Warning

 

Close

Confirm Action

Are you sure you wish to do this?

Confirm Cancel
BCM
User Panel

Site Notices
Page / 2
Next Page Arrow Left
Link Posted: 8/2/2005 11:05:33 AM EDT
[#1]

Quoted:
I had it on TIVO from earier in the week. I will get around to uploading it later today.



tagd
Link Posted: 8/2/2005 11:05:47 AM EDT
[#2]

Quoted:
Yeah go ahead and write and give the guys at the station a good laugh.  Do you really think they care or will change?  99% of the people in this country think it is an assault rifle or assault weapon and the mere technicality of a naming CUSTOM is no big deal.

You sound like some foamer complaining about a reporter calling a diesel-electric railroad engine a diesel engine or the engineer or motorman the driver on a commuter train.  You know what in the grand scheme of things It DOESN"T freaking matter.



If we were talking about trains, maybe it wouldn't matter, but when dealing with firearms it sure as hell matters.
THe whole 'assault weapon ban' didn't ban assualt weapons, the MG ban amendment made them illegal for manufacture after May, 1986

An assualt weapon is a select fire weapon, not a semi auto. Therefore, the SKS was never, and never will be an 'assault weapon'. It was a battle rifle.
Link Posted: 8/2/2005 11:07:04 AM EDT
[#3]

Quoted:

Quoted:

Quoted:

Quoted:
Thanks for writing in to NBC 5. I will notify the reporter of the error and let the newsroom know that in the future, the word "assault" should not be used when talking about this particular weapon.

Thanks again for writing in to NBC 5.

Elvira Sakmari
Executive Producer
NBC 5 Dallas-Fort Worth

Interesting information from our reporter on that story...

-Elvira Sakmari
Executive Producer



this particular rifle had a 30-round banana clip that was illegal under the newly lifted assault weapons ban... so tehcnically you could argue that it became an assault weapon simply by making that addition to the weapon

-Brett johnson, NBC5 reporter






What a fucking Dbag

how can some thing be defined under law if the law doesn't exist



So technically the place the shootout happened should be called a "Speak Easy" because
the sale of alcohol was prohibited under the 18th amendment.



Only if the 18th were still a part of the constitution...



It still is. That is why we have a 19th Amendment, and a 20th, and so on...
However, it was repealed.
Link Posted: 8/2/2005 2:07:27 PM EDT
[#4]

Quoted:

Quoted:

Quoted:

Quoted:
Who's winning?



looks like Mexico is still ahead...


i assume the types of gangs around there are from South of the border?



Your assumptions suck watch the video and stop being so racist



Yeah, we get nothing but good people illegally crossing our southern border
why would you even entertain the idea that it would be an illegal alien gang?
(yes, a lot of the gangs around the border states are illegal aliens, heh)



Did I say "illegals" sorry, apparently they are made up of hard working "immigrants"

Gang roundup includes Houston, South Texas
Federal agents nab 582 migrants across U.S.; most will be deported

By EDWARD HEGSTROM
Copyright 2005 Houston Chronicle
Aug. 1, 2005
www.chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mpl/metropolitan/3291782
Federal agents working with police departments across the country rounded up 582 immigrant street gang members in the last two weeks of July, including eight from Houston and South Texas.

Some of those captured during the ongoing "Operation Community Shield" are expected to be charged with violent crimes. But the majority are illegal immigrants who will be prepared for deportation to Central America and Mexico.

"For too long, these gangs have gone unchecked, flouting our laws and demonstrating a blatant disregard for public safety," Department of Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff said at a news conference in Washington Monday. ( I wonder why )

More than 50 gangs

The operation in late July targeted more than 50 gangs, including some with links to Asia and the Caribbean as well as Latin America. An earlier phase of the operation started in February and specifically targeted a Salvadoran street gang with roots in Los Angeles known as Mara Salvatrucha, or MS-13.

"Some of these guys are committing horrible crimes back in Guatemala, El Salvador or Honduras and then fleeing to the United States," said Luisa Deason, a spokeswoman with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement's Houston office.

Massacre suspect captured

Those captured as part of the earlier phase of the operation included Lester Rivera Paz, a Honduran wanted in that country in connection with the massacre of 28 people on a bus last December. Honduran authorities believe the massacre was intended as a message by MS-13 members concerned about that country's crackdown on gangs.

Rivera Paz escaped from a Honduran jail in January and was discovered in the trunk of a car in South Texas on Feb. 10. After serving a seven-month federal sentence for entering the country illegally, he will be deported to Honduras, Deason said. Chertoff and Deason noted that the federal anti-gang initiative depends on cooperation from local law enforcement. Locally, officers from the Houston Police Department share lists of presumed gang members with federal immigration agents, according to Deason. The immigration agents check those names to see if any are believed to be in the country illegally.

ICE agents out of Houston arrested five presumed gang members at their homes July 26. None of them have been charged with a violent crime, and all are being held pending deportation.

HPD spokesman Alvin Wright said cooperating on the anti-gang efforts does not violate the department's policy against enforcing immigration law, since the police officers are not the ones making the arrests.

Wright said MS-13 and other gangs are a growing concern in Houston, but he said most of the violent crimes committed by these gangs target other gang members.

Some Central American activists expressed concern that the operations appear to target presumed gang members instead of criminals.

"If someone commits a crime — be they a gang-member or not — they should be punished," Teodoro Aguiluz, the head of the Central American Resource Center in southwest Houston, said in Spanish. "But (officials) should not assume that all Central American youths are gang members."

Councilman speaks out

Of the 14 presumed gang members captured in Houston and South Texas since the operation began, three had been previously deported.

Critics say deporting gang members worsens gang problems in poor Central American countries with inadequately trained police departments.

"We are setting these countries up for failure," said Houston City Councilman Adrian Garcia
, who went to see the gang activity in Guatemala City when he headed HPD's anti-gang task force.

But Garcia said he supports using deportation as a tool against gangs. He said the government needs to provide the Central American countries with increased aid, cooperation and intelligence-sharing so they can combat the gangs.
Link Posted: 8/2/2005 2:14:56 PM EDT
[#5]
Sounds about right for the Chronicle
Link Posted: 8/2/2005 2:37:20 PM EDT
[#6]
Page / 2
Next Page Arrow Left
Close Join Our Mail List to Stay Up To Date! Win a FREE Membership!

Sign up for the ARFCOM weekly newsletter and be entered to win a free ARFCOM membership. One new winner* is announced every week!

You will receive an email every Friday morning featuring the latest chatter from the hottest topics, breaking news surrounding legislation, as well as exclusive deals only available to ARFCOM email subscribers.


By signing up you agree to our User Agreement. *Must have a registered ARFCOM account to win.
Top Top