America the shoot-iful

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Two people dead after apparent murder-suicide in Herrin

Posted: Feb 26, 2017 12:37 PM MST
Updated: Feb 26, 2017 11:00 PM MST
By Sydney KesslerCONNECT


WSIL- Two people are dead after an apparent murder-suicide in Herrin.

Williamson County Coroner, Junior Burke pronounced Gregory Kinser of Herrin dead at the scene around 9:50 Saturday night.

When police arrived they also found Toni Ladd of Herrin with gunshot wounds. She was was rushed to the hospital where she later died.

Police say after initial investigation it appears that Kinser shot Ladd before turning the gun on himself.

Officials were called to the home on North 31st Street around 9:15 PM.

An autopsy on Kinser will be conducted Monday.

The incident is currently under investigation by the Williamson County Coroner's Office, Herrin Police Department, and Illinois State Police.​

http://www.wsiltv.com/story/34608228/two-people-dead-after-apparent-murder-suicide-in-herrin
 
Woman gets caught in crossfire after family member intends to shoot brother


BALTIMORE (WBFF) -- A 38-year-old woman was injured when gunfire broke out in West Baltimore Sunday afternoon.
Just before 1:00 p.m. city officers responded to West Saratoga Street near North Smallwood Street when they found the wounded female victim.
According to investigators, two brothers were arguing outside of a home in the location when one of the brothers revealed a gun. The brother that produced the gun, fired at the other brother but missed.
Instead he struck a female victim in the foot, who is also a family member.
Police say the woman had nothing to do with the argument.
She has been taken to a local hospital for her injuries.

http://foxbaltimore.com/news/local/woman-gets-caught-in-the-line-of-fire-after-family-member-intends-to-shoot-brother
 
LCPD: Death of 16-year-old shot, killed on Rena Street result of 'horseplay' with guns

LAKE CHARLES, LA (KPLC) -
A 16-year-old boy's death in the 1700 block of Rena Street Thursday was the result of he and another 16-year-old boy's "horseplaying" with two loaded guns, authorities with the Lake Charles Police Department said.

Christopher Wright was pronounced dead at the scene.

The other 16-year-old involved in Wright's death was arrested Friday, said Sgt. Jeff Keenum, Lake Charles Police Department spokesman.

Following the shooting, the juvenile suspect fled the scene, Keenum said. He was later located by the LCPD SWAT Team in the 1100 block of North Cherry Street. The boy discarded a semi-automatic pistol - which has been recovered - during a brief foot chase.

The boy is charged with negligent homicide, illegal possession of a handgun by a juvenile and being a runaway juvenile.​

http://www.kplctv.com/story/34605079/lcpd-death-of-16-year-old-shot-killed-on-rena-street-result-of-horseplay-with-guns
 
LCPD: Death of 16-year-old shot, killed on Rena Street result of 'horseplay' with guns

LAKE CHARLES, LA (KPLC) -
A 16-year-old boy's death in the 1700 block of Rena Street Thursday was the result of he and another 16-year-old boy's "horseplaying" with two loaded guns, authorities with the Lake Charles Police Department said.

Christopher Wright was pronounced dead at the scene.

The other 16-year-old involved in Wright's death was arrested Friday, said Sgt. Jeff Keenum, Lake Charles Police Department spokesman.

Following the shooting, the juvenile suspect fled the scene, Keenum said. He was later located by the LCPD SWAT Team in the 1100 block of North Cherry Street. The boy discarded a semi-automatic pistol - which has been recovered - during a brief foot chase.

The boy is charged with negligent homicide, illegal possession of a handgun by a juvenile and being a runaway juvenile.​

http://www.kplctv.com/story/34605079/lcpd-death-of-16-year-old-shot-killed-on-rena-street-result-of-horseplay-with-guns

So two people "horse playing" with guns makes it the gun's fault? Interesting perspective. Typical of gun haters but interesting.
 
Donald Trump signs bill allowing mentally ill people to buy guns

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President Donald Trump has signed a resolution blocking an Obama-era rule that would have prevented an estimated 75,000 people with mental disorders from buying guns.

The rule was part of former President Barack Obama's push to strengthen the federal background check system in the wake of the 2012 Newtown, Connecticut shooting.

In the shooting, 20-year-old Adam Lanza, who suffered from several mental impairments including Asperger’s syndrome and obsessive compulsive disorder, shot his mother dead at home, and then went to the school where he fatally shot 20 students between six and seven years old, as well as six teachers. He then turned the gun on himself. The massacre was the deadliest school shooting in US history, leaving 28 dead in total, and prompted President Obama to call for more stringent background checks and a ban on certain kinds of semi-automatic assault weapons.

It required the Social Security Administration to send in the names of beneficiaries with mental impairments who also need a third-party to manage their benefits.

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/us-politics/donald-trump-guns-bill-mentally-ill-background-checks-nra-a7604876.html
 
Rankin Co., MS
CCW permit holder strangles girlfriend to death, shoots female jogger, shoots man during carjacking, and is suspect in fatal shooting of woman at church


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(CNN) - An armed and dangerous fugitive wanted in connection with the killing of his girlfriend and the attempted killing of another woman in Mississippi is now in custody.

Alex Bridges Deaton, 28, was captured early Wednesday near Dorrance, Kansas, the Kansas Highway Patrol said.

A nationwide manhunt had been launched to find Deaton after his girlfriend was found dead last week in Rankin County, Mississippi, near Jackson, and a jogger was shot near the girlfriend's apartment.

Troopers tried to stop a black Cadillac headed eastbound on Interstate 70 just before 8 a.m. after it matched the description of a car seen following a shooting at a Pratt, Kansas, convenience store earlier Wednesday morning, according to a statement from the patrol.

The driver fled at a high rate of speed, the statement said. The vehicle then crashed and caught on fire, and Deaton was pulled out and placed under arrest.

"I understand that the troopers did some pretty heroic, tactical moves with their vehicles to get the man stopped," said Marshall Fisher, head of the Mississippi Department of Public Safety, at a news conference. " ... He's led us on quite the chase the last few days, and everybody here is very happy that he's in custody."

Deaton is also considered a person of interest in a third incident in Mississippi that left a woman dead, according to authorities.

Local and federal authorities had offered a reward up to $32,500 for information leading to his capture.

Deaton was spotted Tuesday night in Albuquerque, New Mexico, where he allegedly carjacked a couple there, according to the Rankin County Sheriff's Office. The couple were able to escape, but the male victim sustained a gunshot wound, the sheriff's office said. Deaton escaped in the couple's Honda Civic, police said.

Suspect's girlfriend found dead, jogger shot
Deaton's girlfriend, Heather Robinson, 30, was found dead in her apartment Friday afternoon following a welfare check. Earlier that morning near the apartment, a jogger had called 911 to say she had been shot by a man who was driving a white SUV, believed to belong to Robinson, authorities said. The jogger was shot in the thigh and is expected to recover.

