I want some longer arms so I can see that blurry front post jiggling around.if you want a 1 MOA revolver.
I want some longer arms so I can see that blurry front post jiggling around.if you want a 1 MOA revolver.
I want some longer arms so I can see that blurry front post jiggling around.
Long and boring but educational if you don't know how firearms expert testimony is done in court. But if you've never experienced it, it's educational. Procedurally, I mean. The tech is, I assume, mostly understood by pretty much everyone reading TGT.
There were one or two rental firms in Cali that, decades ago, had the most wonderful, biggest collections of firearms you can imagine. They had thousands of NFA items, regular guns, and tens of thousands of fake rubber/plastic guns. More interestingly, they had gunsmith shops employing the few gunsmiths in the world who know how to make guns that look like they're firing even when they're not. They made their own blanks, etc. They provided highly competent personnel on contract to movie productions to make sure everyone stayed safe and didn't look too stupid.I would assume any movie filmed in California would not allow them to use live guns, but that is an assumption on my part.
That would be awesome to see, is there a link or title to any of the documentaries? My guess is they went out of business because they were too good at their jobs. A 1st generation M-16 that's "perfectly reliable"?? Lol!There were one or two rental firms in Cali that, decades ago, had the most wonderful, biggest collections of firearms you can imagine. They had thousands of NFA items, regular guns, and tens of thousands of fake rubber/plastic guns. More interestingly, they had gunsmith shops employing the few gunsmiths in the world who know how to make guns that look like they're firing even when they're not. They made their own blanks, etc. They provided highly competent personnel on contract to movie productions to make sure everyone stayed safe and didn't look too stupid.
The documentaries I've seen have been mind-boggling. I never appreciated how difficult it is to make an M-16 fire full-auto with perfect reliability with blanks while also producing enough muzzle flash to be visible in daylight.
As of now, iirc, those firms no longer exist, eventually driven out of business by Cali gun laws.
I'd start here and here. There are links to YT videos at that second link.is there a link or title to any of the documentaries?
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www.wsj.com
They got her! Now on to Baldwin.
Yeah, they took the patsy down. Baldwin needs to do not one less day in prison than she was sentenced to - as producer, it's his responsibility and he ran a slipshod set.
Like Cocaine in the White House, they still do not know who brought live ammo to the set, and who loaded the live rounds into the gun.After watching most of the trial, in my Layman’s opinion, it was a bit of a slam dunk against her. Her job and responsibility was to load the firearm and check the rounds that were loaded into the firearm. She failed miserably to do this.
Now this is not to say, there isn’t plenty of blame and responsibility to go around.
From what I gathered watching the trial, there is no dispute that she loaded the gun just minutes, prior to the incident.Like Cocaine in the White House, they still do not know who brought live ammo to the set, and who loaded the live rounds into the gun.
Sentencing is mid April.Prosecutor will use sentencing as leverage to get her testimony against Baldwin. If she plays ball, she'll walk away with a suspended sentence....