to stop the drill, concerned that it could be too traumatic for teenagers.

...

Two years ago, San Marino High, a 1,050-student campus in one of the county’s most affluent neighborhoods, conducted a simulation drill that involved a police presence, mock shooter and students trapped in a stairwell.

Tuesday, January 7, 2020

"A referee was shot by a cannon during a Maine Maritime Academy football game"

WGME:
It’s academy tradition to sound off a cannon using a blank shotgun shell whenever the team scores, according to the sheriff’s office. But authorities said an alumnus of the school who brought his own cannon to Saturday’s homecoming game

...

The incident was captured on video and posted online by local media.
It happened a few months ago, but charges have been filed:
He will face criminal charges of aggravated assault, reckless conduct with a firearm and possessing or discharging a firearm on school property

Wednesday, January 30, 2019

"Tijuana, a city of 1.8 million that not long ago was celebrating a major reduction in violence, is in the grip of an unprecedented homicide crisis"

LAT:
A record 2,518 people were killed here in 2018 — nearly seven times the total in 2012. With 140 killings per 100,000 people, Tijuana is now one of the deadliest cities in the world.

...

In the past, the body count was driven by powerful drug cartels battling over lucrative trafficking routes to the United States. Now the main cause is competition in a growing local drug trade, with low-level dealers sometimes dying over the right to sell drugs on a single street corner.

...

A high-ranking state police official who spoke on the condition of anonymity said cartel leaders may themselves be unable to control the violence, which is fueled by easy access to guns smuggled from the U.S.

Friday, June 8, 2018

"For more than a year, the state of Florida failed to conduct national background checks on tens of thousands of applications for concealed weapons permits"

TBT:
The employee in charge of the background checks could not log into the system, the investigator learned. The problem went unresolved until discovered by another worker in March 2017 — meaning that for more than a year applications got approved without the required background check.

During that time, which coincided with the June 12, 2016 shooting at Pulse nightclub that left 50 dead, the state saw an unprecedented spike in applications for concealed weapons permits.

...

Agriculture Commissioner Adam Putnam has made it a priority to speed up the issuing of concealed weapons permits since he was elected in 2010. In 2012, he held a news conference to celebrate the state's one millionth concealed weapons permit, noting the time it took to process an application fell from 12 weeks to 35 days on his watch. There are now 1.8 million concealed weapon permit holders in Florida.

Now running for Florida governor as a Republican, Putnam's campaign touts his expansion of concealed carry permits as one of his top accomplishments.

Monday, April 2, 2018

Adventuring equipment






Wednesday, August 2, 2017

"The AutoGlove, scheduled to enter production next month, bills itself as a mechanism that allows for 'full-auto fire without ATF approval, tax stamp or firearm modifications'"

"Powered by a battery pack that can be attached to a user’s arm or body, the device looks like a military-inspired Power Glove and is designed to fire a standard semi-automatic firearm at a rate of up to 1,000 rounds per minute."

Tuesday, March 8, 2016

Link roundup

1. "The U.S. gun industry is trying to shake off the Hollywood hitman image of the gun silencer and rebrand it as a hearing-protection device"
In October, [Arizona Republican Representative Matt Salmon] introduced legislation that would replace the silencer screening process with a simpler background check.
2. "On Monday, Uber walked back a core explanation for the thousands of tickets in its customer support ticket system with the subject 'rape.'"
Uber’s update notes, “We apologize to Zendesk for using an imperfect (and fictitious) example that doesn’t accurately represent their search functionality.”
3. "A Dinner Club Inspired By Los Angeles' Most Lurid, Sensational Legends"
The dinner took us back to Fleiss' heyday, however, before her arrest and at the height of her crimes. When I first walked in, I was asked to write my name in a little black book. I was then given my seat number, which was printed on a motel key attached to a golden fork. A woman handed me a Zima—not a real Zima, but a fruity vodka drink

Friday, February 26, 2016

Link roundup

1. "Why 49ers' 1991 helmet redesign was a historic failure"
Wright died in 2013, but his daughter, Beverly Wright Woo, spoke with Uni Watch shortly after his death and said he didn't mind the fans' response to his design. "He was disappointed, sure, but he had a good sense of humor about it all," she said. "He didn't take it personally, because he just gave the 49ers what they had asked for."
2. "The Rutherford County-made .50-caliber Barrett sniper rifle" is now the official rifle of Tennessee.

3. "Juliette, a white pony adorned with a fake horn, was posing with kids during a children's photo shoot in Madera Ranchos, California, near Fresno. She escaped"

Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Link roundup

1.  The US Coast Guard remembers Dodger phenom Yasiel Puig's early failed attempts to flee Cuba for America:
One night, the gravity of the situation depressed Puig. Torres could tell the toll his impending return to Cuba was taking, so he went to his locker and retrieved a pair of tennis balls. He brought them to Puig, along with a Sharpie, and asked him to sign. 
Carlos Torres was the first American to get Yasiel Puig's autograph, looped in perfect cursive with his number for Cienfuegos: "Y Puig 14." 
Almost two weeks after the Vigilant interdicted Puig's boat, it parked just outside of Cuban water space. Cuba was sending a boat to bring the migrants home. The Coasties thanked them for their conversation, their companionship, their attitude, their appreciation – for understanding this wasn't personal but a policy implemented more than half a century earlier, when the world was a different place. Puig and his friends gathered their belongings and walked toward the ladder. For some migrants, it is the last glimpse they’ll ever get of something American. 
"I remember as they were leaving, I said [to Puig], 'Are we going to see you again?' " Hoschak said. “He just smiled."

2.  The Mall of America to double in size.  A $2.5 billion expansion is planned.

3.  "Algae creates a giant green obstacle for Chinese beachgoers."

4.  "This comically large shotgun was once used for hunting ducks."