I Love This List!: One list member located a side view of the previously 
unidentified "sharpshooter" rifle recently purchased by the British on 
their army website (first link). Jeff Cahill, of TangoDown, identified 
it specifically as the Lewis Machine & Tool MRP Modular Weapon System 
(second link). The price listed for the 440-rifle purchase comes out to 
approximately $5,560 per rifle. With a retail price of $2,500 for the 
rifle, that confirms my suspicion that a large portion of that $5,560 
was for the scope and accoutrements, with the emphasis on the former. 
With the pool of over 700 serious and knowledgeable gun owners on this 
list, it didn't take long to get that sorted out.

http://www.army.mod.uk/news/18798.aspx
http://www.lewismachine.net/product.php?p=204&cid=12&session=423e64b5dc790171f647a33fb6409136
---

Massachusetts Senate Vote Also Affects RKBA: The outcome of Tuesday's 
special election to fill the Senate seat left vacant in Massachusetts 
with the death of Sen. Edward M. Kennedy is about more than health care, 
even though that's the issue on everyone's front burner. It is also 
about more than Massachusetts politics, and Northwest residents, 
including gun owners, are paying very close attention. If Republican 
Scott Brown defeats Democrat Martha Coakley, it will not only bring to a 
grinding halt the Obama juggernaut and put his health care agenda in the 
middle of a political train wreck, it also strips him of a super 
majority in the Senate, where the brakes just might be applied to any 
gun control initiatives that might rise in the wake of the health care 
debate...

http://www.examiner.com/x-4525-Seattle-Gun-Rights-Examiner~y2010m1d19-Massachusetts-Senate-vote-about-more-than-just-health-care?cid=exrss-Seattle-Gun-Rights-Examiner
---

Big Brother, Brady and the RKBA: The Brady Campaign yesterday released a 
scathing "report" - 21 pages long - calling the president (whose 
candidacy they had enthusiastically endorsed) an "abject failure" in 
regard to the forcible citizen disarmament agenda... Obama has given no 
indication whatsoever that his personal position has moved an inch from 
where it was when he sat on the board of the rabidly anti-gun Joyce 
Foundation--a position he maintained throughout his legislative career 
(for example) with nearly every vote.  I say nearly every vote, because 
in 2007, he did (surprsingly, I think) vote in favor of Sen. David 
Vitter's Amendment 4615 to HR 5441, to prohibit gun confiscations during 
emergencies, as happened in the Hurricane Katrian aftermath - that is, 
to my knowledge, the lone exception in his otherwise uniformly anti-gun 
legislative career. His presidential campaign, now that he needed 
broader appeal, tried to downplay his anti-gun stance, but he still 
spoke in favor of banning so-called "assault weapons," closing the "gun 
show loophole," and "childproofing" guns (and let us not forget "bitter 
clinging" remarks).  Those positions were, in fact, outlined in the 
official White House "Urban Policy" for even a while after his election. 
If Obama has backed away from actively pursuing those goals for now, it 
is only because he perceives the time as not being right.  TImes change, 
though, as Sen. Dianne Feistein made chillingly clear with her "I'll 
pick the time and place . . . " to aggressively pursue the forcible 
citizen disarmament agenda...

http://www.examiner.com/x-2581-St-Louis-Gun-Rights-Examiner~y2010m1d19-Brady-Campaign-unhappy-with-Obama-but-that-doesnt-make-him-our-friend
---

