A state-sponsored cash-for-guns program for Camden residents picked up 1,137 firearms over two days, a record number for the state, officials said. New Jersey's attorney general said some gun owners who showed up at two Camden churches appeared to be motivated by the killings at Sandy Hook Elementary in Connecticut.Rico says that's a lot of gubs off the mean streets of Camden...
Jeffrey S. Chiesa alluded to the possible motive at a news conference at Camden's police department, where heaps of surrendered firearms were on display.
"We heard that there were a number of gun owners who had publicly said, in light of the situation that had just occurred in Connecticut, they wanted to turn in their weapons," Paul Loriquet, a spokesman, elaborated in an interview. Loriquet said the anecdotal accounts were relayed to the attorney general by law enforcement officers who spoke to gun owners at Antioch Baptist Church, which hosted the program along with the Higher Ground Temple Church of God in Christ.
Adam Lanza, who allegedly killed his mother in their Newtown home and then killed six adults and twenty children at an elementary school before taking his own life.
Loriquet said the previous most successful gun buyback in the state was a 2009 event in Newark, East Orange, and Irvington that yielded more than 700 weapons in a day and a half from Essex County residents.
Officials said $110,000 from the Attorney General's Office in forfeited money, along with $6,000 in gift cards for groceries from a city-sponsored gun buyback program last year, were doled out in Camden this time. In addition, $39,000 in IOUs will be honored through future forfeited money.
County residents could turn in up to three firearms, no questions asked. Payment was set on a sliding scale, with the $250 maximum going to operable assault weapons and illegal firearms.
Camden Police Chief Scott Thomson said most of the 533 handguns and 504 long guns, including five semiautomatics, were operable. Some residents said they turned in guns simply because they no longer wanted them in their homes. One man said he would use the $400 he received to buy Christmas gifts.
19 December 2012
Camden buy-back
Darran Simon has an article in the Philadelphia Inquirer about the usual firearm-buyback disaster:
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