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GunFun ZS
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Comments by "GunFun ZS" (@GunFunZS) on "The Cheapest handgun VS a Glock (Hi Point C9 VS Glock 19)" video.
Yep I was given a Hi-Point JHP 45. It had been previously stolen and used in a lot of crimes and then recovered and beat ATF sort of restored the serial numbers and gave it back to the original owner who then gave it to me. And fortunately my state now requires FTF transactions to go through an FFL. And we had to pay 30 bucks to get a gunsmith to clean up BATF's restoration of the serials before any ffl would transfer it. From what I understand besides just putting the acid where the cereals used to be insane the metal structure pop up there are at least three other locations where one can find the serial numbers in a high point. Incidentally the total cost of transferring that gun was about $66. Pretty sure $66 is about what a used high point pistol is. And it's been kind of fun to have. It's a great test bed for 45 ACP loads.
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Eric M apparently satire does not translate through YouTube comments. I would not be sad if Steve ballmer and Michael Bloomberg were bankrupt. Nor if Bob Ferguson were disbarred.
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@electricgamez5415 but the blunt is fact is in most cases: The gun does not leave very unique markings on the cases or the bullets. Rather it's sort of like that scene from my cousin Vinny. It'll tell you the type of gun and the type of bullet more than it will tell you this gun. It's like saying the killer had this blood type versus the DNA identified it was this guy. Distinctive tool marks where and polish out of guns as they're used, and unless they get distinctive damage they are probably going to become more and more generic for their model. The other thing that people don't seem to understand is that in most cases most investigations are not using the full battery of forensics tools that are possible those take time and money and apartments have limited resources of both. it is very rare that police departments actually take fingerprints for anything way back in the 2000s when I was working in a prosecutor's office, I had seen internal memos the effect that we should request fingerprints only when it would make the difference for a case because it cost us $86 per sample that was sent to the state crime lab and for a case he usually need to send dozens of samples because you need elimination prints. It's kind of a similar deal for tracing firearms or bullet cases it takes one level of examination to go oh yeah this came from a Glock. it takes a lot more work to say this came from exactly this particular Glock. and in general you only need that If you have the particular clock in which case you probably already have more than enough other evidence to prove that this guy was the shooter. Whereas if you were trying to figure out who did the shooting and you don't have the suspect and you don't have the gun getting high detail on the The brass is a very expensive long shot. It will only pay off if you eventually get the guy and the gun. however if you get the wrong guy and he is a defendant he may say I want analysis on those cases to prove that it is not my gun- and that's an easier thing to prove.
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