PDA

View Full Version : World War II-Era German Assault Rifle Discovered At Connecticut Gun Buy-Back



EE_
10th December 2012, 09:53 PM
Posted: 12/10/2012 1:00 pm EST | Updated: 12/10/2012 4:03 pm EST

One woman hit the bullseye last week when she attempted to toss out a dusty old rifle at a local gun buy-back in Hartford, Conn.

Unbeknownst to the owner, the rifle was identified as a World War II-era German assault rifle valued between $30,000 and $40,000, NECN reports.

The gun is a Sturmgewehr 44, which holds a 30-round magazine, shoots 500 rounds per minute and is the basis for "every modern assault rifle produced today," Officer John Cavanna of the Hartford Police told NECN.

Exchanges vary from city to city, but buy-backs offer gun owners everything from $50 Walmart gift cards, to $250 cash, to flu shots.

Usually, guns purchased at buy-back programs are melted down or destroyed. The idea is that every gun taken off the streets is a step toward reducing gun violence.

In the case of the Stg 44, officers said they would allow the woman to sell the weapon -- keeping a piece of history alive and most likely netting a hefty sum for the unsuspecting owner.

At a buy-back in Worcester, Mass. earlier this year, another piece of history was saved from destruction. A vintage Japanese rifle -- complete with bayonet -- was turned in to aprogram run by the UMass Medical Center. Instead of selling it or destroying it, doctors decided to see if any museums were interested in taking the weapon.

And guns aren't the only things getting tossed out that are worth a pretty penny.

At various Goodwill stores across the country, employees and customers have discovered valuable works of art by artists like Salvador Dali and American artist Alexander Calder. In May, a Milwaukee woman bought a print for $12.34 before learning that it was a lithograph worth $9,000.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/12/10/world-war-ii-era-german-assault-rifle-_n_2270815.html?icid=maing-grid10%7Chtmlws-main-bb%7Cdl10%7Csec1_lnk3%26pLid%3D243562

Glass
10th December 2012, 11:31 PM
well at least they "let" her sell her "own" property.

BrewTech
11th December 2012, 12:38 AM
well at least they "let" her sell her "own" property.


In the case of the Stg 44, officers said they would allow the woman to sell the weapon -- keeping a piece of history alive and most likely netting a hefty sum for the unsuspecting owner.

That little piece of bullshit "journalism" jumped out at you too, did it?

Something tells me the cops ENCOURAGED her to sell it rather than turn it in, but the writers for this statist rag decided to reinforce the paradigm they and others have been working so hard to build... the one where there are no such things as rights, just state-granted "privileges" and "allowances".

midnight rambler
11th December 2012, 12:50 AM
That little piece of bullshit "journalism" jumped out at you too, did it?

Something tells me the cops ENCOURAGED her to sell it rather than turn it in, but the writers for this statist rag decided to reinforce the paradigm they and others have been working so hard to build... the one where there are no such things as rights, just state-granted "privileges" and "allowances".

It appears the StG44 in the article didn't have a tax stamp/wasn't in the NFA registry, so if true I'm really surprised they 'allowed' her to keep it and offer it for sale (it would have had to been entered into the NFA registry before being sold, and any buyer could only buy it from her under NFA rules, i.e. pass a background check and pay $200 for the tax stamp AFTER it had been registered in the NFA registry).

BrewTech
11th December 2012, 12:53 AM
It appears the StG44 in the article didn't have a tax stamp/wasn't in the NFA registry, so if true I'm really surprised they 'allowed' her to keep it and offer it for sale (it would have had to been entered into the NFA registry before being sold, and any buyer could only buy it from her under NFA rules, i.e. pass a background check and pay $200 for the tax stamp AFTER it had been registered in the NFA registry).

Knowing that, I'm surprised they didn't just steal it from her.

joboo
11th December 2012, 02:50 AM
Knowing that, I'm surprised they didn't just steal it from her.

I'll bet you all the money in the world, and a chocolate covered doughnut, it has happened many times.

Oh thanks so much for allowing me to sell my own property!!! <gracious tears of joy>


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2jrlCPq5stE

Just to play the anti.....50 round mag in an M14 (@1m:30s).....One sweet action.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CSceYZsGbkU

mamboni
11th December 2012, 06:08 AM
During WWII, the soldiers could send home the guns of the enemy they killed. My father fought with General Merril in India and Burma. I remember as a kid in the late fifties-early sixties that he had a huge collection of rifles from WWII, mainly Japanese. He got rid of them in the mid 1960s.