#1 2023-10-05 22:42:41
A grandfather who was officiating a wedding in Nebraska is facing charges after accidentally shooting his 12-year-old grandson during the ceremony, officials said. . . .
The 45 COLT ammunition was a blank, but [62-year-old Michael] Gardener "put black powder into the casing and then glued it," the chief deputy added. "And what we believe, is the glue is what injured the child," he said.
Offline
#2 2023-10-05 22:47:05
So, he's an idiot but, just by the skin of his teeth, he's not a complete idiot.
Offline
#3 2023-10-06 05:17:22
Baywolfe wrote:
So, he's an idiot but, just by the skin of his teeth, he's not a complete idiot.
I don't think it's his skin we should be worried about.
Also: https://www.cnn.com/2023/10/06/us/wisco … index.html
Last edited by BorderCount (2023-10-06 05:18:36)
Offline
#4 2023-10-07 13:16:31
I have no problem with guns, but I do have problems with idiots with guns, or nutters.
Offline
#5 2023-10-07 17:30:08
Wouldn't it be nice to make it harder for nutters to GET guns, then?
Offline
#6 2023-10-09 14:46:16
Me Being A Smart Ass:
Insurrectionist, Violent Felons, Child Abusers (physical/sexual), Domestic Violence Perpetrators, Animal Abusers IMVP would be totally acceptable to be prohibited from having a firearm. Anyone who has proved him/herself to be unreliable in these fields. Hard Core 2A's would disagree.
Offline
#7 2023-10-09 18:24:25
Hard Core 2As want us to devolve back to around 1775 so they can have another revolution and make the white people own everything again. Although there were plenty of white people that didn't own shit back then.
We're awash in a sea of guns, almost 50% of households in American have at least one gun. The Texas gun swap meets are selling or trading thousands of weapons every weekend. None of this shit is on any books anymore. Who knows how many guns are really out there.
I remember an Isaac Asimov short story where benevolent aliens made everyone's knowledge of nuclear energy disappear and regressed any evidence it ever did. This did this to slow us down before we blew ourselves up (tells you the time era of the story). Wouldn't it be interesting to see what would happen if every gun disappeared along with the knowledge of what they were.
Offline
#9 2023-11-27 16:46:25
Offline
#11 2023-11-28 14:29:18
Mine never looked like that!
Offline
#13 2024-01-18 16:59:34
Offline
#14 2024-01-20 19:50:20
Offline
#15 2024-01-20 19:57:44
It Seems That A Bit Of Sensible Coverage Is Happening:
Offline
#16 2024-01-20 21:26:05
I have no problem with concealed carry. It's the open carry assholes here in Texas that worry me. Nothing like living in a society where there's no way to tell who the bad guys are. (cops are necessary evils, not necessarily bad guys)
Offline
#17 2024-01-21 10:57:46
Open carry is scary and provocative. It's what we have here in Virginia.
Offline
#18 2024-01-21 16:06:35
It goes county by county here in Oregun. My county happens to be an open carry county, and in all of the years I have lived here, I have only seen 1 person do so.
Offline
#19 2024-01-22 15:34:54
I followed a guy into a local Walmart just this week. He had what looked like a Glock 9 on his hip. But he wasn't carrying an AR-15, so I didn't worry too much. Not too long ago, I ate dinner in a restaurant with my wife and only after ordering I noticed a guy with a pistol strapped to his thigh. He definitely wasn't law enforcement. So it is not really uncommon here.
Offline
#20 2024-02-08 18:57:52
Offline
#22 2024-02-21 18:22:35
Offline
#23 2024-04-22 15:40:43
School shootings in the US: Fast facts
By Alex Leeds Matthews, CNN
Updated: 2:37 PM EDT, Mon April 22, 2024
Source: CNN
There have been at least 18 school shootings in the United States so far this year, as of April 18. Four were on college campuses, and 14 were on K-12 school grounds. The incidents left nine people dead and at least 25 others injured, according to CNN’s analysis of events reported by the Gun Violence Archive, Education Week and Everytown for Gun Safety.