Robinson's family sent a statement to CNN affiliate WJTV-TV in Jackson, saying: "Our family has been overwhelmed by our tragic loss since Friday afternoon. Our lives are forever changed and words cannot express our pain and sorrow. For those that did not know Heather, she had a BS degree in nursing and enjoyed her career in the medical field. She was a very hard working and determined young lady and held respect for all. At this point we ask that our privacy be respected so we can grieve as a family."

Deaton sent cryptic text messages from Tulsa, Oklahoma, to his mother Saturday, Rankin County Sheriff Bryan Bailey told HLN's Ashleigh Banfield.

Deaton has no prior criminal history, Bailey said. But he said there were some disturbing reports about the suspect from Robinson's family.

"I think some of the signs were there about an abusive boyfriend, a controlling boyfriend," Bailey said. "I believe that's what started all these tragic events; I believe Heather was trying to distance herself or break up with him."

Woman killed in church
Deaton also is "a person of great interest" in the Thursday shooting death of Brenda Pinter, 69, at a church in Neshoba County, Mississippi, said Sheriff Tommy Waddell.

Surveillance video showed an SUV similar to the one in the jogger incident entering the parking lot of Dixon Baptist Church that day. Pinter, a member of the church, came by herself around 4 p.m. to clean. Later that afternoon, her husband tried unsuccessfully to reach her by phone and then drove over to the church to check on her. He found her body in the church office. She had been shot to death.

"I have a video showing a vehicle that is very similar to the vehicle that he (Deaton) was known to be driving," the Neshoba sheriff said. "That vehicle belonged to a victim that was found deceased in Rankin County. There is no link we know of between this woman and the other two victims."

Deaton has been charged with one count of first-degree murder in his girlfriend's death as well as aggravated assault in the jogger's shooting, according to Rankin County District Attorney Michael Guest.

The preliminary cause of death in the Robinson case was manual strangulation, he said.

"The charges may be upgraded to capital murder once we have received the final report from the medical examiner," Guest told CNN.


http://www.kxly.com/news/national-news/manhunt-underway-for-mississippi-murder-suspect/368053915
 
Serves this asshole right....

Man walks into an Idaho bar... points rifle, patrons pummel him and police arrest him
[/B
]
Martin%20Knowles

Patrons at the Roadhouse Saloon in Idaho Falls disarmed and injured a man who reportedly returned after a dispute and pointed a rifle at the crowd.

Martin Knowles, 58, had been kicked out of the bar earlier Tuesday night for arguing with a patron. He returned about less than an hour later armed with an AM-15 .223-caliber rifle and a .40-caliber pistol.

Some quick thinking by Trevor Bennion allowed him to disarm Knowles. Bennion told the Post Register on Wednesday that Knowles, a man he had never met, had walked by him at the bar and kicked his broken ankle. Bennion said he had injured his ankle when a steel beam fell on his foot and he was wearing a boot cast.

Bennion said he confronted Knowles and told him he would fight him if he was kicked again.

Court records back up Bennion’s version of events. Records show the bartender ordered Knowles removed from the bar and told him not to return.

About 45 minutes after Knowles was kicked out, he returned armed with a rifle and pistol.

Michael Martinez, Bennion’s friend, said Knowles re-entered the bar and immediately leveled the rifle at the crowd.

“He flung the door open and jacked in a shell and started pointing this rifle at my buddy’s wife and then swung it at another friend,” Martinez said.

Idaho Falls Police reviewed surveillance footage from inside the bar which reportedly shows Knowles point the rifle at the patrons.

Bennion said that he entered “fight-or-flight” mode when he saw the weapon. He grabbed a beer mug and threw it at Knowles. That distracted Knowles, he said, allowing him to rush the armed man and get the rifle away from him.

“He was distracted long enough that he didn’t get a round off, thank God,” Bennion said.

Bennion and several others then began to punch Knowles.

Police arrived a short time later and found Knowles lying near the front door of the bar with blood all over his face. Court records show Knowles was taken to Eastern Idaho Regional Medical Center, where he received six stitches and was diagnosed with a broken nose.

Responding officers wrote in their reports that the crowd at the bar was screaming, and several people were being held back from further attacking Knowles. Officers got Knowles away from the crowd so he could be treated for his injuries.

He later told officers he had been drinking and left after the confrontation with Bennion. He told officers when he returned he never pointed the gun at the patrons, contrary to video evidence. Knowles told officers he didn’t think he stepped on Bennion’s foot.

Knowles told officers he returned to the bar to talk to Bennion and brought the weapons to protect himself. The handgun that was found was also loaded and had a round in the chamber, court records show.

In a phone interview, Bennion said he doesn’t feel shaken by the incident.

“Surprisingly, I really don’t feel anything,” he said. “I’m just glad no one was shot; I mean I’ve got a 3-year-old little girl and a wife and I’d hate to leave them and be shot over some drunk idiot.”

Bennion said police did not confront him or his friends about punching Knowles.

“You know, cops can get a bad rap, but they were really good and handled the business last night very professionally,” Bennion said.

Knowles is charged with aggravated assault, unlawful possession of a weapon by a convicted felon and an enhancement for use of a deadly weapon in the commission of a felony. Aggravated assault and unlawful possession of a firearm are each punishable by up to five years in prison. The deadly weapon enhancement increases the maximum punishment by up to 15 years.

In 2002, Knowles was convicted of possession of a controlled substance in Oneida County, barring him from owning a firearm, court records show.

Read more here: http://www.idahostatesman.com/news/local/crime/article135955773.html#storylink=cpy
 
Serves this asshole right....

Man walks into an Idaho bar... points rifle, patrons pummel him and police arrest him
[/B
]
Martin%20Knowles

Patrons at the Roadhouse Saloon in Idaho Falls disarmed and injured a man who reportedly returned after a dispute and pointed a rifle at the crowd.

Martin Knowles, 58, had been kicked out of the bar earlier Tuesday night for arguing with a patron. He returned about less than an hour later armed with an AM-15 .223-caliber rifle and a .40-caliber pistol.

Some quick thinking by Trevor Bennion allowed him to disarm Knowles. Bennion told the Post Register on Wednesday that Knowles, a man he had never met, had walked by him at the bar and kicked his broken ankle. Bennion said he had injured his ankle when a steel beam fell on his foot and he was wearing a boot cast.

Bennion said he confronted Knowles and told him he would fight him if he was kicked again.

Court records back up Bennion’s version of events. Records show the bartender ordered Knowles removed from the bar and told him not to return.

About 45 minutes after Knowles was kicked out, he returned armed with a rifle and pistol.

Michael Martinez, Bennion’s friend, said Knowles re-entered the bar and immediately leveled the rifle at the crowd.

