https://archive.is/2023.04.17-155007/https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2023-04-17/mayor-karen-bass-calls-for-9500-lapd-officers
In an interview, Bass said she fears the accidental release of photographs of LAPD officers, recently provided by the department in response to a public records request, could accelerate the outflow. If the city fails to fix its recruitment and retention problems, the LAPD could easily fall below 9,000 officers in the coming months, Bass said.
Lol.
I highly doubt that those guns were "securely stored" if they were taken that easily.
Yeah I could be talking out of my ass here but aren't there alot of set ups where you can easily lock away your guns in for all intents and purposes un-openable cases?
I would bet that if they were 'secured' and stolen, that is the set up. Otherwise, even light gun safes normally need like three or four guys or a dolly to carry. Not exactly inconspicuous.
everything can be opened. Whether you be a Lockpicking Lawyer or a dude with power tools.
That being said, still most likely they weren't secured properly at all to begin with.
I wonder how often the guns were simply unsecured in a drawer or something. She has 5 kids and she's now 69. I wonder how often she had (and has) kids and teenagers at her house. I can't believe how cavalier many people are with their guns.
The largest source of stolen guns is from parked cars. Make gun buyers take responsibility when their weapons are used in violent crime and access to illegal guns would go down significantly.
That would fact would have never occurred to me - even though for me it's sort of obvious in retrospect.
Yeah it's a common argument of "most guns in crimes are obtained illegally!" but people never stop to think how those guns are obtained illegally. Straw purchasing and gun thefts (mostly from unattended plain sight guns in cars) are some of the biggest issues there.
It's part of why gun control policies are so stupid, they address what the legal buyer can get but rarely ever penalize the legal buyer for being irresponsible and allowing it to fall into someone else's hands. Straw purchasing laws at least try to address that, although they're pretty weak. Studies tend to suggest that gun dealers are pretty damn willing to engage in straw purchasing.
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Yeah, so that way they'd be incentived to stop leaving it in their cars in plain sight. "Hey Joe, how did that gun hand up in the hands of a convicted abuser who just killed his wife?"
Failure to secure a weapon you chose to own should be criminal negligence and taken seriously.