CNN cross checks these reports of school shootings against school and police accounts and media reports. All incidents of gun violence are included if they occurred on school property, from kindergartens through colleges/universities, and at least one person was shot, not including the shooter. School property includes but is not limited to, buildings, fields, parking lots, stadiums and buses. Accidental discharges of firearms are included, as long as at least one person is shot, but not if the sole shooter is law enforcement or school security.
In the first year of the pandemic, when schools were closed, there was a major decline in gun violence incidents on school grounds. Since then, recent years saw a stark increase in school shootings, with 2021, 2022 and 2023 all setting records since at least 2008. There were at least 82 incidents in 2023, but 2022 was one of the deadliest years, with 46 fatalities, according to CNN’s analysis. That year saw the shooting at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas, where 19 students and two educators were killed and more than a dozen others were injured.
Students and educators have engaged in activism around the issue of gun violence, and some educators have quit the profession.
Some states in the south have seen the highest rate of school shootings relative to their populations since 2008, according to CNN’s analysis. Washington, DC had the highest rate — 5 total shootings, more than 0.7 per 100,000 people — while Texas had the most overall with 58 school shootings. Meanwhile, just five states — Montana, Wyoming, New Hampshire, Vermont and Rhode Island — had no school shootings in that period, according to CNN’s analysis.
Offline
#24 2024-04-22 17:47:13
Lunacy may actually be endemic to the soil, to the air here in the US. I have long considered that this country was founded on Genocide, Slavery and an imported Class System. What strikes me is that while we have such high numbers for gun deaths, it has gotten worse due in part to economic disparities, social pressures/changes etc.
Knife deaths/Beating Deaths far outnumber Rifle Deaths. It is a fact. Violence is as American as Apple Pie. This violence is not just regulated to guns and knives, but social systems/constructs.
Look at the numbers of people who die from drug overdoses. Seriously, I could run you stats but guns and knives are amateur numbers. Death by Medical Misadventures again are much higher. I bring these issues up as they are part and partial to the same problems. When you have Socialism for the Rich, and Social Darwinism for the rest, well... the consequences are writ large.
We do excel at something of course: https://www.datapandas.org/ranking/coun … al-killers ... I bring this up because this is about the mental health of a society. Seriously, the US is fucked.
Offline
#26 2024-04-24 12:52:10
The majority of mass murders in the last several years has been white guys, with right wing views. Prove me wrong.
Offline
#27 2024-04-25 18:08:27
DmtDusty wrote:
The majority of mass murders in the last several years has been white guys, with right wing views. Prove me wrong.
But, what about THIS MEME???????
Offline
#28 2024-04-29 16:58:08
If only they had guns too... wait!
‘Numerous’ officers shot in ‘active situation’ in Charlotte, North Carolina, police say
By Devon M. Sayers and Shawn Nottingham, CNN
Updated: 4:18 PM EDT, Mon April 29, 2024
Source: CNN
“Numerous law enforcement officers” have been shot in an “active situation” in Charlotte, North Carolina, police say.
“The scene is still active. Avoid the area. Many roads are closed for faster ambulance transport. Please cooperate with authorities,” the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department said on X.
The incident is at the 5000 block of Galway Drive, police said, and a SWAT team is on scene. Police said the “threat is isolated” to that area and asked neighborhood residents to shelter-in-place.
“The US Marshals Fugitive Task Force which is comprised of several agencies in the Charlotte area was attempting to serve a warrant” when shots were fired, according to another X post from the police department.
“Multiple law enforcement officers have been struck by the gunfire and are being transported to the hospital,” police said.
Police said “gunfire continues on the scene” in an earlier post on X.
Charlotte Mayor Vi Lyles said in a statement she is “deeply saddened by the shooting that occurred that involved Charlotte-Mecklenburg police officers and US Marshals today.”
