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Better late than never
Author: TriSec    Date: 10/31/2023 13:56:59

Good Morning.

Ah sorry - busy Tuesday already. Had a flat tire that needed changing, laundry to do, and I have an interview for a winter job in a few hours.

But we can still jump right in, and as always - it's the gift that keeps on giving.


You have probably heard that the person involved in the mass shooting in Maine was an Army Reservist. Like many shootings, the warning signs were there - but of course they were all ignored.


LEWISTON, Maine — Five months before the deadliest mass shooting in Maine’s history, the gunman’s family alerted the sheriff that they were becoming “concerned” about his deteriorating mental health while he had access to firearms, authorities said Monday.

After the alert, the Sagadohoc County Sheriff’s Office reached out to officials of Robert Card’s Army Reserve unit, which assured deputies that they would speak to Card and make sure he got medical attention, Sheriff Joel Merry said.

***

Card underwent a mental health evaluation last summer after he began acting erratically at an Army training facility in New York, officials said. A bulletin sent to police shortly after last week’s attack said Card had been committed to a mental health facility for two weeks after “hearing voices and threats to shoot up” a military base.

***

Rick LaChapelle, owner of Coastal Defense Firearms, said Card purchased a suppressor, also called a silencer, online and arranged to pick it up at his shop.

Card already had submitted information to the federal government to purchase it, and federal authorities had approved the sale to that point, he said.

When Card filled out the form at LaChapelle’s gun shop to pick up the silencer Aug. 5, he answered “yes” to the question: “Have you ever been adjudicated as a mental defective OR have you ever been committed to a mental institution?”


“As soon as he answered that ‘yes’ we know automatically that this is disqualifying, he’s not getting a silencer today,” LaChapelle said.

Silencers are more heavily regulated under federal law than most firearms. Federal law requires buyers to apply with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives and be approved. The typical wait time is between six and eight months, said Mark Collins, federal policy director at the gun violence prevention group Brady.


Silencers are more heavily regulated under federal law than most firearms.

Go ahead, read that again.

There are many things wrong here.
 

2 comments (Latest Comment: 10/31/2023 21:17:25 by TriSec)
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