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July 18, 2005

CBS Again, .50 Again, Gun Smuggling...

It is truly amazing, the lengths CBS will go to, to try to ban guns. From CBS TV:


The gunrunner's name is Florin Krasniqi, and he is seen providing a new shipment of weapons to Albanian rebels, who are about to smuggle them over the mountains into Kosovo. After a few days' journey on horseback, the guns will end up in the hands of a guerrilla force known as the Kosovo Liberation Army, which has been fighting for independence from Serbia for nearly a decade.

Krasniqi took these guns to his family's home in Kosovo. Most of them were easy to get in Albania, but not the .50-caliber rifles. "This is, we get from the home of the brave and the land of the free, as we would like to say," says Krasniqi, who lives in Brooklyn, N.Y.

Krasniqi came to America in 1989. He was smuggled across the Mexican border in the trunk of a car with just $50 in his pocket. Today, he’s an American citizen, and the owner of a highly successful roofing business.

"This is what I do for a living," says Krasniqi. "This is how we earn the money in New York. There’s a large Albanian-American community in the New York City area."

[...]

If the power of the .50-caliber rifle amazed Krasniqi, what amazed him even more was how easy it was to buy. Krasniqi allowed a Dutch documentary film crew to accompany him to a gun store in Pennsylvania.

"You just have to have a credit card and clear record, and you can go buy as many as you want. No questions asked," says Krasniqi.

Was he surprised at how easy it was to get it? "Not just me. Most of non-Americans were surprised at how easy it is to get a gun in heartland America," says Krasniqi. "Most of the dealers in Montana and Wyoming don’t even ask you a question. It’s just like a grocery store."

And, he says there are a variety of choices for ammunition, which is easy to get as well. "Armor-piercing bullets, tracing bullets," says Krasniqi. "[Ammunition] is easier than the rifles themselves. For the ammunition, you don't have to show a driver’s license or anything."

"You can just go into a gun show or a gun store in this country and buy a shell that will pierce armor? A civilian," asks Bradley.

"You never did that? You’re an American. You can go to the shows and see for yourself," says Krasniqi. "Ask the experts. They’ll be happy to help you."


I'm just taking a few quotes from the lengthy article to show that there is absolutely no counterbalance to this report, nothing to say, "hey, this guy is breaking the law by making straw purchases", making false statements on the NICS form, much less turning around and smuggling them out of the country:

60 Minutes asked Krasniqi how he shipped .50-caliber rifles out of the United States.

"You just put in the airplane, declare them and go anywhere you want," says Krasniqi. "It's completely legal. It's a hunting rifle."

Krasniqi says he shipped the rifles to Albania, and then the soldiers carried them onto the battlefields. He wouldn’t say how many .50-caliber rifles he sent to Kosovo, so 60 Minutes asked Stacy Sullivan, a former Newsweek correspondent, who wrote a book about Krasniqi called, “Be Not Afraid, For You Have Sons in America.”

How many guns did Krasniqi ship over there? "Probably a couple of hundred," says Sullivan. "It's easy. You're allowed to take two or three at a time. He had a group of guys that were dispersed in the U.S., some in Alaska, some in Nevada, some in California, some in Michigan, some in Illinois. And they would each buy a few at a time, and they would take them over in twos and threes on commercial airlines."

Krasniqi’s team of gunrunners never had a problem getting the guns out of the United States. But they often had to switch flights in Switzerland, and authorities there wanted to know what they were doing with such powerful weapons.

"We told them ‘We’re going to hunt elephants.’ And they said, ‘There’s no elephants in Albania,’" says Krasniqi. "And we told them we were going to Tanzania, so we had set up a hunting club here and a hunting club in Albania."

"You had to set up a phony hunting club in Albania, tell the Swiss authorities that men from this hunting club were going to go to Tanzania to shoot elephants," asks Bradley.

"Yes," says Krasniqi. "I never saw an elephant in my life, never mind shot one."

Even so, Krasniqi’s team needed evidence to support the African hunting story, so he says, "We had bought an elephant in Tanzania and set up the whole documentation, so it proved to them we are just elephant hunters."

He says he paid approximately $10,000 for the elephant. But he never got the elephant. "We were not interested in elephants," says Krasniqi. "We were interested to fight a desperate war."

