If you enjoy the forum please consider supporting it by signing up for a NES Membership The benefits pay for the membership many times over.
Be sure to enter the NES/MFS May Giveaway ***Canik METE SFX***
.
Although the investigation is ongoing, Richter said all of the weapons taken by the Shawsheen students have been recovered. But he noted that police "don't know how many weapons were there to start with.".
? ? ? ? ?
I'm very concerned that she appears to have raised a budding little burglar, and she's more worried about how someone ELSE keeps HIS stuff. If she'd raised the little bastard right, he'd never have known about the guns.Kloetzer's mother, Christine Kaizer, said she isn't excusing what her son has done, but as a parent, said she is appalled that an arsenal of firearms appears to have been kept in a vacant house that "is easy for anyone's child to gain entry to."
"The cellar door to this house wasn't secure," Kaizer said. "I'm very concerned that anyone would allow a house filled with guns and ammunition not to be reinforced with locks. What these kids did was wrong, but there are also laws on how guns should be stored.
I'm very concerned that she appears to have raised a budding little burglar, and she's more worried about how someone ELSE keeps HIS stuff. If she'd raised the little bastard right, he'd never have known about the guns.
The whole story sounds pretty fishy to me though. Anyone taking bets if the cop is going to be charged with unsafe storage?
I agree. I didn't read one bit of information that could help me reasonably conclude that these guns were brought there or stored in that premise by the police officer.I don't think we are getting all the details. It might be hard proving ownership of the firearms unless they are registered to him(the cop). Seeing as the house was abandon and open. Or prints, or maybe he just came out and admitted they are his.