- Reaction score
- 0
- Points
- 210
So there you go, not even the Liberals will take away hunters shotguns and rifles.
Rowshambow said:Inch, I think your point of the VT shootings might be a little off. It was prob mass confusion, yes maybe 1 of the students if armed might have shot the bad guy, but the if say 10 other people were also armed, they could start shooting each other, and than how would the police have known who the shooter was/is? they would have to treat everyone with a gun the same, (like a criminal and you CCW guys hate that!) it would have made for more confusion. I know if I was armed in that sit, and heard someone shooting , and then tried to shoot the shooter, everyone else with a gun would have been shot too, as I would not have known who the shooter was, know what I mean?
Actually armed students had already stopped a armed gunman at another Virgina school without shooting any bystanders
Sigs Guy said:So there you go, not even the Liberals will take away hunters shotguns and rifles.
Wrong, they have already seized people shotguns, this would have resulted in siezing more.
Not to mention the handgun ban will be proposed again, then it will another restriction and another.
But thats ok with you because they will come for yours last.
yes it was, your point?
Sigs Guy said:I don't think you should be giving us a lecture on fear when you feel the need to be armed to even step outside of your house, but thats my own opinion. Really nobody is trying to take away duck hunters shotguns here, what I'm arguing is that first of all we don't need CCW, and second registering a gun isn't really infringing your freedom.
Yes so the system must be able to filter out some of the whackjobs out there. I'd prefer the current system over a system which sells guns as freely as ice cream.
Yeah, imagine how much better High Schools, Universities, and Elementary Schools would be if more people carried guns. Kids and guns, a perfect combination.
So did you break the law?
By that same logic we should start legalizing all drugs.
Unless you make a grave mistake and accidently shoot someone who you perceived to be a threat who may have just happened to be mentally ill.
Johnny Rotten said:I am curious to know if anyone has challenged the inspection portion of the firearms act, and what the outcome was?
'I was portrayed as one of Britain's biggest illegal
gun dealers'
11 July 2007
TODAY a gun dealer who proved his innocence slams a police investigation that left him to suffer an agonising ten-month wait in custody in two of London's toughest jails.
Michael Shepherd, 56, faced 32 years in prison after being arrested in September last year following an 18-month operation by the Met police's anti-gun crime Trident squad.
The raid on his house opposite a primary school in Dartford uncovered a haul of 900 weapons and about 4,000 rounds of ammunition.
Officers believed they were part of a world wideillegal gun trafficking cartel and linked to north London murders. If he was convicted he would most likely have died in jail.
He reveals Kent Police visited his home and renewed his firearms licence just two weeks before he was arrested for allegedly dealing illegal weapons. The father-of-two also claims Trident, a Metropolitan police initiative to tackle black on black gun crime,
is failing to infiltrate the illegal gun trade.
He also accuses the police of pursuing him to show the public they are winning the fight against crime involving illegal firearms.
Speaking from his ransacked home, he said: "Every single one of the guns I had stored in my house, about 900 in all, are legal to own and sell.
"Every one of them! It is as simple as that. About two or three weeks before I was arrested and thrown in jail I had Kent Police officers stand in that building
amongst all my guns and they renewed my RFD (Registered Firearms Dealers licence). You can imagine the shock when police calmly knocked on my door with
the world's media watching and portrayed me as one of the country's biggest criminal gun dealers they had ever arrested."
This week Kent Police confirmed they had visited his home, stood amongst his haul of legal firearms and renewed the licence as the operation by Trident came to a dramatic end with his arrest.
A spokesperson said: "Kent Police carried out all the inspections that we are legally authorized to do as a firearms dealer and certificate holder and no weapons
were found that he was not allowed to have and no prohibited weapons were recovered from inside his premises."
Mr Shepherd added: "Surely the visit by Kent Police is proof enough by weapons are legal.
"My arrest was overwhelming at first but I knew I had done nothing wrong and I kept explaining they were welcome to check out all the guns. They were hanging on walls in the house and locked for security.
"The keys were there for them to open but they just hacked them off and took them down. I was taken away under a blanket and unknown to me was being labelled
Trident's biggest ever scalp. As I was held for six days they searched my house. This was there chance to show the world they are tackling illegal gun crime.
What they did not realise and had they done their homework they would have, all my guns are perfectly legal. They could have asked Kent Police that. I
cannot believe their investigation resulted in me spending so long in prison for something I was clearly innocent of and not to mention the tens of thousands this investigation must have cost."
"Although they had me under surveillance and investigation for about 18 months they did not realize everything you could buy from me you could go in to a newsagents pick up a magazine called Gun Mart and order it from them.
"They raided my mother's place in Bexleyheath. She is very ill and suffers from Alzheimer's. She had no idea what was going on, she did not know what time of day
it was. This whole ordeal has been harder for my family on the outside than me. To put my mother through that is disgusting. They could have come round and gone through all my guns they did not need this big raid. It was all for show. There was no armed police when I was arrested. Why not? If I was supposed to be such a ruthless gun dealer with the biggest arms haul ever why did that not need an armed response?
Last month the father-of-two was found not guilty of 13 gun related charges at the Old Bailey. Ten other charges were either dropped or the judge ordered the jury to return not guilty verdicts.
Flicking through a scrapbook that his daughter, Connie, has made of newspaper reports during the time of his arrest, his sheer disbelief of what has happened is etched on his face.
Mr Shepherd blasted: "This is what has given the gun community a bad name. We have been persecuted for years to the extent were people now think if they see or hear about guns it is to do with terrible murders and armed robberies. Illegal guns are dangerous and in the wrong hands people will kill with them but they will not come to someone like me to get them. I would be the first congratulating Trident if they seized 900 illegal guns but they didn't. Why would a killer buy an antique weapon from me for £2,000 when you can get a sub-machine gun or Mac 10 and Uzis for a few hundred quid off the street. Those two girls who were shot dead outside the hairdressers in Manchester were not killed by a collector's gun. The weapons were probably smuggled in the country via the ports, sold for next to nothing and then used in this tragedy. This is where the first line of defence should be centred.
"I have spent 10 months in jail on remand for a crime I did not commit, all my assets were frozen and for what. It is early days and you have to consider compensation and that is a matter for myself but I can never get those 10 months of my life back."
Although he faced a life sentence the Elvis fanatic, who dresses in 1950s Teddy Boy-style clothes, cannot help to crack a smile as he pores over the extensive Forensic Science Service report compiled on July 10 last year - two months before his arrest.
Referring to a 32.44 pistol, purchased by an undercover cop that was supposedly an illegal firearm, author Ronald Nicholas Gibbs BSC (Hons) writes: "In my opinion, the revolvers PHG/1 (evidence ref) and PHG/2 (evidence ref) were chambered for calibres of
cartridge which appear on the Home Office list of'obsolete calibres'. In my opinion if these revolvers were possessed as curiosities or ornaments, they could be regarded as antique firearms and benefit from exemption from firearms certificate procedure." This
means the gun is perfectly legal and Mr Shepherd is baffled as to why this report did not result in the investigation being dropped.
Further down the report it details an antique gun the same expert conducted research in to regarding its legality claiming it could only be fired if "the trigger was pulled while hitting the hammer with a mallet." It is hardly the weapon of choice for a north London murderer or hardened gangster.
Mr Shepherd added: "I read through this report produced by one of the police experts which is basically telling them that all the guns are legal and I am mystified how this raid on my house was even given the go-ahead. It is laughable. What half decent criminal would buy a gun, pull it on someone and then bash the hammer with a mallet to shoot them.
"I was portrayed as conspiring with the undercover police to sell him guns to kill and that I was aware he was not a collector. I took the chap shooting twice, we talked about him having a place to shoot and how he was 'serious about clay pigeon'. How is this dealing to a man I believe is going to kill someone or commit robbery.
"If you buy a car from a dealer and drive down the road and kill someone doing 100 miles per hour is that the dealers fault because he did not tell you it was illegal to drive over 70. It may be simplifying it but it is true. I should never have even been arrested,
let alone held in prison and refused bail while all my assets were seized."
Mr Shepherd coped with his time on remand by gaining mutual respect from inmates but said it was a time he would never forget. He was kept going by support from family and friends and by sketching drawings of his cell, the view from his barred window and his
favourite stars like Clint Eastwood and Captain Jack Sparrow (Johnny Depp) from Pirates of the Caribbean and Buddy Holly.
He spent four months in Pentonville Prison before he was transferred to Belmarsh as his trial approached, but said the 10 months on remand had a worse toll on his family than himself.
During his stay he was forced to wear a green and yellow suit because he was considered a lifer and spent time in segregation.
He said: "When I was arrested I kept thinking all the guns are legal, I know that for sure, so I will be released but then I was refused bail.