The "Law-Abiding Gun Owner" Trap: Last Friday, I wrote about Jason 
Baez.  Mr Baez is a Manhattan resident who, with his family, endured a 
terrifying armed robbery of their home, was advised by "authorities" to 
simply move out until the robbers were caught, then nearly drowned in 
debt while paying rent on the new apartment and the Manhattan place, and 
was then arrested for carrying the handgun he bought for protection - in 
defiance of New York City law, and has now pleaded guilty to a "gun 
felony." ...I am not, in fact, especially enamored of the term "law 
abiding gun owner."  To me, that term implies that someone who obeys a 
law prohibiting an effective means of defending himself and his family 
is somehow morally superior to someone who has the courage to defy such 
an evil edict.  I would argue that the reverse is true. Like I said, 
many gun rights advocates would disagree.  If one is to believe that the 
NRA is serious about its "enforce existing gun laws" mantra, it becomes 
difficult to escape the conclusion that the NRA supports punishing Jason 
Baez, who, by his own admission, broke at least two "existing gun laws" 
- NYC's Sullivan Act, requiring a permit (not easily or cheaply 
obtained) simply to purchase a handgun, plus the felony of carrying one 
without a carry permit (only issued to the extremely connected and 
wealthy)...

http://www.examiner.com/x-2581-St-Louis-Gun-Rights-Examiner~y2010m1d18-Is-law-abiding-gun-owner-what-we-should-strive-to-be
---

December NICS Data: Data released by the FBI's National Instant Criminal 
Background Check System (NICS) reported 1,407,155 checks in December 
2009, ranking the month in the top five for most NICS checks of all 
time. This figure, while being a 7.6 percent decrease from the 1,523,426 
checks conducted in December 2008 - the beginning stage of an ongoing 
surge in firearms and ammunition sales - is an increase of 14.4 percent 
over checks in December 2007. Year-to-date background checks for 2009 
total 14,033,824, an increase of 10.4 percent over the same time period 
last year. The total number of background checks reported since the 
beginning of NICS is 110,017,832.

http://www.buckeyefirearms.org/node/7068
---

Illegal Aliens and Texas Gun Shows: To keep 'undocumented immigrants' 
from buying guns, Texas cops allegedly violated local and federal gun 
laws. Gun enthusiasts in central Texas are upset over what they say is a 
heavy-handed effort by police in Austin, the capital, to restrict the 
legal sale of firearms at gun shows in violation of state and federal 
laws. Specifically, they accuse Austin's police of unlawfully 
restricting the sales of guns between law-abiding citizens at a gun show 
last weekend. Interestingly, police were in large part seeking to keep 
"undocumented immigrants" from buying guns -- and so they "recommended" 
to the property owner on which a gun show was held that all gun sales be 
made by licensed gun dealers and that private sellers transfer their 
guns through gun dealers. The property owner, H-E-B, is a local grocery 
chain. Austin is considered a "sanctuary city" and is home to many 
"undocumented immigrants," primarily from Mexico...

http://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2010/01/illegals_and_the_second_amendm.html

...But before you grab a pitchfork and head over to Austin police 
headquarters, interviews of the "interested parties" indicate further 
consideration may be valuable... If you want to make a case that 
law-abiding gun owners are being punished because of illegal gun sales 
to prohibited persons, then perhaps HEB is the place to start, since 
they made the final decision. This author is acquainted with many law 
enforcement professionals, and while there are exceptions, they 
generally want to do good work and go home to their families at night. 
One thing appears true: Since the FFL rule was implemented by HEB, the 
wording of the TGS announcement on their web site is overstated. There 
are no clear-cut villains and victims here. In the final analysis, you 
the reader need to decide the best course of action. Facts, not 
rhetoric, help make educated decisions. (Hmm. I own a business and get 
called into a conference with local and federal law enforcement over 
nuisance abatement. No pressure exerted on me? Yes, I agree with the 
implication that a boycott of HEB is probably in order.))

http://www.examiner.com/x-2879-Austin-Gun-Rights-Examiner~y2010m1d20-Austin-gun-show-update-Interviews-reveal-bigger-picture
---

