From:   SSAA, [EMAIL PROTECTED]

"It gets the gun off the street instead of leaving it in a closet where
children or a burglar could find them,"

Street closets?

From: News and Views
Friday, July 28, 2000
http://www.nydailynews.com/2000-07-28/News_and_Views/City_Beat/a-74714.asp

Gun Buy-Back Backfires When Officers Cash In

By MIKE CLAFFEY
Daily News Staff Writer

Gun buy-back program to get illegal weapons off the
streets had to be altered yesterday after a stampede
of court officers tried to cash in.

Brooklyn District Attorney Charles Hynes ordered changes
in the initiative when he found out that court officers
� some of them in uniform � were handing in their old
.38-caliber service revolvers.

Because the program had pulled in only about 200 guns
since the one-month window began July 1, Hynes upped
the reward on Monday from $100 to $250 per gun.

"We had a surge last night of about 100 guns and they
all seem to be .38 service revolvers," said a source
in the prosecutor's office.

One court officer collected $1,500 by turning in six guns.

This is a program with good intentions to get illegal
guns off the street and shouldn't be bastardized by
people looking for a quick buck," said Hynes' spokesman,
Kevin Davitt.

"We're going to be contacting those people who abused
the program and ask for our money back," Davitt said.

But a spokesman for the court system, David Bookstaver,
said it is not clear that the officers can be forced
to do that.

"District Attorney Hynes has indicated that this is
really not in the spirit of what the program was
designed for," Bookstaver said.

But he added that court officials "have no authority"
to tell the officers to give the money back.

He said, however, that word was going out yesterday
that court officers can no longer participate.

Some court officers in Brooklyn were upset that
Hynes had forbidden them from participating in the
buy-back offer. The officers were allowed to keep
their revolvers after they were issued 9-mm semiautomatics
last year.

"I have the flyer right here and it says, 'Any
working handgun, sawed-off shotgun or assault rifle. No
questions asked.'" said Bob Patelli a Senior Court
Officers Association delegate at Brooklyn Supreme Court.

"If the DA sees fit to discontinue the program, fine.
But he's bound legally to pay for the guns he's already
taken."

Patelli added that the program was achieving its goal
of getting extra guns out of circulation.

"It gets the gun off the street instead of leaving
it in a closet where children or a burglar could find
them," he said. Last year, 659 firearms were turned in
for $100 each. The money comes from drug forfeiture
funds, Davitt said. "We thought that perhaps $100 was
not meeting the value that some people place on these
weapons," he said.

 To be turned in, guns must be wrapped in brown paper
and can be taken to any Brooklyn precinct house. If the
gun is deemed operable, the desk officer is supposed to
give the person a pink voucher that can be redeemed at
the district attorney's office at 350 Jay St.


Cybershooters website: http://www.cybershooters.org

List admin: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
___________________________________________________________
T O P I C A  The Email You Want. http://www.topica.com/t/16
Newsletters, Tips and Discussions on Your Favorite Topics

Reply via email to