You have a beautiful carry gun but what happens to it if you have to use it?

Getting your high price carry pistol confiscated after a self-defense situation is the least of your worries, financially speaking.

Your lawyer fees and the possible civil suit will be vastly more. If you think you can scrape by without an attorney after a justify shooting, you're doing yourself a disservice and opening up to possible prison time...irregardless of justification.

Carry any piece you want whether it'd be a $500 polymer or a $1000+ stainless or a $3000 classic, but you should also have a good amount of savings for legal fees. Owning guns goes beyond the price of the firearm and ammunition, that's just the entry fee.
 
Let me know when you actually use your gun for self defense. Point-oh-one percent will actually be used for self defense.

Don't spend your life with an ugly gun.

Your argument leads to the conclusion I shouldn't carry and gun and instead buy some fashion accessories that are pretty. Maybe a bejeweled purse?

Better yet why not have a beautifully crafted gun out of lightweight polymer that doesn't even fire? Then I can stare at its beauty every day


Nah ill just pet my ugly gun every night because I know it will do what's intended if I ever happen to need it
 
Your argument leads to the conclusion I shouldn't carry and gun and instead buy some fashion accessories that are pretty.

Statistically speaking . . . the NRA reports in The Armed Citizen "that firearms are used more than two million times a year for personal protection, and that the presence of a firearm, without a shot being fired, prevents crime in many instances."

"A third point to consider is that the vast majority—up to 98 percent, according to More Guns, Less Crime author John Lott—of armed-citizen events end without a shot being fired. For many criminals, the mere sight of a gun reminds them of urgent business the next county over." - NRA Family | The Top 2 Myths about Self-Defense for Seniors

Y'all ain't going to shoot anybody. Your gun is not going to be taken from you. A citizen actually shooting someone is a fringe event. Worrying about what will happen to your gun in an extremely unlikely event is paranoia.

Unless you live in a blue state.

You can spend your days with a Glock, or with a Colt. I'm saying spend them with what you like, not what you don't care about. Life is too short to carry an ugly gun.
 
Hello, I'm on the collect smith revolvers and carry a glock 19&23 train. It's true about the use it and loose it. My dad @ 93yrs decided to take the easy way out with his trusted I frame terrier he carried as a correction officer for 35 years. It took a year and dozens of phone calls to get it back!
 
Most agree that no matter where you reside..if you use it, you may as well count on not getting it back for a long time, if ever. Pretty sad that it's the intended victim who will be unfairly punished.
I trust Glocks more than all other semiautos. The G29's 15 rds of 10 mm are better (for me) than 5 - 6 rds of .38 or .357, so it's what I' carry...but the Glock 26 and the 640 are carried on certain occasions.
 

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My 442, a certain M-65 and a Glock 26 get carried most often, not because they are a dime a dozen, but because for me they are a really good fit for what they are intended for. If I'm fortunate, they never get used for defense. IF they do, I'm going to be concerned with more pressing matters than whether a pistol gets dropped, scratched or peed on by a public employee. If my high end 1911's were a better fit (for me) for the job, I wouldn't bat an eye at carrying them.

Guess I'm just lucky that I'm a cheap date.
 
I went thru the thread on the perfect handgun and there are some beautiful guns there. Have you ever thought about what will happen to it if you have to use it? Even if it is self defense, The law will probably take it until the case is resolved. It will not treated kindly. If you get it back there is a big possibility that it will be worse for wear. For this reason, I carry a gun(yes I have carry permit) that I can do without and I did not spend that much money on.

What are your thoughts?

Yes we will take it, NO it will not be mistreated. Once the shooting is determined to be lawful and justifiable then it will be returned. As a Detective who has investigated this types of shootings I try to get the firearm returned as soon as the investigation is over. I have to get a DA's approval and that's the hold up.....takes about a WEEK after the investigation is complete. So you might get your gun back a week or two after the incident.
 
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Most agree that no matter where you reside..if you use it, you may as well count on not getting it back for a long time, if ever. Pretty sad that it's the intended victim who will be unfairly punished.I trust Glocks more than all other semiautos. The G29's 15 rds of 10 mm are better (for me) than 5 - 6 rds of .38 or .357, so it's what I' carry...but the Glock 26 and the 640 are carried on certain occasions.

WOW.....for what reason would law enforcement keep your weapon indefinitely for? Once it's justified it's returned to the owner. In my part of NC we have had a few people defend themselves with a firearm from intruders and guess what? they got their firearms back! I have investigated these types of incidents and once it's determined to be a lawful shooting WE NO LONGER HAVE THE RIGHT TO KEEP THE WEAPON
 
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I can always buy another gun, but I can't buy another life....

I don't care what the value of the firearm, as long as it does what it was intended. I can't undo losing my life or someone I love. With carry guns valued at $350 to $3500, my life depends on the reliability of that firearm. I can replace a firearm, I can't bring back myself or a family member. Simple equation for me.

Jeff
 
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This comment is 100% wrong. Even LEO guns used in shootings are taken as evidence. The police will take your gun... maybe not forever and if returned with an only an evidence tag attached, consider yourself lucky. If you gun is sent to a forensic lab it will receive additional engraving by way of a case number.

Yes LEO guns are taken, at the scene you get one just like it for your holster, yes civilian guns are taken but if it's a lawful shooting then why 1. Would it not be returned to the owner? and 2. Why would it be sent to a forensics lab? engraved with a case number? POSSIBLY if someone is charged......

Geesh......
 
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I think people way over-think this. The vast majority of justifiable self defense shootings are pretty cut and dried. The authorities aren't going to confiscate your hand gun if you're clearly in the right.

Finally!! Again, what right does law enforcement have to keep your firearm if the shooting is justifiable?
 
Where I live, it is the policy of the Prosecutor's Office that any gun involved in any death, justified, suicide, whatever is held for 75years. Have to make sure it is specifically mentioned by s/n in wills for at least 2, maybe 3 generations.

That said monetary value per se should be of minor importance , within any vaguely usual context. Carry what is effective, and you shoot well. Think twice about family heirlooms, or very rare and irreplacable.

Holy **** that's one of the dumbest things I've ever read. Their policy doesn't trump state law.....
 
Holy **** that's one of the dumbest things I've ever read. Their policy doesn't trump state law.....

I'd like to know who, in their right mind cares about the value of a firearm IF they've had to use it to defend themselves or another? Metal is metal and historical value, ok I see a loss, but the last thing I'm worried about is not being cleared of a shooting if, indeed, I had to use a firearm. As I stated before, I have handguns that are worth $350 (but reliable) and have Colts worth in the thousands. My or my wife's life trumps everything. Maybe as a VN Vet my mindset is skewed some but the bottom line it the preservation of life no matter the cost of a material item. That's about all I can offer without rehashing comments already made. I'd hate to lose my '66 Colt Python, she's a beauty, but then again I don't everyday carry her. If used in a home invasion, so be it and I'll go through the process. Law Shield money well spent for me as I don't have $15,000 minimum to lauch a defense ad that's probably a lowball figure. Be aware, be safe but never take anything for granted due to the cost of an item.
 
I went thru the thread on the perfect handgun and there are some beautiful guns there. Have you ever thought about what will happen to it if you have to use it? Even if it is self defense, The law will probably take it until the case is resolved. It will not treated kindly. If you get it back there is a big possibility that it will be worse for wear. For this reason, I carry a gun(yes I have carry permit) that I can do without and I did not spend that much money on.

What are your thoughts?

Sounds like the theory that if I owned a Ferrari, I shouldn't drive it when the roads are busy because it might get damaged if somebody runs into me. Keep it in the garage where it is safe, and only trailer it out to drive it at track days....

First, if I'm going to carry and place my life in the hands of a Glock, why shouldn't I be doing most of my shooting with that Glock, instead of my Browning High Power or Dan Wesson CBOB? I intend to do most of my shooting with what I carry for self defense the most. Which would be the High Power in the urban settings, the 10mm CBOB in the rural settings.

Second, as has been said numerous times here already, the value of any gun is insignificant compared to the value of your life.

Third, if your handgun is seized as evidence, it won't be treated kindly? Says who? It seems to me that depends on the jurisdiction you are in, and how professional they are. In my time, handguns went into heavy plastic evidence bags, which then went into a specific evidence locker. The evidence log was used to record when and who went to look at it, who logged it out of the evidence locker and when, etc. And we also knew that defense counsel would have a field day if ANY piece of evidence had markedly changed in appearance or any other characteristic from the time it was seized.

So I have no doubt that there are some police departments out there populated with Neanderthals as far as evidence is concerned, but for the most part professionalism and the courts demand something other than abusing evidence however you feel like.

And finally, like so many others have already said, if I actually have to fire a handgun in self defense, what the police department does with that handgun and how valuable it is to me are going to be the absolutely least of my worries.
 
Better it gets an idiot scratch from me putting it into the safe one night than risking letting my toddler find it when I'm not looking, or some bad guy stealing it while I'm at work and using it to kill someone over five bucks worth of heroin. Better it gets holster wear from being on my person an in my control than it falling out and getting into the same toddler's hands. Better it gets scuffed up, scraped, rusty, or never comes back at all from a police evidence locker than losing a member of my family, or them losing me. I put what the gun is there to protect way, way before the value of the gun, sentimental or otherwise, and it's their value to me, not the value of the gun that dictates what I'm willing to carry.
 
Yeah it's dumb, but the State Law is dumb too. The respective States Atty has authority to set holds, and under state law the default response is to melt everything.

Not quite the same as the Ferrari scenario, but I won't drive my classic Jeep CJ in the snow. I can't control the other non-driving idiots from sliding into me, and I wouldn't be able to replace it. So the Explorer or Cherokee gets driving in snow duty.
 
This thread has had some legs.....................

But I feel like we seem to be missing the middle ground..........

No I would not carry a 3 1/2" Registered Magnum for Concealed Carry.....OK maybe to a "Keith .44" Texas BBQ...... but not concealed :D........ but that doesn't mean I have to carry a "Saturday Night Special" cus it's inexpensive/cheap.............................

the middle ground IMO is : there are a lot of "nice guns" that can be easily replaced for $500-700 in today marketplace ( or are already in your safe).....a 2 1/2" or 4" 66/19........ Sig 220/245......................
 
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That is how I got into Glocks!

I used to carry one variation or another of a nicely built 1911 pattern pistol; and my friends used to frequently chide me about hoping I'd never have to actually use it; so, finally, I went out and bought my first Glock.

I really hated carrying that Glock; but slowly (very slowly) I got used to shooting it; and, little by little, I made an improvement here and another improvement there, until after I finally got that Glock to be, 'tolerable', I ended up with a $1500 dollar Glock. (There's no logic!) :p

Not quite as bad as a custom-built 1911 pattern semi-auto; but close enough for me to realize that old habits die hard; and, 'Ya just got 'a shoot what ya just got 'a shoot.' So, hopefully, I won't ever need to actually use it - Right?

I CCW a Glock 17. If I lose it for awhile, I get my Springfield Armory M1911A1 5-inch out and CCW it. But I do love my G17. But my SA has seven cartridges with 255gr bullets that leave the muzzle at 850 FPS. I trust that my SA .45 can handle up to five felons.
 
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