“I ask that all Charlotteans keep them, the other injured officers, and their families in your thoughts and prayers during this incredibly difficult time,” Lyles said.
This is a developing story and will be updated.
Offline
#29 2024-04-30 00:49:12
Mistakes were certainly made.
Offline
#30 2024-04-30 11:50:47
Here's the latest...
4 law enforcement officers were killed in shooting at a home in Charlotte, North Carolina. 4 other officers are hospitalized
By Devon M. Sayers, Shawn Nottingham and Emma Tucker, CNN
Updated: 11:23 AM EDT, Tue April 30, 2024
Source: CNN
Four officers were killed in a shooting while attempting to serve a warrant at a home in Charlotte, North Carolina, including one deputy US marshal and two local task force officers, authorities say.
Four other law enforcement officers were shot during the incident, Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Chief Johnny Jennings said Monday evening.
An internal law enforcement memo reviewed by CNN shows officers are looking for the person who bought the firearm used in the shooting to potentially bring federal charges.
Law enforcement agents are still processing the scene, the memo says, and will use that evidence to help in their search.
The compound tragedy adds to a growing list of officers shot and killed in the line of duty this year. At least 98 officers were shot in the line of duty from January through March, according to the Fraternal Order of Police, an organization representing US law enforcement officers. Ten of those officers died.
The shooting in Charlotte happened as members of a US Marshals fugitive task force were serving a warrant for possession of firearm by a convicted felon in the Shannon Park neighborhood, Jennings said.
The officers were met with gunfire from a “high-powered rifle” and returned fire, fatally shooting a suspect in the front yard of the house. Jennings said the task force had been serving the warrant to that suspect.
“As officers approached, they received additional gunfire from inside the residence,” the police chief said.
Three members of the marshals’ task force were fatally shot, Jennings said. One of those killed was a deputy US marshal, the US Marshals Service told CNN in a statement.
Two of the officers killed, Sam Poloche and Alden Elliott, worked for the state’s Department of Adult Correction, according to Todd Ishee, the department’s secretary. Both were 14-year veterans of the department assigned to the task force. Poloche leaves behind a wife and two children. Elliott leaves behind a wife and one child.
One of the fatally wounded officers, Joshua Eyer, died from his injuries “with his wife and family by his side” after fighting for several hours, police said. The six-year veteran of the CMPD is survived by his wife and 3-year-old son, Jennings said during a Monday evening news conference.
“Officer Eyer was 6-year veteran with the CMPD, and I am truly grateful for his bravery, service and ultimate sacrifice. He will never be forgotten, and we are forever indebted,” Jennings posted on X.
“It was just last month I was in this very room, congratulating Officer Eyer for becoming officer of the month,” Jennings said during the news conference. “He certainly dedicated his life and gave his life to serve our citizens.”
The injured Charlotte-Mecklenburg police officers were in stable condition, Jennings said.
Authorities identified the deceased suspect as 39-year-old Terry Clark Hughes Jr. He was wanted for possession of a firearm by a felon and two counts of felony flee to elude out of Lincoln County, North Carolina, police said.
The internal law enforcement memo gives a detailed outline of Monday’s shooting, revealing law enforcement agents approached the suspect outside of a home. Hughes retreated into the home before he could be arrested, it said.
As law enforcement agents set up a perimeter around the residence, the memo said, Hughes opened fire with what was likely an AR-15-style rifle from a second-story window, striking 8 officers, the memo said.
Hughes then jumped out of the second story window onto an awning and officers shot and killed Hughes, the memo said.
Police initially believed there might have been another suspect shooting from inside the residence, but Jennings told CNN on Tuesday it’s likely Hughes was moving through different parts of the home.
“Unfortunately, this individual decided to greet them with gunfire, and it just turned into a tragic event for the officers who were originally out on the scene and the officers who responded to try and assist,” Jennings told CNN.
Two women, including a 17-year-old, were brought outside of the home after police secured the scene, Jennings added. The women were taken to the Charlotte Law Enforcement Center to be interviewed by detectives, police said.