“He flung the door open and jacked in a shell and started pointing this rifle at my buddy’s wife and then swung it at another friend,” Martinez said.

Idaho Falls Police reviewed surveillance footage from inside the bar which reportedly shows Knowles point the rifle at the patrons.

Bennion said that he entered “fight-or-flight” mode when he saw the weapon. He grabbed a beer mug and threw it at Knowles. That distracted Knowles, he said, allowing him to rush the armed man and get the rifle away from him.

“He was distracted long enough that he didn’t get a round off, thank God,” Bennion said.

Bennion and several others then began to punch Knowles.

Police arrived a short time later and found Knowles lying near the front door of the bar with blood all over his face. Court records show Knowles was taken to Eastern Idaho Regional Medical Center, where he received six stitches and was diagnosed with a broken nose.

Responding officers wrote in their reports that the crowd at the bar was screaming, and several people were being held back from further attacking Knowles. Officers got Knowles away from the crowd so he could be treated for his injuries.

He later told officers he had been drinking and left after the confrontation with Bennion. He told officers when he returned he never pointed the gun at the patrons, contrary to video evidence. Knowles told officers he didn’t think he stepped on Bennion’s foot.

Knowles told officers he returned to the bar to talk to Bennion and brought the weapons to protect himself. The handgun that was found was also loaded and had a round in the chamber, court records show.

In a phone interview, Bennion said he doesn’t feel shaken by the incident.

“Surprisingly, I really don’t feel anything,” he said. “I’m just glad no one was shot; I mean I’ve got a 3-year-old little girl and a wife and I’d hate to leave them and be shot over some drunk idiot.”

Bennion said police did not confront him or his friends about punching Knowles.

“You know, cops can get a bad rap, but they were really good and handled the business last night very professionally,” Bennion said.

Knowles is charged with aggravated assault, unlawful possession of a weapon by a convicted felon and an enhancement for use of a deadly weapon in the commission of a felony. Aggravated assault and unlawful possession of a firearm are each punishable by up to five years in prison. The deadly weapon enhancement increases the maximum punishment by up to 15 years.

In 2002, Knowles was convicted of possession of a controlled substance in Oneida County, barring him from owning a firearm, court records show.

Read more here: http://www.idahostatesman.com/news/local/crime/article135955773.html#storylink=cpy


Shit head gun fetishist was very lucky he wasn't killed...
 
Flagstaff double shooting leaves 20-year-old man dead, 16-year-old boy injured
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A 20-year-old man is dead and a 16-year-old boy is wounded after a double shooting in Flagstaff.

The man killed has been identified as Jacob M. Allen of Flagstaff

Around 5 p.m. Friday, there were reports of gunfire at the Hal Janson Recreation Center.

When officers responded, they found the 20-year-old Allen dead.

Later, police were able to determine that a teen boy had been shot and wounded at that same location, but that he had taken off from the scene. to go get help.

That victim was later located and taken to Flagstaff Medical Center. He was said to be in stable condition. His name is not being released since he is a juvenile.

A basketball coach at the rec center said there were a lot of teenagers there during the basketball practice.

She said she and her team heard about five big bangs, and at first thought someone was banging on the bleachers.

Another parent sitting on bleachers said, "Everybody, run!"

The coach said they gathered up kids and ran out of the building.

"I heard three gunshots and I saw the guy fall," said one witness.

Officers located and contacted a dark blue Suburban that was originally thought to be involved and have ruled out the occupants as suspects. Investigators are continuing to interview people and follow up on leads.

Investigators are not actively looking for any specific suspect at this time, although that could change depending on what they learn as they follow up with witnesses and leads.[/

http://www.azfamily.com/story/34662961/one-dead-one-injured-in-double-shooting-in-flagstaff
 
Cops ID Orlando man accused of killing wife, stepson


A man accused of killing his wife and stepson claimed he shot them in self-defense Thursday afternoon, Orlando police said.

But police believe Hector Collazo, 57, was the first to become violent, allegedly pushing his wife to the ground.

He is facing two counts of second-degree murder with a firearm, according to police. He is being held in the Orange County Jail without bail.

Police said Collazo’s 15-year-old son called 911 about 1:08 p.m. saying he had just witnessed his dad shoot his mom and brother at their home on Lake Champlain Drive. He said he had safely gotten out of the house.

Officers then got another 911 call, this time from Collazo, who allegedly told a dispatcher that he shot his stepson and wife because they both threatened him with a knife, according to an arrest report.

A crisis intervention officer got on the phone and in less than 10 minutes, convinced him to surrender peacefully, police said.

Officers then went inside and found his wife, Caryn Collazo, 57, in their master bedroom dead from an apparent gunshot wound, according to the report. His stepson, Zachary Humelsine, 25, also had been shot to death.

The teen later told police during an interview that he was in the bathroom when he heard a crash come from his parents’ bedroom.

He walked into a hallway to see his brother, who told him their dad had pushed their mom to the floor and slammed the bedroom door, according to the arrest report.

The teen told police he knocked and then opened the door to hear his mom shouting for him to call 911 and his dad saying not to because she had “only fallen,” the report states. His brother, who had grabbed a knife, told the teen to move from the doorway, according to police.

A short time later, the teen heard a gunshot and his mom cry out, according to the report. He told police he then saw his dad shoot his brother multiple times.

Police said Collazo agreed to speak with detectives, but his statements were redacted from an arrest report.

Crime scene investigators said they found a black, semi-automatic pistol in the master bedroom.

Collazo is a medical doctor, though state records show he is non-practicing. The records do not show a disciplinary history or say why he decided to stop practicing.

Neighbors at the scene Thursday said they often saw Collazo standing outside the home wearing scrubs, drinking his morning coffee.
http://www.orlandosentinel.com/news/breaking-news/os-two-killed-collazo-family-20170303-story.html
 
Trump’s interior secretary reverses ban on lead ammo on national wildlife refuges as his first official act

So much for sober-minded consultation, careful study of the data, and thoughtful analysis from U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service biologists and other experts on his staff. Before the chair in his office was even warm, and just after he dismounted from his horse, Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke undid a director’s order to phase out the use of lead ammunition and fishing tackle over the next five years on more than 150 million acres of National Wildlife Refuges and other agency lands and waterways. The nullified policy had a simple and good purpose: it was designed to stop the needless, incidental poisoning of millions of wild animals each year by lead that’s left behind in the routine pursuit of these field sports.

As the primary wildlife manager of tens of millions of acres of federal lands, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) has a statutory duty to act to protect and conserve wildlife, and that’s what it did by establishing the policy after careful deliberation last year. What Zinke ignored is that less toxic forms of ammunition are field-tested, cost-competitive, and readily available in the marketplace. Leaders of hunting groups huddled around him for his first official action, cheering on an action inimical to the imperatives of conservation and wildlife enhancement.

