Toddler residing in Cicero home where cache of illegal firearms found by NYS Police
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- Опубликовано: 6 май 2024
- A Cicero man is charged with 41 misdemeanors and 98 felonies after a search warrant revealed he possessed a cache of illegal weapons inside a home where a toddler resides.
New York State Police arrested 39-year-old Mario Grgic of Cicero Monday, after serving a warrant at his home on Oldfield Way.
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American in one location is a felon while an American in another location isn’t breaking any laws at all. That sounds like local infringement of guaranteed federal rights
same thing with the gun control act of 1968. One person has a gun and its fine the other person it's illegal. I dont understand why we put up with the atf. We out number them.
Toddler found in house with cocaine! Also at the white house...
New York man charged with owning a typical Idaho man's starter gun collection. None of those things should be illegal and aren't illegal in MOST states.
Since you're such a law abiding gun enthusiast, do you even know what a ghost gun is? 2. What is the main purpose of having an untraceable gun? 3. Why would you be in possession of so many untraceable guns?
@@kevinspears10531 Yes, I actually do. 1. "Ghost gun" is a made up term that the media uses to describe homemade firearms, something that has been legal to do since the founding of this country. 2. Serial numbers are only needed for selling homemade guns and are mostly useless for tracing purposes, since they only link back to the original point of sale and there is no database of serial numbers and most firearms used in crime are stolen, so they don't "trace" back to the criminal anyway. 3. You would be in possession of so many because you were a hobby gunsmith who makes his own firearms. And yes, this is common in a lot of places. Not everyone who builds a so-called "ghost gun" does so to have an "untraceable gun." MOST gun builders build guns because they want them to be built to their specifications and are not content with factory offerings. The fact that a homemade gun doesn't have a serial number (which is very inconsequential to actual gun crime investigations) isn't really the incentive.
@@CutlassOutdoors 1. The use of ghost guns- in U.S. crimes has risen more than 1,000% since 2017. This stat was from 2023.
2. The serial number for newer firearms can be reliably traced to the retailer by way of the manufacturer. The manufacturer must also maintain records of who the guns/parts were sold to. Please tell me why you think there's no database? You also MUST have the gun's serial number to register it in the first place.
3. U.S. Department of Justice made a rule in 2022 clarifying that partially complete or disassembled gun frames and receivers or parts kits qualify as firearms under the Gun Control Act, requiring them to have serial numbers. ALL guns and gun parts must have a serial number as the result of the August 2023 Supreme Court ruling on this rule.
Pennsylvania law does not specifically mention the term “ghost gun.” However, possessing a ghost gun could potentially be a violation of the following laws, depending on the circumstances:
18 Pa.C.S. § 6105 - Person not to possess, use, manufacture, control, sell, or transfer firearm
18 Pa.C.S. § 6110.2 - Possession of a firearm with altered manufacturer’s number
18 Pa.C.S. § 6117 - Altering or obliterating marks of identification
Now tell me again, why would a law abiding gun enthusiast still be in possession of ghost guns?
@@kevinspears10531 1. The "1000%" increase sounds scary until you look at the actual numbers. In 2017 there were 1,629. In 2021 there were 19,273. That is a literal drop in the bucket from the what? 400 million plus firearms in the country?
2. You only have to "register" your guns in a few restrictive states. There's no legal gun registry.
3. There are VERY few gun parts right now that are individually serialized. That puts a ton of strain on manufacturers if they had to serialize EVERYTHING.
4. Cutlass Outdoors is completely correct. Gunsmithing is a hobby for most people. It's the building part that a lot of people actually enjoy. There's so much tinkering it requires in order to have a firearm function correctly and reliably. Just because you don't understand or like that, doesn't make it any less true.
5. "Ghost" guns are just a scary word to intimidate people that don't have common knowledge on the actual hobby of making firearms.
@@kevinspears10531 1. that statistic is easily manipulated due to a lack of tracking, changes in definitions (to include scratched off serial numbers, which were not included in the 2017 numbers), and how grossly small the number actually is. If it was 1 in 2017 and 10 in 2023, that's a 1000% increase. When percentage increases are that dramatic, it's because the numbers are small to begin with. Besides, the number of "ghost guns" used in crimes is still dwarfed by the staggering numbers of the guns used in crimes that are stolen.