“We are very early in the investigation,” Jennings said Monday. “CMPD will lead this investigation, we still have a lot to uncover, a lot of questions that are not answered right now.”
Officers killed in line of duty was highest on record in 2023, data shows
There were 378 officers shot in the line of duty in 2023 – the highest number on record since the Fraternal Order of Police began tracking the data. They included 46 officers killed by gunfire and 20 killed in ambush-style attacks, according to the Fraternal Order of Police.
“Many will often look at this data and just see numbers, but we MUST remember that they represent heroes — fathers, mothers, sons, and daughters,” Fraternal Order of Police President Patrick Yoes said after the organization released the data. “This scale of violence against our officers is horrifying and simply unsustainable. It is no wonder that our profession is facing a recruitment and retention crisis.”
In 2022, there were 331 officers shot in the line of duty, including 62 by gunfire and 32 killed in ambush-style attacks, according to the Fraternal Order of Police. The year before, 346 officers were shot in the line of duty, including 63 by gunfire, the data shows.
The increased violence against police officers in the past few years mirrors the broader rise in shootings and violence in the US since 2020.
Criminology experts such as Thomas Abt, a senior fellow at the Council on Criminal Justice, have cited a few potential explanations: the fraying of social connections due to the Covid-19 pandemic; the murder of George Floyd and resulting rise in public distrust of police and a surge in firearm sales and gun ownership.
While theories behind any violent crime vary, the FBI has tried to piece together an explanation of why some people attack police officers.
A 2016 report, summarized in an FBI document released to law enforcement agencies in May 2017, examined 50 shootings of police officers and found that the assailants’ two key motives were a desire to escape arrest (40%) and hatred of the police (28%), CNN previously reported.
‘They are heroes,’ Biden says
The police chief described the shooting as “the most tragic one” he had been involved with in his 32-year-long law enforcement career.
“I can’t remember an incident where three law enforcement officers were killed in the same incident, as well as one in critical condition and additional (officers) that were shot and injured,” Jennings said.
President Joe Biden spoke with North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper after the shooting, the White House said Monday. Later, Biden issued a statement calling the officers “heroes.”
“They are heroes who made the ultimate sacrifice, rushing into harm’s way to protect us,” the president said. “We mourn for them and their loved ones. And we pray for the recoveries of the courageous officers who were wounded.”
Charlotte Mayor Vi Lyles said in a statement she is “deeply saddened by the shooting that occurred that involved Charlotte-Mecklenburg police officers and US Marshals today.”
“I ask that all Charlotteans keep them, the other injured officers, and their families in your thoughts and prayers during this incredibly difficult time,” Lyles said.
In a post on X, the US Marshals Service wrote, “Our hearts are heavy tonight for the lives shattered by today’s horrific shooting in Charlotte, NC. We mourn the loss of our Deputy and two Task Force Officers. We are grateful for all the support, and we keep the families and colleagues of all officers involved, in our thoughts.”
This story has been updated with additional information.
Offline
#31 2024-04-30 17:32:12
CNN wrote:
346 officers were shot in the line of duty, including 63 by gunfire
Maybe I'm confused, but what were the other 283 shot with, if not gunfire?
Offline
#32 2024-04-30 21:02:19
BorderCount wrote:
CNN wrote:
346 officers were shot in the line of duty, including 63 by gunfire
Maybe I'm confused, but what were the other 283 shot with, if not gunfire?
I think that they think "gunfire" is plural, more than one person at a time shooting at them? I want to know how many were shot by friendly fire, even unintentional.
Offline
#35 2024-05-04 12:31:37
JetRx wrote:
Fled wrote:
I followed a guy into a local Walmart just this week. He had what looked like a Glock 9 on his hip. But he wasn't carrying an AR-15, so I didn't worry too much.
Oh,rlly?
https://cruelery.com/uploads/thumbs/307_img_1660.jpeg
Oh my!
Offline