Meanwhile, in Houston...: Nine local weapons traffickers who were part 
of crew of friends and family that bought guns for a drug cartel are 
headed to prison as part of a rare case in which weapons were traced 
from murder and mayhem in Mexico to stores in Houston. An ongoing 
federal investigation is aimed at the covert ties between Texas, where 
guns are a legal part of everyday life, and Mexico, where a cartel war 
has claimed thousands of lives in recent years despite guns being 
generally illegal for all but police and soldiers... Each got a minimal 
sentence, the most being a year, because they cooperated with 
authorities trying to bust those further up the food chain in the 
conspiracy, a federal prosecutor said. Speaking from the bench, Lake 
questioned if a wide enough net was cast by snaring those who bought the 
weapons, not dealers who sold them over the counter. "I can't believe 
these gun stores didn't know something was wrong," Lake said. "Is there 
any way to investigate these gun stores?" Assistant U.S. Attorney Mark 
White responded that he couldn't disclose what, if anything, was going 
on regarding the gun dealers... (These guns were not purchased at gun 
shows. If the Mexican cartels use firearms that are generally illegal 
for all but police and soldiers, how are they being purchased over the 
counter in Texas gun stores? If they are being purchased from licensed 
dealers, aren't the buyers passing the NICS/FBI background checks?)

http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/metropolitan/6825298.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+houstonchronicle%2Fmetro+%28chron.com+-+Houston+%26+Texas%29
---

No Lack of Steer Manure at Arizona State University: State Sen. Jack 
Harper suggests professors should have the right to carry guns on 
campus. We suggest not pissing off your professor. Last week, a bill to 
give some university and community college professors the right to carry 
concealed firearms on campus was introduced in the state Senate. The 
reason for the bill may be simple on the surface. Putting guns in the 
hands of some professors - who have concealed carry permits, of course - 
not only upholds the Second Amendment, it arguably adds an important 
layer of defense if there is a hostile gun situation on campus. But 
here's the caveat - the benefits are arguable. Does adding a gun to an 
already violent situation help or hurt? ...Michael Berch, an ASU law 
professor, warned guns on campus would increase accidents, not benefits. 
Unlike police officers, permit holders are not required to go through 
weeks and weeks of training to respond to high-intensity situations. If 
someone pulls a gun in a classroom, would professors have the ability to 
respond in the best way? Or would professors become automatic targets? ...

http://www.statepress.com/node/9944
---

California School Hearing Draws Crowd: A teenager expelled from Willows 
High School for parking on the edge of campus with two duck-hunting 
shotguns in his pickup truck took his case to the Glenn County Board of 
Education on Tuesday, asking it to overturn his expulsion. After a 
three-hour hearing, the board said it would issue its ruling Friday... 
At issue in Tuesday's hearing was whether school officials in Willows 
exceeded their authority under the state's Education Code by 
disciplining Tudesko when his truck, with the shotguns inside, was 
parked on a public street next to the high school. Chuck Michel, a 
prominent gun-rights lawyer from Long Beach, traveled to Willows to 
represent Tudesko with backing from the National Rifle Association and 
the California Rifle and Pistol Association. He argued that the school's 
authority ends at its campus boundaries... Criminal statutes prohibit 
guns within 1,000 feet of a school, he said. But police opted not to 
file charges against Tudesko, believing he had no criminal intent, and 
school officials have no authority to enforce criminal laws, the lawyer 
argued...

http://www.sacbee.com/topstories/story/2474483.html
---

Oops, Wrong House, Florida Version: A homeowner shot at an intruder 
Tuesday night in Cantonment, and deputies are still searching for the 
suspect. About 6:30, the Escambia County Sheriff's Department responded 
to the home in the 1800 block of Wareham Way. That's where a homeowner 
says he shot at a man trying to get into his house. Deputies don't 
believe the homeowner's shotgun blast hit the intruder, but they were 
not completely certain. The intruder was not found...

http://www.northescambia.com/?p=13991
---

Oops, Wrong House, Nevada Version: A home invasion ended this morning 
with an elderly homeowner fatally shooting a man who entered his home, 
Metro [Las Vegas] Police said. The incident occurred about 12:14 a.m. 
today in the 700 block of Clarkway Drive, near Bonanza Road and Rancho 
Drive. Police said the apparent robbery appeared to be random in nature. 
Roberts says the homeowner called police and said he shot a man who was 
trying to break into his house. Officers found the dead man's body in 
the doorway. His identity was not immediately made public by the Clark 
County coroner. This is the 14th homicide this year in Metro Police 
jurisdiction.

