748
member
Damn, 742 vots and still has 2 stars.
If criminals are going to arm themselves anyway then they definitely should have these.Having owned a TEC-9 I can validate that they are indeed widely feared. You pull the trigger on that weapon and you have no clue where the bullets will go. The fixed sights on mine were off by 4 feet at 25 meters but that was just a guess based upon the MOA of 5 feet that it produced. Oftentimes bullets would strike the target in the lane next to mine.
Irrelevant. Get back to us when you can show the average number of times an officer is shot by a suspect/criminal. Also...“Rather than six shots or five, they have 14 or 20.”
Then how the !@)#(& do you know they're switching weapons?!?!?!The study did not examine how many of the police officers killed this year were shot with weapons that were legalized three years ago, but the study and figures compiled by the federal Bureau of Justice Statistics suggest a statistical correlation.
I wouldn't consider 3 more over a short period of time to be evidence of a definite cause-effect relationship. It also shows that during a ban year, the killings were also high. This does nothing more than weaken their argument.The 39 officers killed in the first half of 2007 exceeds the 36 officers shot to death in all of 2004, the last year the ban was in effect.
From what I've read from owners, I think the only fear is that it's not going to hit the target.widely feared Intratec Tec-9
The study did not examine how many of the police officers killed this year were shot with weapons that were legalized three years ago, but the study and figures compiled by the federal Bureau of Justice Statistics suggest a statistical correlation.
The 39 officers killed in the first half of 2007 exceeds the 36 officers shot to death in all of 2004, the last year the ban was in effect.