Krasniqi’s shipments of .50-caliber rifles gave the guerrillas a confidence and firepower they’d never had before. But they weren’t getting enough of them. So Krasniqi broke the law by shipping the rifles out in larger quantities than customs allowed.

What was Krasniqi's largest shipment of .50-caliber rifles to Kosovo? "One was on an airplane that he filled up with weapons," says Sullivan. "And I think there were about a hundred guns in there,… 100 .50-caliber rifles."

According to Sullivan, the gunrunners transported the guns on a truck to New York’s Kennedy airport and hid them inside shipments of food and clothing destined for refugees.

"They put the palettes into a plane. Nothing gets X-rayed," says Sullivan. "It's wrapped up as humanitarian aid."


So Krasniqi is also lying and misleading Swiss authorities, illegally transporting weapons in quantities beyond what is permissible, on and on and on.
The clincher, of course, is this:

Tracking weapons as they leave the country is like finding a needle in a haystack, unless federal agents are already tracking the smugglers and their activities. Vince, a former ATF official, says Congress should pass a law that would enable law enforcement officials to maintain computerized records of gun sales, something the gun lobby strenuously opposes.

Right now, Vince says there isn't a central database for gun purchases. "There is no national registration whatsoever," says Vince. "If we had computerized all the sales of firearms, we could be looking at patterns of activity."

And Vince says this includes all those .50-calibers purchased by Krasniqi and his team of gunrunners: "People normally buy firearms for hunting, for sporting purposes and self-defense. But you don’t buy 50 of the same type of weapon – or more in this case. It would obviously, through any type of analysis, ring buzzers with customs or anybody else investigating this."


Mutants such as Krasniqi enter this country illegally, are somehow granted citizenship, and then work the system. There will always be ways to manipulate things for evil intent but that isn't an excuse to suppress the liberties and freedoms of honest citizens.

Secondly, how much of this is real and how much is it just a typical thug bragging? Fish always grow in size in the days after they were pulled from the river.

Third, if it's that easy for international terrorists to purchase these weapons, how come they're not using them (at all) to shoot-up the US?

Lastly, Krasniqi broke numerous laws and regulations: Gun laws, FAA laws, customs laws, international laws. Why does Ed Bradley think passing yet more laws and regulations will stop these crimes? If this creep was able to smuggle out as many firearms as he says he did, isn't that a call for better enforcement of customs and airport security? If existing laws aren't enforced, more laws won't be, either. After all, Kasniqi isn't in jail, right?

It is obvious that CBS "News" has an agenda against the lawful gun owning community. Again, they sought out no opposing views and seemed to relish all the crimes that were committed. I suppose we shouldn't expect any better from the Rathergate Network.

Posted by Jeff Soyer at July 18, 2005 07:57 AM
Comments

I have commented on this before. It's an old story that they are recycling in light of the 50 ban proposed in congress. See these links:

http://www.saysuncle.com/archives/2005/03/21/60_minutes_lies_again

http://www.saysuncle.com/archives/2005/07/18/60_minutes_lies_yet_again/

Posted by: SayUncle at July 18, 2005 09:48 AM

...And we have to keep up the pressure. We in the blogosphere have to be the ones that remind the public that CBS really means SeeB.S.

So far, we (collectively) have chipped away at some of their credibility. Keep those hammers and chisels working, Jeff, you are doing a great job.

Posted by: Individ at July 18, 2005 10:16 AM

I second that, this story has been gutted before, like the rotten bottom-feeder it is.

I have yet to hear of a terrorist or a criminal using a .50 in a crime. Anywhere.

As far as Kosovars using a .50... wouldn't an RPG-7 or a Dragunov be cheaper, easier to supply, and just plain easier to get? Last time I checked, there weren't any warsaw pact weapons chambered in 50 BMG.

Posted by: Eric at July 18, 2005 12:17 PM

Fired off a pissy email to CBS over the following quotation: "You have all the guns you need here to fight a war. M-16s. That's what the U.S. soldiers carry in Iraq. All the rifles which U.S. soldiers use in every war, you can buy them in a gun store or a gun show."

Thug bragging is exactly right.

Posted by: Scott Ganz at July 18, 2005 12:25 PM
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