Disposing of a gun, TV content
Discussion
This may be a very dumb question. Tonight I was watching “The trials that shocked Scotland” this included a gangland killing, where the accused dumped the guns in a public area.
I assume unregistered firearms are fairly expensive to acquire, also I recognize the accused would not want them kept in a place that could be associated with them, but why put so little effort into disposing of them?
I assume unregistered firearms are fairly expensive to acquire, also I recognize the accused would not want them kept in a place that could be associated with them, but why put so little effort into disposing of them?
Draxindustries1 said:
The only sure way of getting rid of an unwanted firearm is in a heavy vice, slicing it into small segments with a 9" cutting disc and dispersing the pile of metal into various sections of a river or at sea...
So obvious when you think about it, far more fool proof than tossing it into a local river. Draxindustries1 said:
The only sure way of getting rid of an unwanted firearm is in a heavy vice, slicing it into small segments with a 9" cutting disc and dispersing the pile of metal into various sections of a river or at sea...
A friend worked at metal recycling place that had an incinerator. One day, a car pulled up and popped the boot. He walked to the back and it was empty. Told the driver there was nothing there. The reply was “good to know it’s always on”. He didn’t go back to work the following day. MDMA . said:
A friend worked at metal recycling place that had an incinerator. One day, a car pulled up and popped the boot. He walked to the back and it was empty. Told the driver there was nothing there. The reply was “good to know it’s always on”. He didn’t go back to work the following day.
Forgive me if I'm having a dumb moment but I don't get it.Funky Squirrel said:
MDMA . said:
A friend worked at metal recycling place that had an incinerator. One day, a car pulled up and popped the boot. He walked to the back and it was empty. Told the driver there was nothing there. The reply was “good to know it’s always on”. He didn’t go back to work the following day.
Forgive me if I'm having a dumb moment but I don't get it.Funky Squirrel said:
MDMA . said:
A friend worked at metal recycling place that had an incinerator. One day, a car pulled up and popped the boot. He walked to the back and it was empty. Told the driver there was nothing there. The reply was “good to know it’s always on”. He didn’t go back to work the following day.
Forgive me if I'm having a dumb moment but I don't get it.In the 80’s a friend of a friend typically used to leave them in the boot of a car and have the car crushed by a friendly scrapyard ie dispose of the car and gun at the same time.
He got arrested for assault on police and whilst on remand had to ask my mate to remove some post office bags and a stolen sawn off from the boot of his own car, and the muppet did it and I think he buried the gun in his own garden and burned the rest of the stuff .
He got arrested for assault on police and whilst on remand had to ask my mate to remove some post office bags and a stolen sawn off from the boot of his own car, and the muppet did it and I think he buried the gun in his own garden and burned the rest of the stuff .
dudleybloke said:
Grind it into powder and job done.
A better way if that were possible.Abrasive grinding discs aren't up to the job and youred be there forever, the carbon steel and stainless content would see to that and the aluminium alloy content just clogs them. Thin cutting discs will slice a firearm up though, a fine gapped diamond one although primarily used on concrete also works on hard steel.
WilliamWoollard said:
Draxindustries1 said:
The only sure way of getting rid of an unwanted firearm is in a heavy vice, slicing it into small segments with a 9" cutting disc and dispersing the pile of metal into various sections of a river or at sea...
You just go to Monster Joe's Truck and Tow
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YgxACD-rL5c
Edited by alfaspecial on Friday 28th October 07:15
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