The NRA and the same crowd of hunting lobbying groups stamped their feet a quarter century ago when George H.W. Bush’s Fish and Wildlife Service banned the use of lead ammunition for hunting waterfowl. President Bush, himself a hunter, showed his true commitment to conservation, even as detractors portended the demise of waterfowl sports.

History has proved them wrong – badly and unmistakably wrong. Waterfowl hunting has continued unabated, but just without the collateral poisoning of so many birds and other creatures.

And today, a quarter century later, there’s absolutely no compelling reason not to require hunters and anglers to switch to these alternative metals for their ammunition. Just like there’s no reason for oil companies to not use non-leaded gasoline or paint makers to keep lead out of their paint.

We’ve known for thousands of years that lead is a deadly toxin. The lingering effects of lead pipes still pose hazards for communities, as we’ve seen in the ongoing crisis in Flint, Michigan, and the larger debate over crumbling infrastructure in the United States. Why wouldn’t we also move to get lead out of the wildlife management profession, especially now that there are ready alternatives available to every single hunter and angler? Why oppose it? And why make it your first official action?

In 2014, The HSUS and other wildlife groups joined with some rank-and-file sportsmen to petition the Department of the Interior to require the use of nontoxic ammunition when a firearm is discharged on federal lands managed by the National Park Service and the FWS.

Hunters and anglers deposit tens of thousands of tons of lead in our environment, and it is estimated that between 10 and 20 million birds and other animals—including more than 130 species—die each year from lead poisoning. That’s a staggering toll, and an entirely preventable one, given our ability to manufacture better ammunition.

Scientists have called lead ammunition the “greatest, largely unregulated source of lead knowingly discharged into the environment in the United States.” Since it breaks into fragments upon impact, lead inevitably makes its way into the food chain as animals feed off carcasses left in the field by hunters. News stories continually emerge, including recently in Oregon and Pennsylvania, of dedicated, self-sacrificing wildlife rehabilitators struggling to treat predatory birds—including our own national symbol, the bald eagle—for acute lead poisoning. Hunting families are at risk too, since the meat from animals shot and cooked for the table can contain tiny lead shards. Children are especially vulnerable and even low levels of lead in their bodies can adversely impact their health for life. Why risk it?

Lead alternatives are readily available, and comparably priced copper and steel ammunition outperform lead and do not keep killing days, weeks, and months after leaving the gun. Ten years after the FWS required the use of non-lead shot for the hunting of waterfowl nationwide, researchers found significant improvements in the blood and bone lead levels in a variety of waterfowl species. The use of nontoxic shot reduced the mortality of mallards by 64 percent, and saved approximately 1.4 million ducks in a single fall flight.

Individual states, recognizing the negative impact of lead, are starting to act to remove lead sources from their forests, despite the anti-conservation bluster and threats of political retribution from the NRA. Last year, New Hampshire phased out the use of lead fishing sinkers and jigs weighing less than one ounce in order to help protect loon populations in that state. In 2013, California became the first state in the nation to phase out the use of lead ammunition for the taking of all wildlife, with a deadline of 2019 for completing the transition.

Sport hunters – including Mr. Zinke — often cite the legacy of Teddy Roosevelt. But too often they treat President Roosevelt and his commitment to conservation as a talking point or a historical artifact. They cast the idea of sacrifice and the common good as part of a scheme to erode their rights, and not as part of their duty to uphold the principles for which Roosevelt stood as a conservationist. Here is their test: you’ve got alternatives to lead and you know that lead kills wild animals by the millions. Show us that you treat conservation as a continuing commitment and not an abstraction or a word that you just discharge without any real meaning or force.

This is a very inauspicious start for Mr. Zinke, and it smacks of a political sop to the NRA. The nation’s wildlife and the health of our public lands depend on both his independence and tangible acts of policy that align with conservation-laden rhetoric.

http://blog.humanesociety.org/wayne/2017/03/trumps-interior-secretary-reverses-ban-lead-ammo-national-wildlife-refuges-first-official-act.html
 
MASS SHOOTING CASUALTIES IN THE U.S. – February 2017
34 verified mass shootings
153 total casualties (killed & wounded)

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These people were victims strictly of mass shootings (when four or more people were shot in an event, or related series of events without a cooling off period). Not included are victims of shootings where three or fewer people were shot. On average, 93 Americans are killed and 186 injured with guns every day [Source], resulting in approximately 8,500 gunshot casualties each month. In the U.S. in 2014 – the last year for which CDC data is available – 1 of every 78 deaths was caused by gunshot [Source].
Bonus “Guns Are Cool” Fun Facts for February:
So far there has been an average of 1.27 mass shootings per day in 2017.
The top 10 states for mass shootings so far in 2017 (# per million people) are: Mississippi (2.01), Tennessee (0.62), Illinois (0.54), Kentucky (0.46), Louisiana (0.43), Ohio (0.43), South Carolina (0.42), Colorado (0.38), Minnesota (0.37), and Florida (0.36) (for states with at least 2 mass shootings). Last's year's state rankings are available here, and last year's metropolitan statistical area (MSA) rankings are available here.
3 mass shootings involving domestic violence or child victims occurred in Morris, OK, Preston, ID, and Toomsuba, MS.
In the U.S., on average, 50 women are shot to death by intimate partners every month [Source] and 55 children (0-11) are killed or wounded by guns every month [Source]. Last year's state rankings for domestic violence are available here.
So far in 2017 (through February), there have been:
488 domestic violence incidents involving firearms in which 347 people were killed and 182 wounded (for a total of 528 total casualties)
  • (data from GVA).
    337 accidental shootings in which 68 people were killed and 254 wounded (for a total of 322 total casualties)
    • (data from GVA).
      Approximately 3,556 suicide shootings (based on 21,334 suicide shootings reported by the CDC for 2014).
      Approximately 50,000 to 100,000 cases in which guns were stolen from private owners, more enough to provide a weapon for every instance of gun violence in the country [Source].
      Roughly $28 billion paid by U.S. taxpayers to cover the costs of gun-related deaths and injuries [Source].
      154 documented DGU incidents in which the victim stopped a crime, including incidents where no shots were fired.
      • . As an alternative source, the Reddit – DGU site lists 227 verified DGU incidents -- not all of which involved successfully stopping a crime -- which includes 14 DGU incidents involving animals and 12 “bad” or “tragic” DGU incidents (i.e., 1 out of 18 recorded DGU incidents).
        These figures above indicate that so far in 2017, gun owners were ~29 times more likely to shoot themselves, a family member, an intimate partner or an innocent bystander than to successfully stop a crime with a gun (if suicide is not included, the ratio decreases to ~5.6 times more likely). Gun owners were also at least 325 times more likely to have a gun stolen by criminals than to successfully stop a crime with a gun.


