cuchulainn
April 29, 2003, 09:09 AM
It will be interesting to see how this tidbit affects the suit against Bushmaster
from the Baltimore Sun
http://www.sunspot.net/news/local/crime/bal-malvo0429,0,6084464.story?coll=bal-home-headlinesReport: Malvo says he shoplifted rifle
Seattle Times says sniper suspect told investigators $1,600 military-style weapon came from Tacoma gun shop
The Associated Press
Originally published April 29, 2003, 8:23 AM EDT
SEATTLE -- Lee Boyd Malvo has told investigators he shoplifted the military-style carbine that was used in the sniper killings, The Seattle Times reported Tuesday in a copyright article.
The other man facing capital murder charges in the sniper case, John Lee Muhammad, was a frequent shooter at the firing range in the upstairs of the Bull's Eye Shooter Supply in Tacoma, where the .223-caliber Bushmaster AR-15 was prominently displayed before it vanished in July, according to the report.
Bull's Eye, billed as "The Biggest Little Gun Shop Around," had come under repeated scrutiny before the $1,600 Bushmaster, a civilian version of the M-16 military assault rifle, was found with Muhammad and Malvo when they were arrested in October.
According to documents obtained by The Times in a freedom-of-information lawsuit against the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, guns traced to the store were involved in 52 killings, kidnappings, assaults and other crimes between 1997 and 2001.
ATF investigators have asked the U.S. attorney's office to file a felony charge accusing store owner Brian Borgelt for willful disregard of gun laws, a law enforcement source told The Times.
Such cases are rare. In 1999 ATF revoked a total of 20 firearms licenses nationwide.
"What you have in front of you is a case study in what is wrong with this system," said Jerry Nunziato, a former ATF National Tracing Center director who reviewed the 283-page Bull's Eye file.
"This shop has all of the obvious indicators that something's wrong," Nunziato said. "When the bureau looked at it and found the problems were true, nothing was done."
Borgelt, 38, a former Army Ranger and military sniper instructor, cannot account for 238 guns; say whether they were stolen, lost or sold, or determine whether buyers of any of them underwent felony background checks.
"He's a poster boy for gun control," said William Vizzard, a retired ATF supervisor, criminal justice professor at California State University, Sacramento, and author of "In the Crossfire: A Political History of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms."
In an interview with The Times, Borgelt denied doing anything illegal and blamed the problems on rapid business growth, theft by outsiders and employees and the failure of some workers to record sales or complete federal forms properly.
"Yeah, these are excuses," Borgelt said, "but, damn it, these are my excuses."
He said he was considering getting out of gun dealing and concentrating on operation of his pistol range.
"I've given it my best go," Borgelt said, "but it's grown exponentially into something I can't chew."
Former employees such as Carl Shanks, who worked at Bull's Eye in 1997-98 and is now a Pierce County sheriff's deputy, told The Times the store was run by the book.
"I always saw the paperwork done correctly," Shanks said.
When FBI and ATF agents asked about the sniper rifle, Borgelt said his records showed the gun was still on the shelf, where it had been prominently displayed with a laser scope and other exotic accessories.
"It would be like being a car dealer and having a Cadillac disappear from the sales floor without anybody noticing," said Joseph Vince, a former chief of ATF's crime gun analysis branch and a partner in Crime Gun Solutions, a consulting firm in Frederick, Va.
Borgelt obtained his first federal firearms license as an Army staff sergeant in 1986 and ran a business called Pacific Shooters Supply out of his home in Tacoma.
He came under scrutiny in November 1994 during a criminal investigation involving an AK-47-style assault rifle that had been sold at a gun show in Yakima.
At Borgelt's home, ATF inspector Eric Younger got no response but found a note saying Pacific was closed and referring customers to Bull's Eye, in which Borgelt had become a partner with Charles N. Carr, an Army buddy who is now a police officer in Bridgeport, Conn.
