“About a third of all firearms seized in Southern California now are unserialized, and that is expected to grow,” Ginger Colbrun, a spokeswoman for the Los Angeles region’s ATF office, told The Times in August. [More]Words of encouragement for those of us who aim to misbehave...
[Via Henry Bowman]
Given the rarity of a gun trace having anything to do with solving a crime, why do so many people have their shorts in a bunch over "untraceable" guns?
ReplyDeleteGiven the rarity of a trace, period.
ReplyDeleteIt is not that the firearms are unserialized, but that a serial number is not recorded by some government entity. The serial number itself does not confer some talismanic magical properties to the firearm.
ReplyDeleteStop recording the serial numbers, destroy the records of serial numbers and the lack of a serial number becomes a non-problem. After all, it is the inappropriate usage of the object, not the unique properties of the object such as a serial number that is the issue.