      • https://www.reddit.com/r/GunsAreCool/comments/5xkaja/here_are_your_february_2017_mass_shooting_figures/
 
Sikh man in Kent says he was told, ‘Go back to your own country’ before he was shot

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Kent police look for gunman who allegedly walked onto victim’s driveway and shot him in the arm; Sikh community sees rise in abuse.

Kent police are looking for a gunman who allegedly walked onto a man’s driveway and shot him, saying “Go back to your own country.”

The victim, a 39-year-old Sikh man, was working on his vehicle in his driveway in Kent’s East Hill neighborhood about 8 p.m. Friday when he was approached by an unknown man, Kent police said, after talking with the victim.

An altercation followed, with the victim saying the suspect made statements to the effect of “Go back to your own country.” The victim was shot in the arm.

The victim described the shooter as a 6-foot-tall white man with a stocky build. He was wearing a mask covering the lower half of his face, the victim said.


Kent police say they’ve reached out to the FBI and other law-enforcement agencies.

“We’re early on in our investigation,” Kent Police Chief Ken Thomas said Saturday morning. “We are treating this as a very serious incident.”

Jasmit Singh, a leader of the Sikh community in Renton, said he had been told the victim was released from the hospital.

“He is just very shaken up, both him and his family,” Singh said. “We’re all kind of at a loss in terms of what’s going on right now, this is just bringing it home. The climate of hate that has been created doesn’t distinguish between anyone.”

In a statement Saturday, the Sikh Coalition, a New York-based civil rights group, asked local and federal authorities to investigate the shooting as a hate crime.

Singh said Puget Sound-area Sikh men in particular have reported a rise in verbal abuse and uncomfortable encounters recently, “a kind of prejudice, a kind of xenophobia that is nothing that we’ve seen in the recent past.”

To Singh, the number of incidents targeting members of the religion, which has its roots in the Punjab region of South Asia, recalls the aftermath of the Sept. 11 attacks in 2001.

“But at that time, it felt like the [presidential] administration was actively working to allay those fears,” he said. “Now, it’s a very different dimension.”

Sikh Coalition Interim Program Manager Rajdeep Singh, in calling for the hate crime investigation, said in a statement: “While we appreciate the efforts of state and local officials to respond to attacks like this, we need our national leaders to make hate crime prevention a top priority. Tone matters in our political discourse, because this a matter of life or death for millions of Americans who are worried about losing loved ones to hate.”​


http://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/crime/kent-shooting-victim-says-he-was-told-go-back-to-your-own-country/
 
Boy, 14, charged with shooting Youngstown woman in face
Handcuffs2.jpg
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (AP) -- A 14-year-old boy has been charged with attempted murder for allegedly shooting a northeast Ohio woman in the face on Feb. 6.
WKBN-TV reports that Youngstown police charged the youth Saturday and he has been detained at the Mahoning County Juvenile Justice Center. He was brought to the police station by his mother.
The teen, whose name is being withheld, faces charges of attempted murder and attempted robbery in connection with the shooting of 57-year-old Ellen Zban, of Youngstown, while she sat in her car in the driveway of her home on Powersdale Avenue. Zban was shot three times, once in the face and twice in the arm.
Zban survived and is recovering. She told the station she harbors no hatred for the boy.

http://abc6onyourside.com/news/local/boy-14-charged-with-shooting-youngstown-woman-in-face
 
Despite a mother’s plea, her mentally ill daughter was sold a firearm. The mother called the police. Then ATF. After that, the FBI. Janet Delana was desperate to stop her mentally ill adult daughter from buying another handgun but was still unable to stop her. Thanks GOP!​

She called the police. Then ATF. After that, the FBI.

Janet Delana was desperate to stop her mentally ill adult daughter from buying another handgun.

Finally, Delana called the gun shop a few miles from her home, the one that had sold her daughter a black Hi-Point pistol a month earlier when her last disability check had arrived.

Above: Janet Delana at the grave of her husband, Tex Delana, in Lexington, Mo. He was fatally shot in 2012 by their daughter, Colby Sue Weathers, who suffers from paranoid schizophrenia.
The next check was coming.

Delana pleaded.

Her daughter had been in and out of mental hospitals, she told the store manager, and was diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia. She had tried to kill herself. Her father had taken away the other gun, but Delana worried that her daughter would go back.

“I’m begging you,” Delana said through tears. “I’m begging you as a mother, if she comes in, please don’t sell her a gun.”

Colby Sue Weathers was mentally ill, but she had never been identified as a threat to herself or others by a judge or ordered to an extended mental hospital stay — which meant she could pass the background check for her gun.


At the Odessa Gun & Pawn shop, Weathers approached a manager: “Something like what I bought last time.”

She seemed nervous, the manager, Derrick Dady, would recall to police.

The Hi-Point pistol and one box of ammunition cost Weathers $257.85 at the store, on the main drag of the small town of Odessa, about 40 miles east of Kansas City.

Weathers headed back to the house that the 38-year-old shared with her parents, stopping along the way for a pack of unfiltered cigarettes at a gas station. A firefighter who was an old acquaintance saw her acting skittishly and muttering.

An hour after leaving the gun store, Weathers was back home where her father sat at a computer with his back to her.

She shot.

Weathers planned to kill herself next but told a 911 operator: “I can’t shoot myself. I was going to after I did it, but I couldn’t bring myself to it.”

Delana lost Tex, her husband of nearly 40 years, and her daughter, who was charged with murder. And beneath her anguish, Delana seethed.

The store had made about $60 profit on the sale, court records would show.

“After everything I did, they still sold her a gun,” Delana said recently. “The more I thought about it, the madder I got. I wanted someone to pay.”

Delana sued the Odessa Gun & Pawn shop for negligence in the June 2012 sale and won a decision at the Missouri Supreme Court that said that nothing in federal law barred Delana’s type of lawsuit. Under state law, the court ruled that dealers can be held liable if they should have known a buyer was dangerous. Last fall, with a trial set to start in January in the wrongful-death case, the gun shop settled with Delana, saying it had followed the law and done nothing wrong.

“I can’t just go by what a phone call says,” Dady said in a deposition. “If the person that comes in . . . passes the background check, I can sell them a gun.”

The gun shop agreed to pay Delana $2.2 million.

Gun-control advocates say the state court’s decision combined with Delana’s settlement are significant victories for those who want to reduce gun violence by changing the financial equation for the firearms industry.


Alla Lefkowitz and Jonathan E. Lowy, attorneys with the Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence, argued Delana's case. (Courtesy of Alla Lefkowitz and Jonathan E. Lowy)
The Missouri case, brought with the help of lawyers from the D.C.-based Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence, provides a legal road map for similar lawsuits around the country, according to the Brady Center, which said there are at least 10 other civil cases pending, including in Florida, Pennsylvania, Indiana and Texas.

Jonathan E. Lowy, Brady’s legal director who argued Delana’s case, said it sends a “powerful message to the gun industry nationwide, and to the companies that insure them, that if you supply a dangerous person with a gun, you will pay the price.”

