charlie sherrill
Member
It was common for the arresting officer to keep a crime gun after a case had been completed if the judge or one of the prosecutors didn't get it first. Somewhere in the 70's things changed. The weapons then had to be recorded and became the property of the local governing agency. After a case is settled the weapons are either auctioned off or destroyed. I had a few knife and gun murder weapons from those days, mostly junk. I kept them at the time for the memories of a case I was involved in. Then came the horrible boat accident where all were lost, except for the "Machete of Death". Luckily it wasn't on the boat because I had purchased it legally from another department at an auction. I knew the investigator on the case and he told me the victim got hit 37 times. It's got some rust spots on it from all the blood. I've got a few "found guns" where someone throws them down and they are not linked to a crime. Officers around here are still allowed to keep those as long as they report them and they are not linked to a crime. My partner and I picked up seven of them one night in one bar, including a S&W model 36. We gave the customers a little incentive to ditch their guns. I wrote about this here one time. Maybe I will again.