Alpo
Member
"for a while"?
You mean they don't do it that way now?
You mean they don't do it that way now?
Love "The Rifleman" intro, where Chuck fires more rounds from the 1892 Winchester lever rifle than the magazine can hold. Does he fire 12 or 13?
YouTube
Sorry to call you on this, but you are just wrong. The main charge on the battleship guns was not black powder for WWII era guns, but rather smokeless powder. ....
No
He
Didn't.
First of all you don't keep a given weapon your entire career. You get issued a different weapon at every new duty station.
I have no idea what he told you or what was in his home but it was not a USMC issued weapon. And I won't even discuss ammunition which is accounted for To. The. Round. ( and people go to jail when they're caught with it)
You have no idea how closely "sensitive items" are monitored. Ft. Carson put the entire 2nd Brigade Combat Team on lockdown for a day and a half over a missing M9. (Berretta) No one from that entire unit (5000 people) was allowed to leave the post and most of them were confined to the barracks until that weapon was found.
Assuming that your late cousin was even allowed to leave post with an issue weapon his entire chain of command would be risking their careers by allowing him to keep that weapon in his quarters. If the weapon were stolen from his private quarters everyone from him up would have to explain how that weapon got out of the arms room.
Not if but when the IG showed up for a spot inventory the unit armorer and everyone from him up would have to explain why that weapon wasn't in the unit arms room. In either case careers would end. No unit armorer (or commander) would ever put their career on the line for that and no E9 would risk pissing his career away to keep an issue weapon at home.
Based on my actual military experience there is nothing you could tell me that would ever make me believe your story.
ETA I put the question to a friend of mine who retired as an E7 who was also in Supply and she said that in her entire career hell would freeze SOLID before what you're describing ever happened
I recall the Vice Presidential candidate Lloyd Benson stating his Army AirCorps issue 1911 on his bedside table This was his when he was a WWII B 17 pilot. Fcourse it may have been BS as he was a Democrat " who supported the Second Amendment".
My Grandson recently found in the attic of an old house belonging to a First World War a 1911 in GI webbing and holster which had a magazine full of ammo ofGI WWI vintage.
In the late 1940's I saw several carbines which had at that time not released through CMP.
The Crook Factory
by Dan Simmons
Good story but really" flipping off the safety on the 357 magnum"
and a belt fed BAR!
...and in pictures from the Vietnam war.