Gun rights supporters counter that a 2005 national law that shields gunmakers, distributors and sellers from lawsuits never provided blanket immunity and already has exceptions to cover knowingly illegal sales.

Lawrence G. Keane, general counsel for the National Shooting Sports Foundation, said the lawsuits brought by the Brady Center and others are an effort to impose gun control through litigation instead of legislation. There is “nothing remarkable” about the Missouri settlement, Keane said. “What’s remarkable is that the law is functioning just as Congress intended.”

Growing up with guns
Far from Washington, where vast fields of corn and soybeans surround a community of 800 on the bluffs of the Missouri River, the gun debate is personal.

Delana grew up around guns. Her father was an avid hunter. Her husband, the high school sweetheart she married when she was 17, cleaned guns on the porch of their two-bedroom cottage in Wellington. Their dates included target practice.

A Browning pistol her husband bought still rests in the gun safe next to her bed, as much for sentiment as protection.

On gun regulations, a partisan divide:
• The House and Senate voted largely along party lines in February to get rid of Obama administration regulations aimed at blocking mentally ill people from passing federal background checks for gun purchases. President Trump signed the measure, HJ Res 40, rescinding the rules on Feb. 28.
• The rules had required the Social Security Administration to share information with the FBI about those receiving federal disability payments because of a mental illness — and unable to manage their finances — to ensure that their names were flagged in firearms dealers’ routine background checks.
• The Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act provides unique legal protections for firearms manufacturers, distributors and retailers. Passed by Congress in 2005, the law bars most civil lawsuits seeking to hold the industry accountable after the products it sells are misused, including in mass shootings.
• Supporters of the law say it has prevented frivolous lawsuits and includes exceptions for knowingly illegal sales. Opponents say those exceptions are narrow. Efforts to change or repeal the law, including last year, have not gained traction in a Republican-controlled Congress.
Delana doesn’t want to take guns away from everybody — just from people like her daughter who are struggling with mental illness. After a career in state government helping other people navigate Missouri’s social services system, she is frustrated she couldn’t do more to stop her daughter from getting a gun.

She said she is determined to bring attention to gaps in the background-check system and to expand the number of mentally ill people barred from buying firearms.

Even if her daughter had previously been deemed a threat by a judge, Delana has learned, there was no guarantee a background check would have caught that exclusion. The federal background-check system that is used to prevent convicted felons from buying guns is missing scores of state health records that would also flag and disqualify those who are seriously mentally ill.

Regulations finalized late in the Obama administration, but overturned in February with President Trump’s signature, extended restrictions on gun purchases to people who receive a federal disability payment because of mental illness and also have that check sent to someone who manages their financial matters.

But, Delana also has learned, if the Obama regulations had been in place when Weathers bought her weapon, they would not have barred her purchase because she received and managed her own Social Security disability checks.

Dismantling those regulations now, her mother said, is a mistake.

Delana retired from her job last year and at 61 is a newly minted activist, making speeches in New York and Washington, and meeting with congressional members about gun buying and the mentally ill.

“I will do whatever I can. I’m working for justice for Tex. I’m not sitting around brooding.”

http://www.washingtonpost.com/sf/lo...n-215pm:homepage/story&utm_term=.edd261bab02b
 
Despite a mother’s plea, her mentally ill daughter was sold a firearm. The mother called the police. Then ATF. After that, the FBI. Janet Delana was desperate to stop her mentally ill adult daughter from buying another handgun but was still unable to stop her. Thanks GOP!​

She called the police. Then ATF. After that, the FBI.

Janet Delana was desperate to stop her mentally ill adult daughter from buying another handgun.

Finally, Delana called the gun shop a few miles from her home, the one that had sold her daughter a black Hi-Point pistol a month earlier when her last disability check had arrived.

Above: Janet Delana at the grave of her husband, Tex Delana, in Lexington, Mo. He was fatally shot in 2012 by their daughter, Colby Sue Weathers, who suffers from paranoid schizophrenia.
The next check was coming.

Delana pleaded.

Her daughter had been in and out of mental hospitals, she told the store manager, and was diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia. She had tried to kill herself. Her father had taken away the other gun, but Delana worried that her daughter would go back.

“I’m begging you,” Delana said through tears. “I’m begging you as a mother, if she comes in, please don’t sell her a gun.”

Colby Sue Weathers was mentally ill, but she had never been identified as a threat to herself or others by a judge or ordered to an extended mental hospital stay — which meant she could pass the background check for her gun.


At the Odessa Gun & Pawn shop, Weathers approached a manager: “Something like what I bought last time.”

She seemed nervous, the manager, Derrick Dady, would recall to police.

The Hi-Point pistol and one box of ammunition cost Weathers $257.85 at the store, on the main drag of the small town of Odessa, about 40 miles east of Kansas City.

Weathers headed back to the house that the 38-year-old shared with her parents, stopping along the way for a pack of unfiltered cigarettes at a gas station. A firefighter who was an old acquaintance saw her acting skittishly and muttering.

An hour after leaving the gun store, Weathers was back home where her father sat at a computer with his back to her.

She shot.

Weathers planned to kill herself next but told a 911 operator: “I can’t shoot myself. I was going to after I did it, but I couldn’t bring myself to it.”

Delana lost Tex, her husband of nearly 40 years, and her daughter, who was charged with murder. And beneath her anguish, Delana seethed.

The store had made about $60 profit on the sale, court records would show.

“After everything I did, they still sold her a gun,” Delana said recently. “The more I thought about it, the madder I got. I wanted someone to pay.”

Delana sued the Odessa Gun & Pawn shop for negligence in the June 2012 sale and won a decision at the Missouri Supreme Court that said that nothing in federal law barred Delana’s type of lawsuit. Under state law, the court ruled that dealers can be held liable if they should have known a buyer was dangerous. Last fall, with a trial set to start in January in the wrongful-death case, the gun shop settled with Delana, saying it had followed the law and done nothing wrong.

“I can’t just go by what a phone call says,” Dady said in a deposition. “If the person that comes in . . . passes the background check, I can sell them a gun.”

The gun shop agreed to pay Delana $2.2 million.

Gun-control advocates say the state court’s decision combined with Delana’s settlement are significant victories for those who want to reduce gun violence by changing the financial equation for the firearms industry.


Alla Lefkowitz and Jonathan E. Lowy, attorneys with the Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence, argued Delana's case. (Courtesy of Alla Lefkowitz and Jonathan E. Lowy)
The Missouri case, brought with the help of lawyers from the D.C.-based Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence, provides a legal road map for similar lawsuits around the country, according to the Brady Center, which said there are at least 10 other civil cases pending, including in Florida, Pennsylvania, Indiana and Texas.

Jonathan E. Lowy, Brady’s legal director who argued Delana’s case, said it sends a “powerful message to the gun industry nationwide, and to the companies that insure them, that if you supply a dangerous person with a gun, you will pay the price.”