http://www.lasvegassun.com/news/2010/jan/19/homeowner-fatally-shoots-man-during-home-invasion/

An intruder is dead and the resident who shot him is still shaken after 
a home invasion in the central valley early Tuesday morning. The 
resident, a man in his 60s who uses a cane to walk, was visibly upset as 
he emptied the trash outside his home in the 700 block of Clarkway 
Drive, near Bonanza Road and Rancho Drive, at 7:30 a.m. Tuesday... The 
resident said he awoke about midnight to a sound at his front door. As 
he investigated, he saw a man kick open the door, breaking the chain 
lock, he said. The suspect took two steps inside the house, where the 
resident waited in the living room with a .45 caliber handgun at his 
waist. "I said, 'Get the hell out of my house,' and he stood there 
laughing," he said. "He said, 'I'm going to beat your ass and then I'm 
gonna kill you,' and he took one more step. Then I shot him." The 
resident said he was angry at morning television news broadcasts that 
claimed there was a scuffle before he fired the weapon. He is currently 
disabled because of several back surgeries that require substantial pain 
medication, he said. He had taken his medication that evening, and was 
in no shape for a physical confrontation, he said...

http://www.lvrj.com/news/man-shaken-after-fatal-shooting-82143507.html
---

Oops, Wrong Car: Police said two robbers were shot this morning when 
they attempted to steal a car and wallet from a man at a Kansas City, 
Kan., car wash. Kansas City, Kan., Police Spokesman Michael Golden said 
the man was at the car wash in the 2700 block of Merriam Lane shortly 
before 8 a.m. when two men approached. He pulled out a gun and shot both 
of the men. One of the robbers suffered life-threatening injuries and 
couldn't flee. However, the second suspect escaped in a car driven by a 
third suspect. They drove to 42nd Street and Shawnee Drive where they 
called medical officials for help. The second man's condition was not 
believed to be life-threatening. Police said it was the second time in a 
matter of hours that a victim shot at a would-be robber...

http://www.kansascity.com/news/breaking_news/story/1685401.html
http://www.examiner.com/x-18149-SelfDefense-Examiner~y2010m1d17-Car-wash-robbers-shot-by-armed-victim
---

Unintended Consequences of a Gunshot: A Syracuse [NY] man was shot 
Monday and charged with driving while intoxicated after attempting to 
drive himself to the hospital. Derrick M. Pride, 39, told police he was 
standing at the corner of East Fayette and Bruce streets around 7:30 
p.m. when someone came along and shot him. Pride then got in a car and 
attempted to drive himself to the hospital. However, he drove in the 
opposite direction as other traffic and collided with a car at the 
intersection of Crouse Avenue and Adams Street, police said. Pride was 
taken from the crash to Upstate University Hospital where he was treated 
for a gunshot wound to his left shoulder. The wound, police said, was 
not life-threatening. According to police, no one was injured in the 
other car.

http://www.syracuse.com/news/index.ssf/2010/01/man_shot_crashes_while_driving.html
---

Weapons, Equipment Industry Hit with Arrests: Twenty-two executives and 
employees of companies in the military and law enforcement products 
industry have been indicted for engaging in schemes to bribe foreign 
government officials to obtain and retain business. Twenty-one 
defendants were arrested in Las Vegas yesterday [January 18, on the eve 
of the SHOT Show]. One defendant was arrested in Miami. The indictments 
stem from an FBI undercover operation that focused on allegations of 
foreign bribery in the military and law enforcement products industry... 
In connection with these indictments, approximately 150 FBI agents 
executed 14 search warrants in locations across the country, including 
Bull Shoals, Ark.; San Francisco; Miami; Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla.; 
Sarasota, Fla.; St. Petersburg, Fla.; Sunrise, Fla.; University Park, 
Fla.; Decatur, Ga.; Stearns, Ky.; Upper Darby, Penn.; and Woodbridge, 
Va. Additionally, the United Kingdom's City of London Police executed 
seven search warrants in connection with their own investigations into 
companies involved in the foreign bribery conduct that formed the basis 
for the indictments... (I suspect we may see claims of entrapment if 
these cases go to trial - shade of the DeLorean case?)

