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His partner, officer Michael Moore, looked over his left shoulder and thought he saw something flying at the squad car. Officer Deitan Dubuc ducked to his right, lying down on the squad’s bulky radio and siren box. Gomez, hiding in a vacant lot across the street, leveled the Hi-Point.Ī bullet slammed into the side of the squad car. Each of the brown envelopes holds a confiscated handgun. These weapons are among the approximately 8,000 handguns, rifles and shotguns seized by police from the streets of Minneapolis and St. Two officers inside were focused on some paperwork, the dome light inside the squad car illuminating them against the darkness. Gomez saw a Minneapolis squad car parked on the side of Penn Avenue N. His 17-year-old brother had just been arrested after the shooting death of an 18-year-old in an alley in north Minneapolis. That summer, at age 18, his life was in turmoil. Gomez grew up wanting to be a gangbanger like his dad, even as he graduated from high school in June 2011 and prepared to go to the University of North Dakota. Later in life, Gomez joined the Stick Up Boys gang, but didn’t get his first gun until he was 16, later than many others caught up in gangs. His father’s murder prompted two community foundations to issue a brochure decrying street killings it mentioned how the elder Gomez’s death had devastated his three children. His father, a gang member, was killed at age 21. It was for his protection, he said, which he thought he needed growing up in north Minneapolis. He thinks he stole it from someone else who shouldn’t have had it. Malo Dashaunta Gomez doesn’t remember exactly where he got the Hi-Point handgun. McLearen reported the theft to the police, but there was no way to track the gun. He said two of the guests were “chicks from a bar” that he knew only as Binny and Lisa.Īfter the women left, McLearen realized his debit card was missing. On June 29, 2008, McLearen tucked it away in a closet under some blankets before he had a party in his Coon Rapids apartment. Then he gave it to a friend, an Army veteran named Lee McLearen, for cleaning. Hoffman, a phlebotomy technician who lived in Plymouth, fired his Hi-Point a few times at the range. All black, somewhat heavy for a pistol at 1.5 pounds, the C-9 slips easily into a coat pocket.
BLACK STAR PISTOL FREE
It comes with a lifetime warranty that promises free repair for whoever sends it in, original owner or not.
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Sold with an eight-round magazine, the C-9 has a suggested retail price of $179. At least 149 were seized in the Twin Cities from 2007 through last year. One of the most common of the illegal firearms seized was the Hi-Point C-9. Others were stolen from their rightful owners. Some were unwittingly sold by gun shops in “straw purchases,” or at gun shows and by private owners, who aren’t required to do background checks on buyers. Nearly 8,000 firearms have been taken off the streets by police in Minneapolis and St. Bruce Folkens of the Minneapolis police special crimes investigation division. “If you look at a gun that’s 10 years old, that’s an eternity of how many times it can pass hands,” said Cmdr.