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65 Second Movie Clip

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E3 Interview
with
Gary Coleman
by
The New Digital Reporter
Gary Coleman

Pictures and Video of Gary at the Shooting Range

(Click on image for full size)

Video of Gary at the Shooting Range


64 second movie clip
Windows Media (wmv)
2.1 MB
Quicktime Movie (mov)
3.8 MB
Music by Ph8

When asked by friends or foes, please be accurate in your description of the firearms we were shooting with Gary, because nearly 99.99% of the people in the so-called "real" media have nary a clue that what we were doing is perfectly legal. Milton Schick of Starlight Enterprises was the Class III dealer and license-holder who provided the full-autos we shot that day.

First off...

Yes, Title II weapons like submachine guns are legal to own in America. The firearms are registered with the BATF and the owner pays a $200 transfer tax to the feds EVERY time the weapon is transferred. This is why most of the sub-guns we fired that day are worth
over $2500. Oh, and for what it's worth, only three legally owned full-autos have ever been used in a crime in America since 1934 (the year this stupid law went into effect) and there are at least a quarter-of-a-million full-auto owners in this country.

Secondly...

Yes, suppressors (Note: they are NOT called "silencers") are legal to own under the same rules described above.

Thirdly...

Those are NOT "clips" that one feeds the ammo into. They're called magazines. A "clip" means something entirely different. We owe this stupidity to Hollywood.

As for the sub-guns used that day, they were...

1) a British STEN Mk. II http://world.guns.ru/smg/smg38-e.htm submachine gun (fired with and without a suppressor) dating from late in the Second World War. This was the sub-gun that feeds its magazine from the left side. It fires a 9mm cartridge.

2) an American Ingram M11 (MAC-11) http://world.guns.ru/smg/smg22-e.htm submachine gun (fired with and without a suppressor) from the post-Vietnam era. Gary assumed this would be his favorite, because it fires a .380 cartridge, but its astounding 1600 round-per-minute cyclic rate made it climb even with the big can ("can" is slang for a suppressor) affixed to it.

3) an Austrian Steyr MPi 69 http://world.guns.ru/smg/smg45-e.htm submachine gun (no suppressor was used that day) of a 1980's vintage. This is the sub-gun that Vince is seen firing from the hip (and in most of the other shots of him). It also fires a 9mm cartridge.



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