Archive for December, 2011:


Who’s Got Your Back When Selling Guns Privately?

Police Search for AR-15 Robbery Suspect

MESA, Ariz. – Police are searching for a suspect who pulled a gun on a man at the Sportsman’s Warehouse parking lot near Greenfield and Baseline Roads.  The victim had posted an ad for his AR-15 rifle on the backpage.com web site. He agreed to meet the potential buyer in a public place, but when the suspect arrived, he got into the victim’s truck, pulled out a handgun and pointed it at the victim.  The suspect took the AR-15, victim’s cell phone and truck keys, then fled in his car. Police say as the suspect was driving away, the victim drew a revolver he had in an ankle holster and fired three shots.  One of the rounds was found in a parked Valley Metro van nearby.  The suspect is described as a white male, 30 years old, 5′ 9″ tall, 190 pounds with a shaved head. The getaway car was a blue/gray Ford Fusion or Taurus.  Investigators say the store’s video cameras did not record the incident since their field of view doesn’t go that far into the parking lot.  If you have any information about this case, call the Mesa police at 480-644-2211

This comes from http://www.myfoxphoenix.com/dpp/news/crime/police-search-for-ar-15-robbery-suspect-12122011

If you’re going privately sell a gun, it’s probably a good idea to have some back-up.  You never know what you might be getting into.  Also, if something like this does happen to you, it’s probably not a good idea to shoot at the bad guy while he’s fleeing.  Most States do not allow the use of deadly force to protect property, even a stolen AR15!  As much as it pisses you off, just let the guy go.  Now I don’t have all the facts here, but based on the information above, I don’t see how shooting at the thief could be justified.  The standard rule for using deadly force, i.e. shooting at someone, is to protect yourself, or someone else, from the imminent threat of death or serious bodily harm.  Someone driving off with your AR15 typically isn’t going to fall into this type of a threat.

So be careful out there.  It’s a dangerous world.

Improving AR15 Accuracy & Performance

One of the great things about AR15 rifles is the ability to customize them.  Most of the modifications do little to improve the rifles performance.  They’re mostly cosmetic (makes them look cooler)!  Today I want to talk about practical modifications you can make to seriously improve your rifle’s accuracy and performance.

Trigger

Lot’s of people ask about improving AR15 accuracy and I rarely see too many people talk about the trigger.  AR15s come with standard, military grade triggers which aren’t that great for accuracy.  Now, the trigger doesn’t really affect the accuracy of the rifle itself – it just makes it easier for YOU to shoot it more accurately.  That’s why I think a lot of folks overlook the trigger when talking about AR15 accuracy.  Upgrading the trigger doesn’t make the rifle shoot more accurately, but in my experience, installing a single stage, 3 pound (or less) trigger dramatically increases your ability to shoot the rifle more accurately.  And therefore your accuracy improves.  I really like the CMC AR15 triggers and use them in my own rifles.  I like them because they’re a complete module, install easily and work very well.  Choose large pins for Colt and small pins for all other AR15s.  You will not believe the difference.  I think it’s the most practical upgrade you can make to your AR15.  Beware… once you shoot an AR15 with a good trigger, you’ll never be satisfied with normal trigger again!

Free Floating Forearm

We’ve talked about Picatinny rails and forearms before, but here I’ll talk about them in the context of accuracy.  A free floating forearm attaches to the barrel nut of your AR15 and does not touch the barrel at all.  This improves the accuracy of your rifle by not exerting any external pressure along the barrel.  Unless you really know what you’re doing, and have the right tools, it’s best to have a gunsmith install your free floating forearm.  Free floating forearms tend to cost a little more than the standard versions, but if you’re trying to improve the accuracy of your rifle, they are well worth the extra money.

Fail Zero Bolt Carrier Kit

I first saw the Fail Zero Bolt Carrier Kit at the Shot Show a couple years ago and couldn’t believe my eyes.  They had it installed in an AR15 and then had a regular AR15 right next to it so you could compare them side by side. The difference is nothing short of amazing!  The Fail Zero bolt carrier is so smooth.  It seems like its floating on precision ball bearings inside your upper receiver.  So what makes Fail Zero so special?  Fail Zero parts are coated using their proprietary EXO Technology that “creates a permanently lubricious surface” that never needs grease, oil, etc to make it slide easily.  Additionally, this coating never flakes or rubs off.  It enhances reliability and makes cleaning a lot easier.

