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AP: Some stolen US military guns used in violent crimes
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Driving for drunks - The Citizen
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Some stolen US military guns used in violent crimes around the nation
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Nearly 2K military guns stolen, some used for violent crimes
By Kristin M. Hall, James Laporta, Justin Pritchard and Justin Myers
Published
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WASHINGTON (AP) - Pulling a pistol from his waistband, the young man spun his human shield toward police. Don’t do it! a pursuing officer pleaded. The young man complied, releasing the bystander and tossing the gun, which skittered across the city street and then into the hands of police.
Pulling a pistol from his waistband, the young man spun his human shield toward police.
“Don’t do it!” a pursuing officer pleaded. The young man complied, releasing the bystander and tossing the gun, which skittered across the city street and then into the hands of police.
They soon learned that the 9-millimeter Beretta had a rap sheet. Bullet casings linked it to four shootings, all of them in Albany, N.Y.
And there was something else. The pistol was U.S. Army property, a weapon intended for use against America’s enemies, not on its streets.
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The Army couldn’t say how its Beretta M9 got to New York’s capital. Until the June 2018 police foot chase, the Army didn’t even realize someone had stolen the gun. Inventory records checked by investigators said the M9 was 600 miles away safe inside Ft. Bragg in North Carolina.