"In prison I just tried to switch off and wait for my trial so I could be cleared. I never doubted the jury system or the fact that justice would be done and I
would be cleared.
"However, that did not mean prison was nice it is a very degrading place. I would have to take my boxer shorts down and lift my shirt to show I had nothing concealed on me. You had to strip and squat so they could check you out. I had to be with three people when I was allowed out of the block for exercise.
"Two people hung themselves in prison and one kept self-harming and slashing himself there was blood everywhere.
"But I gave respect to people. You have to give it to receive it. They (prisoners) all knew who I was when I arrived and they made Elvis jokes and talked about the news coverage. I had offers to sell all my guns when I got out to a few of the inmates.
"I was an enhanced prisoner during my stay so I was given better jobs and I did a lot of drawing."
Since his release, Mick Shepherd is still waiting the return of his 900 gun collection from the Met, thought to be worth over £250,000 and his gun licence. He still has no identification and has now been suspended from his job.
Having worked for Greenwich council for over 30 years as a carpenter he bizarrely received just £2.88 per week while in prison. Upon release he was informed he would be suspended on full pay pending an investigation.
He added: "It's a bit weird considering I am innocent but it's a blessing in disguise really because I have so much to sort out."
The gun dealer now hopes he can get on with his life and change the tainted image of guns and shooting.
He added: "Since the Dunblane and Hungerford massacre the shooting community has been persecuted, new laws have been passed and the sport is being vilified. As
tragic as both these cases are they were illegal firearms in criminal hands. If someone wanted to do it
again today they could. Illegal gun crime has nothing to do with the shooting community and something we cannot be held accountable for.
"Shooting has always been a passion of mine and something I have pursued since a kid like my passion for Elvis and his music. It is such a shame in this country that I cannot be left to pursue my interests without being dragged through the courts and held in prison for something I was clearly innocent of.
"Years ago Dartford and the surrounding area had five shooting clubs, now it has three and there is never anything illegal going on. You don't see police down there but you see hundreds at football matches so you tell me who the risk is to the public?
"The government and police do not like guns but it is the illegal guns in the hands of criminals that kill."
A Greenwich Council spokesperson said they were unable to discuss or divulge employment and financial details of employees.
Why did they seize peoples shotguns? Was it because they weren't following the law?
The handgun ban wouldn't have done much anyway. Besides, speaking from my own experience, my brother has been able to obtain 5 guns despite the fascist government.
So the rest of us can suffer because it doesn't affect you?I work for the military, so I doubt they'll take away our weapons.
They weren't just students, they also happened to be sworn police officers. So that defeats the notion that having a large gun toting population will be the golden ticket to reducing school shootings. It largely confirms the idea that the police can help fight crime and prevent further violence. Perhaps we should hire more police officers instead.
The Life / Death Clock attempts to add real perspective to the discussion
of the social costs/benefits of gun ownership in America.
Uh, nope. Owning or carrying guns in no way affects my mental state, nor do they cause any undue burden on the health care system.
No they were students who happened to also to be LEO's. You also forget that in Canada these officers would not be armed as almost every department discourges or bars their officers from taking their duty pistol home. The same attitude that says no CCW for the citizens also does not trust oddity police officers.
All of which would have to be turned in for whatever price the government deemed them to be worth, although they might have not done that. By this line I can clearly see you have absolutely no concept of what is going on in regards to the laws or the politics behind them.
I realize you will look down at the source because in your mind the NRA could never produce anything worthwhile, just remember they are the most effective firearm organization in the world:
This site might educate you on how complex CCW is in the US and what a person must keep up with to remain lawful:
Sigs Guy said:Actually, firearms proliferation does cause a burden on the healthcare system. As for drugs, if your not hurting anyone you should be able to do whatever you want correct?
Actually on a topic on blueline, most police officers there said they wouldn't want to carry their firearms around off duty.
You mean the undercover fascist regime aiming to take away guns from farmers/hunters? With all of the nazi comparisons this is the best I could come up with.
The NRA, ensuring that mentally unstable people can get firearms as quickly and easily as possible for over a century.
recceguy said:Like I said earlier about painting with a broad brush...............you've just proven your bias and are not worth engaging. You do not want discussion, or fact. Your last post read like 'The ABC's of Internet Trolling.'
Sigs Guy said:Actually, firearms proliferation does cause a burden on the healthcare system. As for drugs, if your not hurting anyone you should be able to do whatever you want correct?