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AR15.COM
6/18/2017 8:51:14 PM EDT
Last summer my kid-brother, after a long battle with substance abuse and depression took his own life. I am now the owner of his once fired Glock 17. For others that have lost a loved one to suicide by gunshot I ask the following question: what did you do with the gun? Keep it? Sell it without disclosure? Sell it with disclosure? Let the police keep it?

I really am interested to hear what you all have to say.

Harp
6/18/2017 8:55:00 PM EDT
[#1]
Sorry for your loss.

Personally, I'd keep the gun.
6/18/2017 8:56:14 PM EDT
[#2]
It's an inanimate object. I'd carry it. What one meant for evil, I mean for good.
6/18/2017 8:57:26 PM EDT
[#3]
I did not seek the return of the handgun that my father used to end his suffering.
6/18/2017 8:58:03 PM EDT
[#4]
I didn't know you could keep it... I am assuming my father's is long gone by now.

Personally I would keep it, I would probably carry it.
6/18/2017 8:58:12 PM EDT
[#5]
I wouldn't want THAT particular pistol around me.  I would sell it, but that's just me.
6/18/2017 8:58:37 PM EDT
[#6]
Sorry for your loss.
Personally I would keep it. I don't know if I would use it.  Wish I could be of more help.
6/18/2017 8:58:51 PM EDT
[#7]
Keep it .
6/18/2017 9:00:36 PM EDT
[#8]
Quote History
Quoted:
Sorry for your loss.
Personally I would keep it. I don't know if I would use it.  Wish I could be of more help.
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This.  I can't really give you a good reason, but I would keep it.  Sorry for your loss.
6/18/2017 9:01:37 PM EDT
[#9]
Quote History
Quoted:
Keep it .
View Quote
6/18/2017 9:01:53 PM EDT
[#10]
I don't think that it would bother me to keep it or sell it (though I would disclose when I sold it).  I suppose it just doesn't bother me because it's an inanimate object.

Not the same thing, but my grandfather, grandmother, and uncle all died in the same house (all natural causes, two in the same room but decades apart).  I still love that house and it wouldn't bother me at all living there, though I know that such things do creep some people out.
6/18/2017 9:02:49 PM EDT
[#11]
Quote History
Quoted:
I wouldn't want THAT particular pistol around me.  I would sell it, but that's just me.
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This.
6/18/2017 9:05:00 PM EDT
[#12]
I'd probably keep it. But I might be inclined to toss it into the ocean or something.
6/18/2017 9:06:42 PM EDT
[#13]
I never thought about it.

I guess it depends on how you feel about the gun. Not reality. If you need the cash, sell it. Or if it brings back sorrow, sell it. If you really want it for your own collection, keep it.
6/18/2017 9:06:42 PM EDT
[#14]
I posess a revolver which an uncle used on himself. Even have the evidence tag kept with my gun paperwork. It's just a tool to me. My mother and her sister enjoyed being able to shoot it with me. My grandmother was glad that it was eventually passed down to me, my grandfather bought it for her when they honeymooned in Vermont.

Despite the history attached, it's still an inanimate object. Brushed nickle, 8" barrel and white grips, I actually admire it.
6/18/2017 9:07:15 PM EDT
[#15]
Quote History
Quoted:
I wouldn't want THAT particular pistol around me.  I would sell it, but that's just me.
View Quote
6/18/2017 9:07:33 PM EDT
[#16]
I'd just sell it. No need for disclosure. The gun didn't make him do it.
6/18/2017 9:08:53 PM EDT
[#17]
I'd get rid of it one way or another brother and I’m sorry shit had to shake out for him like that.

Had someone close do something similar so I’ve seen this kinda thing before.
6/18/2017 9:09:54 PM EDT
[#18]
If it reminds you of what happened, sell it. If not, keep it. I don't think you'd need to disclose anything, unless it was damaged in some way due to the incident. It's just an object that may provide joy and/or protection to someone else.
6/18/2017 9:10:34 PM EDT
[#19]
First and foremost, I am very sorry for the loss of your brother. While I am not real close to my little brother these days, we do still let each other know we are alive every so often. Sometimes we just get busy living our own lives, and don't make the time we probably should to get together.

I can't comment from the experience in the OP, I can honestly say, if I wound up with said gun I would not have a problem keeping and using it. I don't hold special curses/stigma to a tool, nor would there be any reason to disclose suicide to a person I was selling to if I went that route.
If I felt that way I probably wouldn't have a fraction of the milsurps that I do.
6/18/2017 9:14:16 PM EDT
[#20]
I'd keep it and shoot the heck out of it.

Don't make other people's problems your own.
6/18/2017 9:14:42 PM EDT
[#21]
I didn't get the pistol - wasn't mine thank God. Wouldn't want it either.

