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View Full Version : Buffalo, NY wants to seize guns from deceased family members



skorpion
11-14-2014, 08:44 AM
Buffalo, NY officials apparently skim the obituaries and then compare the names of the deceased with those in gun owner databases so they can go confiscate the firearms. Family members of the deceased supposedly have 15 days to secure the necessary paperwork in order to attempt to keep the guns: That is, if they even know about this process.

Proof that registration leads to confiscation:

http://www.foxnews.com/us/2014/11/14/buffalo-police-search-for-firearms-at-home-after-funerals/?intcmp=latestnews


Derrenda said guns pose a threat if their owner is no longer alive to safeguard them, especially if a recently-deceased gun owner's home is burglarized.

"At times they lay out there and the family is not aware of them and they end up just out on the street," he said, according to WGRZ.com.
Yes, because the minute those pesky guns find out about their owner dying, they get up and walk right out of the house!

Helen Keller
11-14-2014, 08:48 AM
http://hardtickettohomevideo.files.wordpress.com/2013/03/clarence-boddicker.jpg?w=388&h=217

Krupski
11-14-2014, 11:04 AM
Buffalo, NY officials apparently skim the obituaries and then compare the names of the deceased with those in gun owner databases so they can go confiscate the firearms. Family members of the deceased supposedly have 15 days to secure the necessary paperwork in order to attempt to keep the guns: That is, if they even know about this process.

Proof that registration leads to confiscation:

http://www.foxnews.com/us/2014/11/14/buffalo-police-search-for-firearms-at-home-after-funerals/?intcmp=latestnews



Here's the mayor of Buffalo, NY, Byron Brown



http://voiceofniagara.files.wordpress.com/2012/03/mayorbyronbrown212.jpg


He was one of Michael "Gas Chamber Jew" Bloomberg's "Mayors Against Guns". Figures.

The guy is a real dickhead. And, you can wet his lips and stick him to the wall easily.

I don't live in Buffalo, but I do have a NY CHL (aka "Pistol Permit"). My oldest son also has one, and all my pistols are also on his, so if I croak, they remain in the family.

Plus, my wife knows "No warrant, No entry", and she knows that the rifles and pistols are all legal and not "eligible" to be snagged by the cops.

And if they disagree, well there's another alternative.....

Krupski
11-14-2014, 11:11 AM
Yes, because the minute those pesky guns find out about their owner dying, they get up and walk right out of the house!

My now deceased nextdoor neighbor was a Vietnam Veteran and (I don't know how) he brought back his M-16 rifle. It was a nice one... the older triangle handguard SP-1 type (except it wasn't an SP-1, it was a military M16). I saw it and tried not to drool as I fondled it.

One of his friends (a fellow VN Veteran) now has it, and I have no idea where that guy is now.

Gosh... a horrible, illegal full auto MACHINE GUN!!! And all the years he had it in his house, it hurt absolutely ZERO people.

Quite amazing, when you think of all the guns that get up at night, sneak out of the house and start shooting people all by themselves...

alismith
11-14-2014, 02:39 PM
Quite amazing, when you think of all the guns that get up at night, sneak out of the house and start shooting people all by themselves...

This is why the government wants to collect them...so they can't do that.

An interesting quote I found:

"If guns kill people,
then pencils misspell words,
car make people drive drunk, and
spoons make people fat."

tank_monkey
11-14-2014, 05:12 PM
This is of course outrageous. I (unfortunately) live in a upscale neighborhood that is predominantly ultra liberal. Ugh. But my neighbors DO have the sense to call me and ask me to assess the value of the gun collections that belonged to their recently deceased grandpas or uncles or fathers or brothers. I can usually tell them what's low value and what could be HIGH value collectible. BUT 15 DAYS?!?!?!?!?! Many funerals take more than 15 days to organize and plan after someone dies. The family is still grieving. What kind of fucking psycho demands the guns RIGHT AFTER the death of a loved one?

I also tell the owners that they will get a lot more money selling the guns on an auction site and selling to the END USER rather than taking a 50% or more dollar hit by selling it on consignment to a gun store. I know of a local gun store that won't pay more than $250 for ANY used or new in box semi auto pistol. USP, Walther P99, FN FiveseveN, doesn't matter. Fuck that. Sell it to an end user on a place like Gun broker and transfer it legally.

davepool
11-14-2014, 09:49 PM
My now deceased nextdoor neighbor was a Vietnam Veteran and (I don't know how) he brought back his M-16 rifle. It was a nice one... the older triangle handguard SP-1 type (except it wasn't an SP-1, it was a military M16). I saw it and tried not to drool as I fondled it.

One of his friends (a fellow VN Veteran) now has it, and I have no idea where that guy is now.

Gosh... a horrible, illegal full auto MACHINE GUN!!! And all the years he had it in his house, it hurt absolutely ZERO people.

Quite amazing, when you think of all the guns that get up at night, sneak out of the house and start shooting people all by themselves...

My dad brought his M1 Garand back from korea, i didn't find out he had it until i was 21 when my grandfather died and we went his house and got it out the attic where it had been stashed for 20 years, he wouldn't tell me how he got it home and that was the last time i saw it.

I heard stories from my Marine buddies who sent home M-16's in pieces sealed up in speaker cabinets, they claimed it was lost in a fire fight, got issued a new one and had to pay back the $127 for losing it.

alismith
11-14-2014, 10:18 PM
My dad brought his M1 Garand back from korea, i didn't find out he had it until i was 21 when my grandfather died and we went his house and got it out the attic where it had been stashed for 20 years, he wouldn't tell me how he got it home and that was the last time i saw it.

I heard stories from my Marine buddies who sent home M-16's in pieces sealed up in speaker cabinets, they claimed it was lost in a fire fight, got issued a new one and had to pay back the $127 for losing it.

A deceased friend of mine was a Viet Nam vet and served as an MP. When he was coming back to the states, he decided to try and bring back a few AK's he managed to "find" around camp. He wrapped them in clothes and stuffed them in a duffel bag. While getting ready to board the plane, he noticed other MP's going through peoples' bags, searching for contraband. He got nervous and put that duffel bag elsewhere. When it was his turn to be checked, the MP's saw he was a fellow MP and didn't even bother searching his stuff...just motioned him through. He was really upset that, had he known they weren't going to check him, he could have brought back some neat shit...