Colorado Springs police may sell seized firearms

Big Don

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Colorado Springs police may sell seized firearms

The City Council is considering a program to let the Police Department sell confiscated guns to licensed dealers. Sales could net $10,000 a year.

By Nicholas Riccardi LA TIMES EXCERPT:

August 23, 2009
Reporting from Colorado Springs, Colo.
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This conservative city is taking an unusual, some might say extreme, step to try to stem its fiscal woes: It's entering the gun business.

The Colorado Springs City Council is expected in coming weeks to approve the final details of a program that would allow the Police Department to sell confiscated firearms to federally licensed gun dealers. Police have already stopped melting down the hundreds of guns they collect from crime scenes, drug houses or civilians who don't need them anymore.

The sales are projected to bring in about $10,000 a year, only a slight dent for a city that faced a deficit of one-quarter its $200-million annual budget this year. But it still helps, said Vice Mayor Larry Small, who proposed the gun sales.

"Every penny counts," Small said.

Colorado Springs is home to the Army's Ft. Carson, the Air Force Academy and NORAD. Men and women in uniform mingle easily with civilians in the shopping centers and strollable downtown that sits in the shadow of 14,000-foot Pikes Peak. People here are comfortable around firearms.

But even in Colorado Springs, the idea of law enforcement as gun sellers has raised some eyebrows.

The Police Department objected, only to be overruled by the council, which in February voted 8 to 1 to direct the department to draw up the program it will consider this month. Lt. David Whitlock said the Police Department has been moving cautiously to address the many concerns the sales raise.

"There's all kinds of ancillary issues, one of which is the politics of being in the gun-selling business," Whitlock said. "The other is not introducing another weapon into the community."

Jan Martin, the lone council member who voted against the sales, said the small amount of money they could bring in is outweighed by the risk that a gun sold by the city could one day be used for a crime.

"I remember what some of those weapons were used for," Martin said. "Just the idea of putting those weapons back on the street is unconscionable."

The International Assn. of Chiefs of Police cautions against law enforcement agencies selling weapons they have seized. Destroying the firearms, it says, is a better policy. No one tracks the number of agencies that make sales, but officials believe it to be very small.

Nonetheless, Scott Knight, who helped formulate the association's policy on gun sales, said, "We understand, particularly in this economy, that some departments need to recoup budget losses."
End Excerpt
Once the weapon is fully documented, for purposes of trials, appeals, etc, what is the reasoning behind destroying them? I've never met a LEO that thought guns were evil.
Why sell them to dealers? Why not have a big 'ol gun sale at the fairgrounds, you know, like they have when they induce morons into trading their guns for movie tickets, gift cards, etc? Aren't the friggin' police qualified to do background checks? Besides, selling them to law abiding citizens is environmentally sound!
 

FearlessFreep

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"risk that a gun sold by the city could one day be used for a crime."

At which point it will be picked up again and sold again.
 
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Big Don

Big Don

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"risk that a gun sold by the city could one day be used for a crime."

At which point it will be picked up again and sold again.
If they sold the guns to dirtbags, they could sell the same guns over and over...
 

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