Gun rights supporters counter that a 2005 national law that shields gunmakers, distributors and sellers from lawsuits never provided blanket immunity and already has exceptions to cover knowingly illegal sales.

Lawrence G. Keane, general counsel for the National Shooting Sports Foundation, said the lawsuits brought by the Brady Center and others are an effort to impose gun control through litigation instead of legislation. There is “nothing remarkable” about the Missouri settlement, Keane said. “What’s remarkable is that the law is functioning just as Congress intended.”

Growing up with guns
Far from Washington, where vast fields of corn and soybeans surround a community of 800 on the bluffs of the Missouri River, the gun debate is personal.

Delana grew up around guns. Her father was an avid hunter. Her husband, the high school sweetheart she married when she was 17, cleaned guns on the porch of their two-bedroom cottage in Wellington. Their dates included target practice.

A Browning pistol her husband bought still rests in the gun safe next to her bed, as much for sentiment as protection.

On gun regulations, a partisan divide:
• The House and Senate voted largely along party lines in February to get rid of Obama administration regulations aimed at blocking mentally ill people from passing federal background checks for gun purchases. President Trump signed the measure, HJ Res 40, rescinding the rules on Feb. 28.
• The rules had required the Social Security Administration to share information with the FBI about those receiving federal disability payments because of a mental illness — and unable to manage their finances — to ensure that their names were flagged in firearms dealers’ routine background checks.
• The Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act provides unique legal protections for firearms manufacturers, distributors and retailers. Passed by Congress in 2005, the law bars most civil lawsuits seeking to hold the industry accountable after the products it sells are misused, including in mass shootings.
• Supporters of the law say it has prevented frivolous lawsuits and includes exceptions for knowingly illegal sales. Opponents say those exceptions are narrow. Efforts to change or repeal the law, including last year, have not gained traction in a Republican-controlled Congress.
Delana doesn’t want to take guns away from everybody — just from people like her daughter who are struggling with mental illness. After a career in state government helping other people navigate Missouri’s social services system, she is frustrated she couldn’t do more to stop her daughter from getting a gun.

She said she is determined to bring attention to gaps in the background-check system and to expand the number of mentally ill people barred from buying firearms.

Even if her daughter had previously been deemed a threat by a judge, Delana has learned, there was no guarantee a background check would have caught that exclusion. The federal background-check system that is used to prevent convicted felons from buying guns is missing scores of state health records that would also flag and disqualify those who are seriously mentally ill.

Regulations finalized late in the Obama administration, but overturned in February with President Trump’s signature, extended restrictions on gun purchases to people who receive a federal disability payment because of mental illness and also have that check sent to someone who manages their financial matters.

But, Delana also has learned, if the Obama regulations had been in place when Weathers bought her weapon, they would not have barred her purchase because she received and managed her own Social Security disability checks.

Dismantling those regulations now, her mother said, is a mistake.

Delana retired from her job last year and at 61 is a newly minted activist, making speeches in New York and Washington, and meeting with congressional members about gun buying and the mentally ill.

“I will do whatever I can. I’m working for justice for Tex. I’m not sitting around brooding.”

http://www.washingtonpost.com/sf/lo...n-215pm:homepage/story&utm_term=.edd261bab02b

Now crazy people can buy guns...
trump-gun.jpg
 
Top Trump Ally Met With Putin’s Deputy in Moscow

Before the NRA poured more than $30 million into Trump’s election, it met with a notorious Kremlin hardliner, allegedly to discuss a rifle competition.


49632606.cached.jpg

In March 2014, the U.S. government sanctioned Dmitry Rogozin—a hardline deputy to Vladimir Putin, the head of Russia’s defense industry and longtime opponent of American power—in retaliation for the invasion of Crimea and eastern Ukraine.
Eighteen months later, the National Rifle Association, Donald Trump’s most powerful outside ally during the 2016 election, sent a delegation to Moscow that met with him.
The meeting, which hasn’t been previously reported in the American press, is one strand in a web of connections between the Russian government and Team Trump: Attorney General Jeff Sessions and former National Security Adviser Michael Flynn both denied speaking with the Russian ambassador, which turned out to be untrue; former campaign manager Paul Manafort supported pro-Russian interests in Ukraine; Secretary of State Rex Tillerson won an “Order of Friendship” from Putin; and then, of course, there’s the hacking campaign that U.S. intelligence agencies say Russian launched to tilt the election in Trump’s favor.
Meeting with Rogozin, a target of U.S. sanctions, is not itself illegal—as long as the two sides did no business together—explained Boris Zilberman, an expert on Russian sanctions at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies. But, he noted, it is “frowned upon and raises questions… those targeted for sanctions have been engaged in conduct which is in direct opposition to U.S. national security interests.”
Which raises the question: Why was the NRA meeting with Putin’s deputy in the first place?
The NRA had previously objected to the parts of the U.S. sanctions regime that blocked Russian-made guns from import into the United States. But curiously, David Keene, the former NRA president and current board member who was on the Moscow trip, insisted the meeting with the high-ranking member of the Kremlin government had nothing whatsoever to do with geopolitics.
“Rogozin is chairman of the Russian Shooting Federation and his Board hosted a tour of Federation HQ for us while we were there,” Keene told The Daily Beast. “It was non-political. There were at least 30 in attendance and our interaction consisted of thanking him and his Board for the tour.”
Rogozin tweeted photos of the meetings, writing that they discussed a forthcoming rifle competition in Russia.

But Rogozin is no ordinary Russian official, and his title extends far beyond being merely the chairman of a shooting club. His portfolio as deputy prime minister of Russia includes the defense industry. One issue where Rogozin seems particularly interested is cyberwarfare, which he has heralded for its “first strike” capability. And he’s well-known in Russia for being a radical—often taking a harder line than Putin himself.
Rogozin was the leader of the ultra-right party called Rodina, or Motherland, and famously believes in the restoration of the Russian Empire, including what he calls “Russian America” (i.e., Alaska).
To wrestle control of the party, he turned its course from a party that was occasionally in opposition to Putin to a strictly pro-Putin party. In 2005 Rogozin and his party miscalculated Putin’s anti-immigrant mood and got kicked out of the parliament for a chauvinistic promotion video that said: “Let’s Clean the Garbage!” featuring Central Asian workers eating a watermelon and spitting on the ground.
Still, Rogozin stayed loyal to Putin and soon was appointed Russian ambassador to NATO at the time of the Russia-Georgia War—his main responsibility at the time was to prevent Ukraine and Georgia from joining NATO. Today his Motherland party is back in the parliament, trying to unite right-wing movements in Europe.