Borgelt denied ever owning the rifle, but Younger had located both a woman who said she purchased it from him in Yakima and a man who said he sold it to Borgelt at a previous gun show.
Younger also noted that Borgelt was supposed to have surrendered his individual dealer's license and obtained a new license with Carr when they opened Bull's Eye.
Borgelt was cited for failing to record the Yakima gun show sale and for improperly mailing in felony background checks.
The outcome was a note from Younger in ATF's Bull's Eye file to notify other agents that "any subsequent violations of these specific regulations should not be found upon inspection at his new business."
According to the newspaper report, every "red flag" developed by ATF in the 1990s as a potential indication of illegal gun trafficking was later found at Bull's Eye _ thefts from inventory, lack of federal sales records, 10 weapons traced to crimes in a year, frequent sale of multiple guns to individual buyers and use of guns in crimes soon after they were sold.
Between 1997 and 2000, Bull's Eye sold 663 guns to 265 individual buyers, as many as 10 guns at a time. The number of crime guns traced to Bull's Eye went from three in 1997 to 10 in 1998, 18 in 1999 and 11 in 2000.
ATF examines fewer than 4 percent of the nation's gun dealers in any given year but inspected Bull's Eye four times in 1998-2002 and cited it for violations at least 15 times.
"He had a lot of attention," said Richard Van Loan, ATF regional director for industry operations. "The guy wasn't ignored."
Borgelt, cited for nine paperwork violations after an ATF audit, was notified in 2000 that the agency might move to revoke his license. He said he would computerize his inventory records and promised to avoid further violations.
A new inspector reported in July 2001 that Borgelt had made improvements, but Van Loan said the audit could have been more thorough, adding that top regional ATF officials should have been alerted sooner to problems at the store.
Cited for two record-keeping violations in 2001, Borgelt again kept his license.
During that period ATF was shifting its focus to explosives and terrorism.
"If we hadn't been distracted, we would have been down there and I think we would have found something," Van Loan said. "He got past us in 2001."
Copyright © 2003, The Associated Press
from the Baltimore Sun
http://www.sunspot.net/news/local/crime/bal-malvo0429,0,6084464.story?coll=bal-home-headlinesReport: Malvo says he shoplifted rifle
Seattle Times says sniper suspect told investigators $1,600 military-style weapon came from Tacoma gun shop
The Associated Press
Originally published April 29, 2003, 8:23 AM EDT
SEATTLE -- Lee Boyd Malvo has told investigators he shoplifted the military-style carbine that was used in the sniper killings, The Seattle Times reported Tuesday in a copyright article.
The other man facing capital murder charges in the sniper case, John Lee Muhammad, was a frequent shooter at the firing range in the upstairs of the Bull's Eye Shooter Supply in Tacoma, where the .223-caliber Bushmaster AR-15 was prominently displayed before it vanished in July, according to the report.
Bull's Eye, billed as "The Biggest Little Gun Shop Around," had come under repeated scrutiny before the $1,600 Bushmaster, a civilian version of the M-16 military assault rifle, was found with Muhammad and Malvo when they were arrested in October.
According to documents obtained by The Times in a freedom-of-information lawsuit against the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, guns traced to the store were involved in 52 killings, kidnappings, assaults and other crimes between 1997 and 2001.
ATF investigators have asked the U.S. attorney's office to file a felony charge accusing store owner Brian Borgelt for willful disregard of gun laws, a law enforcement source told The Times.
Such cases are rare. In 1999 ATF revoked a total of 20 firearms licenses nationwide.
"What you have in front of you is a case study in what is wrong with this system," said Jerry Nunziato, a former ATF National Tracing Center director who reviewed the 283-page Bull's Eye file.
"This shop has all of the obvious indicators that something's wrong," Nunziato said. "When the bureau looked at it and found the problems were true, nothing was done."
Borgelt, 38, a former Army Ranger and military sniper instructor, cannot account for 238 guns; say whether they were stolen, lost or sold, or determine whether buyers of any of them underwent felony background checks.
"He's a poster boy for gun control," said William Vizzard, a retired ATF supervisor, criminal justice professor at California State University, Sacramento, and author of "In the Crossfire: A Political History of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms."
In an interview with The Times, Borgelt denied doing anything illegal and blamed the problems on rapid business growth, theft by outsiders and employees and the failure of some workers to record sales or complete federal forms properly.
"Yeah, these are excuses," Borgelt said, "but, damn it, these are my excuses."
He said he was considering getting out of gun dealing and concentrating on operation of his pistol range.
"I've given it my best go," Borgelt said, "but it's grown exponentially into something I can't chew."
Former employees such as Carl Shanks, who worked at Bull's Eye in 1997-98 and is now a Pierce County sheriff's deputy, told The Times the store was run by the book.
"I always saw the paperwork done correctly," Shanks said.
When FBI and ATF agents asked about the sniper rifle, Borgelt said his records showed the gun was still on the shelf, where it had been prominently displayed with a laser scope and other exotic accessories.
"It would be like being a car dealer and having a Cadillac disappear from the sales floor without anybody noticing," said Joseph Vince, a former chief of ATF's crime gun analysis branch and a partner in Crime Gun Solutions, a consulting firm in Frederick, Va.
Borgelt obtained his first federal firearms license as an Army staff sergeant in 1986 and ran a business called Pacific Shooters Supply out of his home in Tacoma.
He came under scrutiny in November 1994 during a criminal investigation involving an AK-47-style assault rifle that had been sold at a gun show in Yakima.
At Borgelt's home, ATF inspector Eric Younger got no response but found a note saying Pacific was closed and referring customers to Bull's Eye, in which Borgelt had become a partner with Charles N. Carr, an Army buddy who is now a police officer in Bridgeport, Conn.
Borgelt denied ever owning the rifle, but Younger had located both a woman who said she purchased it from him in Yakima and a man who said he sold it to Borgelt at a previous gun show.
Younger also noted that Borgelt was supposed to have surrendered his individual dealer's license and obtained a new license with Carr when they opened Bull's Eye.
Borgelt was cited for failing to record the Yakima gun show sale and for improperly mailing in felony background checks.
The outcome was a note from Younger in ATF's Bull's Eye file to notify other agents that "any subsequent violations of these specific regulations should not be found upon inspection at his new business."
According to the newspaper report, every "red flag" developed by ATF in the 1990s as a potential indication of illegal gun trafficking was later found at Bull's Eye _ thefts from inventory, lack of federal sales records, 10 weapons traced to crimes in a year, frequent sale of multiple guns to individual buyers and use of guns in crimes soon after they were sold.
Between 1997 and 2000, Bull's Eye sold 663 guns to 265 individual buyers, as many as 10 guns at a time. The number of crime guns traced to Bull's Eye went from three in 1997 to 10 in 1998, 18 in 1999 and 11 in 2000.
ATF examines fewer than 4 percent of the nation's gun dealers in any given year but inspected Bull's Eye four times in 1998-2002 and cited it for violations at least 15 times.
"He had a lot of attention," said Richard Van Loan, ATF regional director for industry operations. "The guy wasn't ignored."
Borgelt, cited for nine paperwork violations after an ATF audit, was notified in 2000 that the agency might move to revoke his license. He said he would computerize his inventory records and promised to avoid further violations.
A new inspector reported in July 2001 that Borgelt had made improvements, but Van Loan said the audit could have been more thorough, adding that top regional ATF officials should have been alerted sooner to problems at the store.
Cited for two record-keeping violations in 2001, Borgelt again kept his license.
During that period ATF was shifting its focus to explosives and terrorism.
"If we hadn't been distracted, we would have been down there and I think we would have found something," Van Loan said. "He got past us in 2001."
Copyright © 2003, The Associated Press