http://www.fcpablog.com/blog/2010/1/19/massive-fcpa-indictment-unsealed.html

Federal authorities in Washington have accused 22 executives of trying 
to bribe foreign officials to obtain lucrative contracts to sell them 
grenade launchers, guns, armored trucks and bulletproof vests. Among 
those charged was Amaro Goncalves, vice president of sales for Smith & 
Wesson, and R. Patrick Caldwell, who was named the head of a Florida 
weapons manufacturer in July after spending 27 years in the U.S. Secret 
Service. During his Secret Service career, Caldwell led the vice 
presidential protective division and served as deputy assistant director 
of the Office of Protective Operations... The weapons companies were 
located across the U.S., the United Kingdom and Israel, court documents 
said. Among those charged was Helmie Ashiblie, the vice president and 
founder of Woodbridge-based i-Shot, which sells gun bags and other 
weapons accessories to law enforcement agencies worldwide. The company's 
Web site says Ashiblie is a former commander of a Singapore Guards 
regiment. Calls to the company were not returned Tuesday.

http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/local/crime/22-weapons-dealers-accused-of-trying-to-bribe-foreign-officials-82102447.html
---

S&W Introduces New Pistol, Revolver: ..."Throughout the development of 
the BODYGUARDS, our engineers and product managers worked closely with 
end users to design and produce an innovative line of personal 
protection firearms," said Michael Golden, CEO of Smith & Wesson Corp., 
a division of Smith & Wesson Holding Corporation. "Both the BODYGUARD 
380 pistol and the BODYGUARD 38 revolver have been built with 
state-of-the-art manufacturing techniques. Each provides a reliable and 
logical choice for those seeking a firearm for personal protection. In 
addition, our engineers worked closely with Insight Technology to design 
an integrated laser that not only improves target acquisition but also 
reduces the price of this technology so more customers can afford to use 
laser sighting systems. We are very pleased with the positive feedback 
we have received on the new BODYGUARD line from the numerous retailers 
and media professionals at the 2010 SHOT Show." ...(Presumably, the .380 
pistol overcomes some of the issues with the old Sigma in that chambering.)

http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/smith--wessonr-introduces-new-bodyguardr-line-82045372.html

...These new handguns seem to be S&W's answer to Ruger's hugely 
successful LCR and LCP lightweight compact handguns. The .38 revolver 
version is a five-shot of totally new design - the cylinder turns 
clockwise like a Colt instead of the traditional counterclockwise 
rotation S&W is famous for - and its cylinder release latch is (gasp!) 
on the top of the gun.  The .380 auto is polymer framed, with thumb 
safety, good sights, and a double action only trigger...

http://backwoodshome.com/blogs/MassadAyoob/2010/01/19/shot-show-day-one-2/
---

Some People Never Learn: ...I've never been a huge fan of Taurus 
firearms, and I've been known to opine that the Frankenstein creature it 
calls "The Judge" is downright stupid. A grossly over-sized revolver 
that shoots .410 gauge shot shells in addition to .45 Colt cartridges, 
the logic of using mild shot shells whose energy will dissipate and 
whose pattern will spread unacceptably within a few feet is lost on me. 
So imagine my surprise when I became utterly enamored when Taurus 
revived a 19th century concept: The revolving rifle. While it is not yet 
available, I got a chance to heft this sweet-handling little carbine and 
fell in love. With a cylinder holding 5 rounds, it fires .410 GA shot