“It is disconcerting that they would be meeting [with a Russian official] about anything given their vocal support of the president,” said Rep. Mike Quigley, a member of the House Intelligence Committee, which is investigating Russia’s attempts to influence the 2016 presidential elections. “Due to the NRA’s opposition to sanctions, it defies credulity that they wouldn’t have discussed sanctions and their extraordinary support for Donald Trump’s campaign.”
“Russia is not America’s friend. And it’s stunning to hear that while they were attacking our democracy, one of the largest organizations supporting Trump was cozying up with a sanctioned Russian in Moscow,” said Rep. Eric Swalwell, who is the top Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee panel that oversees the CIA.
Rogozin’s inclusion in U.S. sanctions, prior to his meeting with the NRA delegation, marks him as an American adversary. But if that designation raised red flags to Keene and his compatriots—including board member Pete Brownell, top NRA donor Joe Gregory, and Trump supporter Sheriff David A. Clarke—they didn’t mention them, before or since.
The White House designated Rogozin for sanctions through an executive order in March 2014 after the Russian annexation of Crimea in Ukraine. Perhaps it’s only coincidence, then, that a few months later, the NRA’s Institute for Legislative Action protested when the Treasury Department banned the importation of Kalashnikov firearms under authority granted to them from that same executive order.
“These latest sanctions will no doubt engender the idea among some that the Treasury Department is using a geopolitical crisis as a convenient excuse to advance the president’s domestic anti-gun agenda,” the NRA-ILA wrote at the time.
The National Rifle Association’s support for Trump was unprecedented—and it seems to have paid off. The organization backed Trump in May 2016—much earlier than they had endorsed other candidates in previous election cycles, and before he had even been officially named the Republican presidential nominee.
The NRA spent $30.3 million to elect Trump—more than even the top Trump super PAC, which spent just $20.3 million, according to OpenSecrets.
This proved to be an important piece of the puzzle for the president’s eventual victory, giving him bona fides among Democrats from working class families.
“They got behind him early. It tends to be a lot of movement conservatives, a lot of Republicans —but the NRA’s membership is also so powerful in union households,” said Richard Feldman, a former NRA lobbyist who wrote a book, Ricochet, about his experiences. “Union leaderships are very concerned about what the NRA has to say… This year it was a very important. NRA was the first major group to get behind Trump.”
Indeed, there is a solid case to be made that the NRA’s endorsement and support was among the most important of any group this election cycle. The NRA lined up television advertising space early, when rates were lower, and had money to spend when the Access Hollywood scandal struck, reading with a fresh advertising spot to support Trump.
“There are many claimants to the honor of having nudged Donald Trump over the top in the presidential election,” wrote Fred Barnes, executive editor of the conservative magazine The Weekly Standard, last week. “But the folks with the best case are the National Rifle Association and the consultants who made their TV ads.”
Soon after the election, the Trump administration rescinded an order, issued in the waning days of the Obama administration, that banned lead ammunition in various hunting and fishing areas—the NRA immediately applauded the action.
In retrospect, the second week of December 2015 is notable: In Moscow’s Metropol Hotel, now-disgraced Trump national security adviser Gen. Michael Flynn dined with Putin at a dinner held by Russia Today, a state-sponsored propaganda outlet.
The NRA delegation’s 2015 trip to Russia took place the same week, lasting from Dec. 8-13, according to Clarke’s public financial disclosure forms, (PDF), and included not only the people who met with Rogozin but a number of other NRA dignitaries, including donors Dr. Arnold Goldshlager and Hilary Goldschlager, as well as Jim Liberatore, the CEO of the Outdoor Channel.
Various members had various stated reasons for going. At least one was there for business reasons.
“Mr. Liberatore traveled to Russia to discuss our new outdoor lifestyle service MrOutdoorTV (MOTV) and prospects for international distribution,” said Liberatore’s spokesman, Thomas Caraccioli. Liberatore did not meet with Rogozin, he added.
The delegates who were contacted by The Daily Beast did not respond to questions regarding how they paid for their trip. But Clarke, as the sheriff of Milwaukee County, Wisconsin, was required to fill out public disclosure forms outlining any private money he received for travel (PDF).
The trip was sponsored at least in part by the organization, The Right to Bear Arms, a firearms advocacy organization founded by Russian national Maria Butina, a former Siberian furniture store owner who now lives in Washington, D.C., and serves as a link between Russian political circles and the American capital’s conservative elite.
“A delegation of the world’s largest gun rights civic organization—the National Rifle Association of the US (the NRA) visited Moscow on an official trip and met with supporters of the Right to Bear Arms movement,” wrote Butina in Russian in December 2015, posting a photo of the delegation on her organization’s Facebook page.

Clarke reported that Butina’s organization paid $6,000 for his meals, hotel, transportation, and excursions during his time in Russia. Brownell, the CEO of a prominent firearms company and an NRA board member, paid for the remainder, including his airfare and visas.
It is unclear where Butina’s firearms advocacy organization gets her money—it is a puzzling group, considering that Russia does not have a large grassroots movement for gun rights like the United States does.
Butina does, however, have a close relationship with Alexander Torshin, the former deputy governor of Russia’s central bank who has been accused by Spanish authorities of laundering money for the Russian mob. Neither Butina and Torshin responded to requests for comment.
Both Torshin and Butina pride themselves on their close relationship with the National Rifle Assocation, bragging on social media about their life memberships in the organization and posting photos of themselves with Keene, a former president of the NRA.
They’re not the only ones who posted photos showing links with the NRA: Rogozin posted photos of his meetings with the NRA in 2015. In one photo, the deputy prime minister is standing at what appears to be a shooting range with Gregory, Brownell, and Keene.
In another photo, Rogozin is at a conference table with Clarke and Brownell. Putin ally and former Russian senator Alexander Torshin is also seated with the group, along with a number of other unidentified individuals.
A White House spokesman declined to comment, as did the NRA.
Whatever the NRA’s ultimate reason for sending a delegation to Moscow, the conservative movement in D.C. is starting to slowly shift their views on Russia and Putin.
In May 2014, Keene criticized President Obama for not doing enough to confront Putin.
“The United States under President Obama’s leadership is content to issue rhetorical denunciations, insult Mr. Putin by claiming he runs a second-rate country that doesn’t understand the times in which we live, and deny he and his friends visas to visit the United States [emphasis added],” Keene wrote in the Washington Times, where he is now an editor.
With Trump about to enter office, in January 2017, Keene was singing a different tune.
“We seem prepared to believe any evil of Vladimir Putin’s Russia, which has with its second-rate military establishment and failing economy somehow morphed in the minds of many Americans into a greater threat than the old Soviet Union [emphasis added],” he wrote.
Asked why the contradiction, Keene employed some Trumpian logic.
“The two statements aren’t inconsistent,” he told The Daily Beast.

http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2017/03/07/top-trump-ally-met-with-putin-s-deputy-in-moscow.html

Is there any aspect of the Trump campaign that didn't have a Russian connection?
 
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