Criminal police demand gun owners bring in firearms for inspection or face criminal investigation!
Officials threaten those who refuse with criminal investigations.
TULSA, Oklahoma -
August 21, 2008 - Oklahoma police investigating the shooting deaths of
two girls have told area residents with guns to bring them in for a test to
determine whether they were used in the attack, sparking concern among those
who own guns for hunting and self-defense.
According to reports in the Tulsa
World the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation sent letters to members of
the community who were registered as owning .40-caliber handguns suggesting
they voluntarily bring in their gun or guns for a test.
The individuals who were
"invited" to bring their guns in but didn't now will be included in
the ongoing investigation, as well as people who were identified by former
owners as having purchased that type of weapon recently, authorities said.
"We'll be checking on
them," Jessica Brown, a spokeswoman for the Oklahoma State Bureau of
Investigation, told the newspaper.
The investigation is into the June
8 shooting deaths of Skyla Jade Whitaker, 11, and Taylor Paschal-Placker, 13,
who died when they were shot several times on a road about four miles from
Weleetka. Authorities say two guns were used in the killings, but they haven't
released much information about the weapons until they now confirmed one was a
.40-caliber.
They have not yet identified the
second type of weapon used.
Authorities said they sent out
about 60 letters, and about 40 gun owners voluntarily brought in their weapons
to the Okfuskee County Courthouse at Okemah for testing over the weekend.
Brown said those weapons were taken
by investigators and test-fired, and the results of those tests now are being
evaluated. She said nearly half a dozen former gun owners contacted authorities
to identify new owners, and another 15 gun owners did not show up.
Those who participated in a forum on the newspaper
website expressed sympathy for the victims and their families, but worried
about the maneuver of inspecting privately owned guns without a search warrant
or probable cause.