Categories
All About Guns Anti Civil Rights ideas & "Friends" Cops You have to be kidding, right!?!

ATF targeting old men in rural Missouri ATF charges two suspects — ages 75 and 81 — for selling guns without a license. by Lee Williams

The entire State of Missouri can rest much easier now. The ATF has made the Show-Me State a much safer place. Two rule breakers from small Missouri towns were indicted by a federal grand jury last week. Their crimes? They’re accused of selling guns without a federal license. Their ages? One was 75 and the other was 81 years old.

This, friends, is not a sick joke. The ATF actually publicized the arrests in a press release, which was sent out last week.

“According to an indictment returned this week, Aubrey Foxworthy, 81, of California, Missouri, was charged with dealing firearms in Morgan and Moniteau Counties from approximately June 2, 2023, through September 9, 2024.

 

He did not have a federal firearms license to deal firearms. Foxworthy was also charged with possession of a rifle with a barrel length less than 16 inches and that rifle was not registered to him in the National Firearms Registration and Transfer Record,” the press release states.

 

“According to an indictment returned this week, Philip Leroy Rains, 75, of Popular Bluff, Missouri, was charged with dealing firearms in Morgan County from approximately April 1, 2023, through April 4, 2024. He did not have a federal firearms license to deal firearms.”

Each man now faces five years in a federal prison and fines of up to a quarter-million dollars for the no-FFL charges, but Foxworthy faces an additional 10 years in prison and fines of up to $10,000 for whatever the ATF considered an unregistered short-barreled rifle.

Nowadays this could be a legal firearm with a brace. Unfortunately, if things go the ATF’s way, Foxworthy could leave federal prison in 2040 at the ripe age of 96.

Foxworthy could lose a lot more than just his freedom. According to his indictment, the ATF also ordered him to turn over all of his guns, and the 81-year-old had a decent collection.

The ATF wants 197 of Foxworthy’s personal firearms, according to a list attached to his indictment. The guns are about what you’d expect a lifelong gun owner to have in his safe.

Almost all are American made: Ruger, Colt, Winchester, Savage, Browning, Remington, Marlin, Mossberg, Henry and Smith & Wesson. The ATF also wants Foxworthy’s ammunition, and the list claims he had more than 16,000 rounds.

Because the ATF prepared the list, there are four firearms identified as “machineguns,” but the type, manufacturer and calibers are listed as “unknown.” Also, Foxworthy was not charged with the illegal possession of any machineguns. This makes sense in a sick way, because experience has shown when the ATF can’t identify a firearm, they usually just consider it a machinegun.

The list also shows that Foxworthy owned a dozen Winchester Model 94 rifles. The serial number of one rifle shows it was manufactured before 1896. Depriving the man of that rifle is a sin, especially since it will likely be kept or even resold by some nameless ATF agent.

Calls to Foxworthy’s defense attorney were not returned.

Takeaways

Who hasn’t seen an old man at a flea market with a couple guns for sale either on a folding table or laying on a blanket in the bed of his pickup?

It’s classic Americana, right? There is certainly no crime or criminal intent.

Unfortunately, Joe Biden robbed us of this for a few years. Biden’s “engaged in the business” rule required anyone who made a profit on a single gun sale to obtain a federal firearm license.

“Under this regulation, it will not matter if guns are sold on the internet, at a gun show, or at a brick-and-mortar store: if you sell guns predominantly to earn a profit, you must be licensed, and you must conduct background checks,” former Attorney General Merrick B. Garland announced about a year ago.

The press release shows that both arrestees’ alleged law-breaking occurred while Biden was napping at the White House. Besides, it was easier for the ATF. Their agents are much less likely to be shot or scared if they harass a couple old men, rather than going after big-city gangsters armed with full-auto Glocks with Glock switches.

Truth be known, Attorney General Pam Bondi or her staff should examine all of the ATF’s cases made during Biden’s term. Some were much worse than this one.

I certainly hope that whoever is actually in charge of the ATF today will take this into account and drop all charges against Messrs. Foxworthy and Rains.

The ATF has put each of them through enough. I hope that Foxworthy gets to keep his guns, too, especially the pre-1896 Model 94.