So with all the modifications you can make to your rifle, here’s three easy steps to dramatically increasing the accuracy and performance of your AR15.

Conspiracy Fact! ATF Operation Fast & Furious

There’s lots of conspiracy theories floating around out there, but it’s not very often we get conspiracy facts.  Case in point, check out ATF’s Fast and Furious operation:

From the first moment that the American people became aware that senior BATFE officials ordered agents in the field to allow guns sold in the U.S. to be smuggled on an all-but-certain path to Mexico’s vicious drug cartels, many of us have wondered “why.”
What possible legitimate purpose could be fulfilled by allowing a large number of guns—over 2,000, by some estimates—to disappear across our southwestern border without the Mexican government’s knowledge?

There has been only one logical answer possible. Someone within the BATFE or higher in the Department of Justice wanted the smuggled guns to be recovered at crime scenes in Mexico, and traced to sources within the U.S., so that the Obama Administration could claim a need for one or another gun control measure being pushed by anti-gun groups. Someone who values gun control more than the lives of innocent people killed by cartel operatives armed with the BATFE’s “walked” guns. Someone who believes, as one BATFE official put it, that “to make an omelet, you have to break some eggs.”

Until now, there was no proof, however. But this week, CBS News reported that the BATFE “discussed using their covert operation Fast and Furious to argue for controversial new rules about gun sales.” In particular, agency officials wanted guns to fall into Mexican drug cartel hands and be traced back to gun dealers in the U.S. to make a case for requiring dealers to report individuals who buy more than one detachable-magazine semi-automatic rifle over .22 caliber in a five day period.

According to CBS, “emails show they discussed using the sales, including sales encouraged by ATF, to justify a new gun regulation called Demand Letter 3. That would require some U.S. gun shops to report the sale of multiple rifles or ‘long guns.’”

CBS singled out a July 14, 2010 email sent by BATFE Field Operations Assistant Director Mark Chait to Bill Newell, the agency’s Special Agent in Charge in Phoenix, from which Fast and Furious was based. In the email, Chaits asked Newell to “see if these guns were all purchased from the same [licensed gun dealer] and at one time. We are looking at anecdotal cases to support a demand letter on long gun multiple sales.”

Pro-Second Amendment U.S. Senator John Cornyn (Texas), the senior Republican on the Senate Judiciary Committee’s Immigration, Refugees and Border Security subcommittee, quickly responded to CBS’s revelation, saying “If these reports are true, even by Washington standards this reaches a new level of arrogance and corruption.” With Attorney General Holder again appearing before Congress to testify about Fast and Furious this week, Sen. Cornyn added, “again, the Attorney General has some explaining to do.”

Also this week, CBS reported another means by which Mexico’s drug cartels have acquired a large enough number of U.S.-made firearms to partially explain the high tallies repeated time and again by Mexican president Felipe Calderon, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Attorney General Eric Holder, and other gun control supporters.

Apparently, hundreds of firearms sent to Mexico by U.S. firearms manufacturers, through Direct Commercial Sales approved by the State Department since 2006, cannot be accounted for by Mexican officials and are presumed to have made their way to the cartels. As CBS reporter Sharyl Attkisson relates it, “The Mexican military recently reported nearly nine thousand police weapons missing. Yet, the U.S. has approved the sale of more guns to Mexico than ever before.” The government of Mexico now buys more U.S.-made firearms than Iraq, whose security forces American and allied troops trained from the ground up, after the fall of Saddam Hussein.

Providing some insight into the scope of the problem, after one U.S.-made rifle sold to the Mexican military ended up in a cartel arms cache, the State Department asked Mexico to account for 1,030 more rifles, but received no reply. Between 2006 and 2009, 2,400 firearms were sold to Mexico through direct sales. But trying to avoid further embarrassment, State refuses to provide the numbers for 2010 and 2011. Attkisson says, “With Mexico in a virtual state of war with its cartels, nobody is tracking how many U.S. guns are ending up with the enemy.”

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