Interesting conundrum about an 1800's revolver...

Started by Ol Gabe, November 18, 2008, 04:58:59 PM

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Ol Gabe

No comment here, just an interesting article about one of 'our' types of revolvers and how it came to be involved in a crime investigation.
Best regards and it probably had to happen sooner or later,
'Ol Gabe
...
Exclusive: Attorneys Use Unusual Method To Convict Felon
Federal Law Prevented Prosecutors From Proving Weapon Was Firearm

POSTED: 11:02 pm CST November 17, 2008
UPDATED: 6:05 am CST November 18, 2008

OMAHA, Neb. -- U.S. attorneys had a conundrum on their hands -- they had the evidence to prove a convicted felon was in possession of a gun, but they couldn't prove the gun was a gun.

What attorney's had on their hands was an American double-action revolver that was manufactured between 1880 and 1941.

The problem is that federal code states that the weapon is not a firearm unless it was manufactured after 1896. Without a definitive production date, the gun was inadmissible as evidence.

At the time, the attorneys were trying to charge Lawrence Ray Cook with possession of the weapon.

Omaha police picked up Cook last September after a hit-and-run crash. U.S. attorney Joe Stecher said that Cook left the scene but he flagged down officers later to tell them he caused the crash.

"His testimony was that he swerved to miss two pedestrians and he hit another car. And as he was driving away they threw the revolver in the back of his car through the open window," Stecher said.

The attorney said that Cook couldn't explain how the revolver got into his pocket.

However, it didn't matter because couldn't prove what Cook had was a gun.

But they proved something else instead.

"Two rounds of live ammunition and an empty casing gave us the ability to prosecute for felony in possession of ammunition," Stecher said.

The jury convicted cook and added another charge to his record. It includes forgery and burglary.

"Terroristic threats, two counts of confining, a personal assault on an officer, he's an armed career criminal," Stecher said.

Prosecutors had the ammunition to convince a jury Cook should go to federal prison for 15 years.

He's scheduled to be sentenced next January.

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