Recovered Stolen

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Mayberry RFD, NC
Trying to post pictures of this newly recovered stolen (I think) M&P. Actually in pretty good shape! Serial Number: 1214##. Our evidence vault people are going to contact the owner to return it.

UPDATE: post 24
 

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Tongue in cheek. Most people on this forum think guns in evidence get hit with a grinder . . .


No, no, no! Not a grinder, an electro pencil. :D BTW, my department DID have an electro pencil that we would allow the public to use to mark their property.

In the 23 plus years I worked there, I never saw it used on a firearm.
 
A museum I belong to received the donation of three weapons from a WWII vet who brought them back or was able to keep what was issued, a Walther P38, a 1911 and an M1, all in great shape.

Except for his driver license number which he engraved on all three.
 
Some departments mark recovered firearms. I have a friend in Lake Charles that had his Hi-Standard target pistol returned and it had an inventory # or case # electro penciled on it.
SWCA 892
 
My Ruger Blackhawk was stolen in 1995 in Baton Rouge LA.
25 years later it turned up in a pawn shop in Kingman AZ.
The officer who filed the initial report , returned it ... he remembered filing the report and still had the photo's I gave him ...I was at the same office address and same phone number 25 years later, He called talked to me and came over ... It didn't have any ID numbers or marks on it ... in fact it looked just like it did 25 years ago , even the sights were set to my pet handload .

You aren't going to believe how happy the owner is going to be to get his S&W back ... I almost cried .
Bless all of you in Law Enforcement.
Gary
 
Stolen from my jurisdiction, found in Wyoming and sent back here to be returned.

We didn't scratch them up in Wyoming 40 years ago, either.

"Officer, how can you identify this as the weapon you recovered from the defendant?"

"By the manufacturer's serial number and description of the firearm as recorded in my contemporaneous field notes."
 
I have a couple of stolen firearm stories. The weirdest one makes me think all the time about buying used firearms. I get called to retrieve a Sig handgun from a pawn shop. I walk into the pawn shop to find the store owner I know and the customer. They were confused on this one. Sometime around 2005 the shop takes the handgun in and the person defaults on the loan. The shop owner did not remember the guy. The gun is twice checked for hits. The gun is sold to a man who keeps it for a few years and decides to trade it back to the shop. Bing, there is the NCIC hit. An investigator a couple hundred miles away comes for the gun and tells me the victim saw the gun in their drawer sometime around the early 2000s and then noticed it was missing in 2006ish. It was reported stolen in 2006 and the person suspected of stealing, a relative of the victim, died of a drug overdose a year later.
 
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