To do anything else would be a real crime.

The Second Amendment Foundation’s Investigative Journalism Project wouldn’t be possible without you. Click here to make a tax-deductible donation to support pro-gun stories like this.

Categories
War Well I thought it was neat! You have to be kidding, right!?!

The Hidden Story of Nazi Drug Abuse

Categories
All About Guns You have to be kidding, right!?!

Pistola PRESSIN: Llama’s Sneaky Self-Defense Weapon

Categories
All About Guns Anti Civil Rights ideas & "Friends" Born again Cynic! You have to be kidding, right!?!

I wonder how many of these were stolen in the first place?

Categories
You have to be kidding, right!?!

Somebody is in for a nasty surprise soon

Categories
The Green Machine You have to be kidding, right!?!

CHICKEN POWERED NUCLEAR LANDMINE

Categories
You have to be kidding, right!?!

I Absolutely LOVE THIS TANK | Black Prince

Categories
All About Guns You have to be kidding, right!?!

What Makes a Good Gun Design

Categories
All About Guns War Well I thought it was neat! You have to be kidding, right!?!

What are the funniest or strangest facts about the World Wars? by Pat Sullivan

Ok, one of my favorites. Truly a ‘Strange’ one. This is the Lewis Light Machine

The wide ‘barrel’ is actually a aluminum web heat sink inside a brass collar to keep the barrel cool, it is fed by a circular pan of 97 rounds in a drum that could be replaced by an infantry gunner and his assistant in about 30 seconds using this handy tool.

Simple right?

Unless of course, you’re in an aircraft, specifically a very light handling Martinsyde Scout and it’s 1915, before there was ever such a thing as an interrupter gear so that you could shoot through your spinning propeller.

So, in YOUR case, the Lewis gun is on the top of the wing above the pilot’s seat, so that you can reach with one hand as you manipulate the gun, charging, readying the weapon, etc.. Hopefully, you won’t have to reload another drum.

Or deal with a jam, like what happened to (believe it or not) one Captain Louis Strange.

With an enemy plane in his sights he got off one or two rounds and his Lewis gun jammed. Turning away, he tried to charge the weapon, and realized that to clear the jam he would have to loosen the drum with that tool and then tighten it back down,…. while flying,…. with an enemy observer still firing at him. So he put the plane into a gentle climb loosened his restraint, and holding his joystick between he knees, stood up to adjust the drum with that tool using both hands.

You see what’s coming, right? Well, he didn’t.

Just as he got the first turn to loosen the drum slightly, the plane stalled and spun, and out of the cockpit he went, with his only handhold to his craft the now loosened Lewis drum.

8000 feet in elevation doesn’t give one much time, or options, especially with an enemy still in range with a loaded weapon.

So, brilliant man that he was, Captain Strange realized that his handhold was tenuous at best, so he switched one hand to grab the upper mount bracket of the weapon (just as his other hand slipped) and managed to swing a leg upward to try and kick the joystick over as the plane was now in an upside down dive.

After what must have seemed like forever, he did manage to do just that, but the sudden spin of the aircraft as he connected with his foot dropped him into the pilots seat with such force that he broke the seat and pinned the control wires running beneath it to the tail, and his numerous misses at the joystick had smashed many of his gauges and indicators.

Managing to half crouch and lift the seat with one hand, he was just able to control the aircraft and get back to level flight just at treetop level and head back to his airfield. Where he was chastised for ‘willful damage to his own aircraft’.

He would finish the war as a Lieutenant Colonel with a DSO, DFC, and Military Cross, along with three Mentions in Dispatches and remained in the RAF until retiring through poor heath brought on by his war service in 1922.

But he would still mobilize and serve at the age of 48 in 1939 in the RAF, earning a second DFC for flying a Hawker Hurricane from France to England, despite the fact he had never flown the plane before, and was set upon by no fewer than six enemy Messerschmitts. The plane he flew had no ammunition when he took off, so his exploit was simply to avoid the enemy planes by extreme low-level fast flying through a small French town and the countryside, dodging church steeples and trees.

He passed away in 1966 at the age of 75.

Categories
You have to be kidding, right!?!

900 Sonic Booms Per Second – XF-84H Thunderscreech