Oklahoma Gun Museum Upgrading After Firearms Thefts

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Shipwreck

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Oklahoma Gun Museum Upgrading After Firearms Thefts
Wednesday, June 14, 2006

CLAREMORE, Okla. — A string of firearms disappearances from a gun museum here may go back nearly 40 years, a prosecutor says.

A state audit released Tuesday showed that at least 125 firearms are missing from the J.M. Davis Arms & Historical Museum.

The report also found, among other things, that the museum's director didn't follow policy for receiving donated guns and that a current inventory wasn't kept.

Rogers County District Attorney Gene Haynes, who requested the audit, said further investigation is needed to determine how the guns disappeared.

"I kind of doubt that the general public could go in and shoplift a gun," Haynes said. "I think it's more likely going to be people who had authorized access to them."

The disappearances may have started as early as 1969, Haynes said. Some guns in the collection, which isn't insured, are valued at up to $50,000, Haynes said.

The official tally of missing guns was far fewer than the thousands officials initially feared. The collection should have 13,454 firearms.

The collection contains such rare items as a 500-year-old Chinese hand-cannon and the world's smallest automatic pistol, the Kolibri. Haynes said those pieces are not missing.

The collection was acquired by Claremore hotel owner John Monroe Davis, who transferred ownership to a trust called the J.M. Davis Foundation in 1965. The foundation entered into a $1 long-term lease with the state that requires the state to house, preserve and display the collection with no admission charge.

In a statement released Tuesday, J.M. Davis Memorial Commission Chairman William Higgins said museum officials are implementing the audit's recommendations, including regular inventories and an upgrade of policies to ensure donations are properly recorded and deposited.

Claremore Police Chief Mickey Perry said his department and the district attorney's office will continue to investigate whether the guns were stolen internally or externally.

"It's going to be difficult, if not impossible to trace some of these," Perry said.
 
You mean there's something left after 40 years of theft ??
 
What isn't there stands out

Been there several times (doing work in Tulsa), and my first impression was that some things were conspicous by there absence. For instance, no Model 42s. I figured that some of the good stuff was cherry picked by the inside folks during the move. I had heard it was done by loading guns into private car trunks and driving across town to the museam. Plenty of opportunity to forget to unload a 42 or two that was sitting in the back seat!
 
Start investigating former & current employees. Something like 85% of all thefts from museums, historical societies and libraries (think rare books) are in-house personnel from directors all the way down to janitors. Sad that our cultural & technological heritage is being plundered by some greedy individuals. :fire:
 
Actually, this is GOOD news!

When I first heard about the thefts, the number of missing guns was unknown but thought to be in the neighborhood of 6,000 pieces! I cannot rate this on a scale of 1-10 in terms of museum, but I know that each time I've been there I have left with a few more ideas in my mind and wonder at how those MANY inventors have paved the way to today's firearms.

At the time that I heard about the theft, one of the missing firearms had been traced to the museum from a crime scene, I think it was in New York. The suspicion was that the director's son financed his drug habits from the sale of the guns. I heard this abouot a month ago, perhaps they have new evidence and more of the story now. The shocker was that, at the time, NO ONE could come up with a list of what the museum was supposed to have! Apparently, any lists were destroyed by the director...etc.
 
P.S.

If you happen to be in the area, take the time to visit the Will Rogers museum, too.:)
 
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