It wouldn't surprise me if CT had a law requiring that they be reported stolen or lost.
They do.
It wouldn't surprise me if CT had a law requiring that they be reported stolen or lost.
If his registered firearms ever turns up in the wrong place & he didn't report the theft it's also gonna suck. Rock & a hard place.Or, now having 20-20 hindsight, I bet he wishes he never would have reported the theft and just ate the loss of the handgun. That law is going to have the effect of others not reporting stolen firearms. And then the politicians will laud themselves and point out how much the law has reduced firearms thefts.
Rule #1 - When given the choice of prosecuting a life long repeat offender or a white citizen who has never been arrested, the system will always go for the latter.
Rule #2 - If anything is ever stolen from your car, the car was locked and the perp must have used a slim jim, hacked the On Star or used some kind of master key to gain access. Never say that the car was not locked.
Rule #3 - If asked whether you have any other firearms, your response should be that you want an attorney and say nothing more
Rule #4 - In case of any doubts, always refer to Rule #1
That's a shame, I was thinking about going boating there.Rule #5 - stay the hell out of Connecticut.
Takes about 5 minutes to put a lockbox in your car. Which if you live in Conneticut you may want to do.
He left a gun in an unlocked car to boot? now thats stupid.
Hypothetically speaking: Rule Number 2 would be absolutely incorrect as far as a cunning and somewhat unethical gun owner might go. Thus no gun ever will have been stolen from his car unless he is in travel status and legally moving firearms locked in his trunk. Really now, wasn't the stolen firearm in his home when stolen, wasn't there a break in, wasn't that glass from a broken window on the floor or pieces of a broken front or back door lock lying there, weren't his drawers and closets opened and belongings strewn about, wasn't the lamp broken, didn't it look as if someone ransacked at least part of his abode by the time the police arrived after he called them to report a stolen firearm from his home? Just all hypothetical as to what a somewhat unethical but cunning gun owner who suffers a loss of a gun due to theft might claim to avoid being arrested and having his other guns seized. I would never do such a thing nor do I recommend that anyone do it but I suppose someone with less than stellar ethics or none at all might try it if there were no video surveillance cameras to suggest a fraudulent report to the police. By the way, fraudulent reports to the police are a criminal act.Rule #1 - When given the choice of prosecuting a life long repeat offender or a white citizen who has never been arrested, the system will always go for the latter.
Rule #2 - If anything is ever stolen from your car, the car was locked and the perp must have used a slim jim, hacked the On Star or used some kind of master key to gain access. Never say that the car was not locked.
Rule #3 - If asked whether you have any other firearms, your response should be that you want an attorney and say nothing more
Rule #4 - In case of any doubts, always refer to Rule #1
I set standards for myself all the time. One of those standards is to be smart enough to at least lock the doors on my car if I am leaving a firearm inside of it. If I ever leave one in my car, that is stolen due to me having left the vehicle unlocked - shame on me for being that moronic.Just wait until somebody decides your standards are too low and feels the need to dictate what measures you must take.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk