Gun in car problem

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If It were me, I'd say that I loaded the .357 cartridges to the max because I had planned to shoot them through my .357 model 92 Rossi rifle, and I hadn't intended that they be shot from a pistol. Even though it would be an out right lie, I doubt that I would be convicted. Most lawyers, like politicians, are flat out paid liars too, so I would have no ethics problem with fibbing my way to an exoneration. Now, honestly, maybe a loaded to the max .357 cartridge would blow up a Rossi too, for all I know, but in court I'd just play dumb. Oh, one more thing, I'd not mention that I'd had a box stolen previously.
 
I think it might be time to start using florescent purple ink booby traps like the banks use.

I have a friend who, years ago, had a box of .357 swiped from his glove box. So what did he do? He loaded a box of.357, loaded to the max that a cartridge case would hold with Bulls Eye, and left it in his glove box. About a month later .......... you guessed it, since then, end of problem.



Brilliant! And I don't see how anyone could sue over this. There are no laws about overloading cartridges, and the person did not give them away.

If I leave a chicken sandwich in my vehicle for a month and someone breaks in, steals it, and gets very sick, could I be sued for poisoning the person who stole it?


Take Care,

Buzz
 
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Fine for a quick dash inside a GFZ every now and then, but you'd be surprised how many street punks and thugs carry cuff keys, sometimes even as "jewelry."
You bring up a good point. Since it's locked under the seat and pretty much sight unseen. Unless they actually open the doors chances are they will never see the gun. With the modern vehicles they have security systems which helps. I had a truck broken into a few years back, they broke the window grabbed what they could and were gone. They never opened the doors.
 
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