hoss@fol43
Member
This is exactly why I carry a truck gun as my EDC, worn on the outside but pristine on the inside, accurate and yet easily replaced if nessassary...
My favorite is not super expensive so I'd just buy another one.
It is just a crying shame that the dirt bag didn't get his rights between the eyes or center mass. Some folks just don't deserve to have rights. But in this screwed up PC world I feel your pain Brother. Hang in there, and praise your Daughter evertime you can.Real Life.....
My daughter used her's to stop an armed robber from executing her self and 3 fellow employees at her place of business. He had the money, then told them to face the wall and kneel down . Around here they don't like to leave any witnesses to testify at a trial. She said she wasn't going to let him do that .
Police took her gun as evidence. After the first trial , the appeals started, several new trials , more appeals case working up the ladder in appeals courts, etc, etc, etc. Now several years have gone by.
After criminal case, civil case (she shot but didn't kill him) more years go buy....no suit ever gets dismissed...everything must be held as evidence , criminals have their RIGHTS !
Seven or eight years have gone by....she tries to recover her gun.....is told it has been "misplaced"...SORRY !
The criminal has all the rights, you will likely loose you weapon.
DO NOT carry anything you will miss or that is not easily replaceable...not in Louisiana anyway.
True story , I was a witness.
Gary
That just sounds wrong for some reason. To bad the prosecutor couldn't be voted out of office and replace with someone with common sense, go figure.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.