2. I already said that. It can only be traced to the original point of sale, which doesn't matter since guns can be legally sold person to person and most crime guns are stolen, so tracing is usually a dead end anyway. There is no national database of serial numbers and such a database is actually illegal to maintain, per federal law.
3. Again, I already said that. Scratching off a serial number is illegal federally. Manufacturing a firearm for personal use (that is not intended for sale) does NOT federally require a serial number. Your local laws may vary.
4. I already answered that too. Most "ghost guns" are home made firearms made by enthusiasts and amateur gunsmiths. Do criminals exploit this? Sure. But most homemade firears are not crime guns and most crime guns are not homemade firearms.
What? A toddler around guns and none of the guns got up and shot the kid on their own? Weird.
The right to keep and bear arms applies to all states.
So he owned what everyone else can own in most states...
NYS is gay!
Yeah I’m gonna be honest they’re illegal in New York State but I will tell you that most people in neighboring PA have the same amount of firearms if not more plus they have children. I don’t get the point of adding the fact a child lived in the house. Are you guys trying to fear monger and make gun owners look bad or something?
You guys are allowed to have unregistered guns with the serial numbers shaved off? Your comprehension skills clearly show you're not from Reading, PA 😂
@@kevinspears10531 so how are guns without serial numbers more dangerous than ones with them
People can 3D print and machine their own guns without serial numbers….
@@kevinspears10531 Serial numbers weren't shaved off. They never existed because these are homemade guns. Removing serial numbers is illegal, but guns aren't required to have them. There is no registry, so serial numbers aren't that useful in "tracing" a gun anyway.
"illegal firearms" is a huge oxymoron
Nice biased reporting couldn’t be more blatant. Really showing your integrity
Sounds like a lot of righteous indignation after the state passed laws making an otherwise law abiding citizen into a felon. Aside from possessing "scary" stuff, what laws did he break? Many of us were toddlers, and young children in homes with guns.
Persons in other states look at the 'recovered items' and almost laugh.
Not illegal to own that many rounds and firearms in my state that's for sure.
We can even own and use incendiary type ammunition without needing permits or permission.
In the US we have the 2nd amendment which grants the right to bear arms. The local laws do NOT trump the constitution.
The US Constitution gives him the right to own everyone of those items. The Constitution over rides state law.
Lol so stuff that is legal almost everywhere else 😂😂 NY is such a joke.
Better arrest the child for being a 2a supporter. What about the dog they got him too right??
I see a lot of failed gun projects in this video. Magazines do not harm or kill anyone yet they say 80 mags were found time and time again.
So what?
THE SHOCK, THE HORRROR! 😱
Completely legal in the non-communist America.
Shall not be infringed!
As a parent you should take it upon yourself to store your firearms so that they are inaccessible to your children BUT under no circumstance should it be illegal not to nor should any of the guns or ammunition be illegal.
Land of the free ... Right?
Just saying. Any tho way your wipeing a small city with all that …
I find that hard to believe let’s be honest
Yeah, that was a dumb comment. You could say the same thing if somebody had a case of ammo. Apparently a gun collection with some magazines is now a weapon of mass destruction.
Its NY, they let him out before the news finished writing their article.
Not in NY. This man cheated the state's monopoly on violence by trying to make his own firearms...
Why did this criminal get bail this is outrageous the court should be ashamed of themselves he's dangerous
Damn ATF These Guns will go into the Front door of Police Department then Right out the Back door of same police station into a Van owned by the ATF and then straight into the hands of Your Local Gangbanger unions and the ATF Just Reports Them Stolen
No such thing. The Second Amendment trumps all gun laws.
Does it say you have the right to have unregistered guns with no serial numbers?
@kevinspears10531 It doesn't say they have to be registered either... now does it? Registration sounds like alienation.
@@kevinspears10531 Guns aren't registered federally. Serial numbers don't trace back to registration, only to sales through an FFL. Since most guns used in crime are stolen anyway, "tracing" a gun is usually a useless endeavor and rarely is effective in homicide investigations.
@@kevinspears10531
Actually the gun control act of 1968 allows a regular citizen to make firearms for personal use.
They’re not required to serialized, but they can’t be sold or transferred.
Look it up Sir.
@@kevinspears10531 At the signing of the constitution there were no serial numbers, that is a new invention.