Neighbor has the .308 his sister used. Everybody's different, very personal decision.
6/18/2017 9:15:07 PM EDT
[#22]
You would think of your brother and what he did to himself every time you saw it.  No thanks.  I'd get rid of it.  Too many guns out there to be looking at the one your brother took his life with.  Plus, if you're imaginative, you wouldn't be able to help picturing how that went down every time you saw the gun.  You could do without that.
6/18/2017 9:15:08 PM EDT
[#23]
I don't blame the object.
6/18/2017 9:16:00 PM EDT
[#24]
I would keep it.
6/18/2017 9:16:27 PM EDT
[#25]
Throw it into Lake Michigan and have some degree of closure on one small aspect of it all.
6/18/2017 9:18:12 PM EDT
[#26]
Get rid of it. I know every time I held it, my mind would run wild. No thanks.
6/18/2017 9:20:43 PM EDT
[#27]
Quote History
Quoted:
Throw it into Lake Michigan and have some degree of closure on one small aspect of it all.
View Quote
I was born and raised in Gary, Indiana which is right on Lake Michigan. In fact, our house was maybe 3-4 blocks from the lake.
6/18/2017 9:21:36 PM EDT
[#28]
I want to say keep it. But if it's the gun he used,  you need to get rid of it. You don't need to deal with that shit every time you see it.
6/18/2017 9:22:24 PM EDT
[#29]
Sell it and donate the money to a worthy charity, maybe some type of suicide prevention group.
6/18/2017 9:23:53 PM EDT
[#30]
I would probably sell it and donate the money to a verified suicide prevention program.
6/18/2017 9:24:58 PM EDT
[#31]
Quote History
Quoted:
Sell it and donate the money to a worthy charity, maybe some type of suicide prevention group.
View Quote
You posted as I was typing mine but I agree.
6/18/2017 9:26:27 PM EDT
[#32]
Quote History
Quoted:
It's an inanimate object. I'd carry it. What one meant for evil, I mean for good.
View Quote
Absolutely. Don't tie the sad past to it. Instead, see it as something he left for you to protect yourself from people who wish to do evil things to you and those you love. 
6/18/2017 9:37:43 PM EDT
[#33]
Quote History
Quoted:
I was born and raised in Gary, Indiana which is right on Lake Michigan. In fact, our house was maybe 3-4 blocks from the lake.
View Quote View All Quotes
View All Quotes
Quote History
Quoted:
Quoted:
Throw it into Lake Michigan and have some degree of closure on one small aspect of it all.
I was born and raised in Gary, Indiana which is right on Lake Michigan. In fact, our house was maybe 3-4 blocks from the lake.
Take a ride out into the lake and let it plunge into the depths.  There's so much more you need to remember about your brother than this gun.
6/18/2017 9:45:47 PM EDT
[#34]
It's just an object xx. I would keep and shoot it.
6/18/2017 9:46:41 PM EDT
[#35]
I guy I knew many years ago killed himself with what turned out to be a stolen pistol. Always wondered if the legal owner got it back. I wouldn't want it. If I didn't know the person, I probably wouldn't care...but not in the case of someone close. 
6/18/2017 9:52:50 PM EDT
[#36]
I have an M1 carbine that killed one of my uncles (by marriage) sisters, in a bar room love triangle altercation something like 30 years ago. He carried it as a truck gun, and shot it often. So do I.
6/18/2017 9:53:29 PM EDT
[#37]
As much as I like Glocks, I wouldn't keep it for the opposite reason one would keep something with intrinsic value. Like if he had a favorite watch, that would be something with intrinsic value you would want to keep to remember him by. I'd sell the pistol. If you want a Glock, just buy a new one.
6/18/2017 9:54:53 PM EDT
[#38]
I sold a gun to a co-worker who took it home and shot himself in the head with it. That was an awful feeling, in a way I felt responsible for his death. His mother asked if I wanted the gun back since she didn't want it. I took it as a favor to her but it wound up in the bottom of Lake Allatoona, I couldn't keep it and felt weird about selling it again.

Sorry for your loss OP.
6/18/2017 9:57:26 PM EDT
[#39]
I'd sell it.  You'll never be in a good headspace when carrying or using it.

Mike
6/18/2017 10:08:49 PM EDT
[#40]
My fishing buddy lost his son in law to suicide.  Kept the gun.
6/18/2017 10:33:35 PM EDT
[#41]
My cousin used a Smith .357 to end his life. My aunt (his mom) asked if I would shoot it for her to see what it looked like being fired. I shot it for her and my uncle to watch.

Morbid curiosity I guess. My aunt passed awhile back and my uncle still has the gun as far as I know.

The police told them it was unusual for families to want a firearm back after a suicide.