curtailing my posting because I am disappointed with most of the hexbear takes on most things in the past month or two, if I wanted garbage takes I'd be on heckin reddit
nat_turner_overdrive
Guy doesn't have a gun that works right, he racks good rounds out (you should not be doing this in drills), he uses a GPS tracked bicycle
He was definitely an amateur. Lucky maybe, but there was nothing professional here.
A practiced professional wouldn't have a nonfunctional gun. I think we must have watched different videos, anyway, because nothing about the gun handling looks more than surprise and then fumbling to me.
Which part of racking unfired rounds out of your magazine is practiced and professional??
He definitely was.
edit: they found unspent rounds on the ground. Because he was fumbling with a pistol that wasn't working right.
Looks like at least two types of failures, the bolt/slide isn't cycling and at least once he has to smack the back of it because it fails to feed. I think he may also slap the mag base too? Either way, it's a gun that isn't working right not some fancy exotic assassin pistol.
Everybody wants to imagine a tv style contract killer which doesn't really exist when the video plainly shows a guy fumbling with a gun that isn't cycling properly
He definitely wasn't catching casings, he was fumbling with a gun that kept jamming
I am entirely convinced that it's a semi-auto .22LR and not some fancy or unusual gun. There's people on reddit imagining it's one of the modern welrod repros, and I don't buy that either. The way he's handing the gun it doesn't seem like he was expecting it to jam, and then when he's manually cycling the bolt he actually has to slap it closed once. To me that just screams typical .22LR pistol being shot by someone who doesn't know what ammunition feeds the best, so they're having to cycle it and even slap the bolt closed because the rounds are jamming on the feed ramp.
this is a materialist approach to problems and it is good and correct
resistance was using drone attacks in Iraq fifteen years ago, not prolific like today because the commercial/civilian hardware wasn't as cheap or advanced
The cops also claimed he had $8000 (or $10000) in cash on him and Mangione said he had no cash on him in his arraignment.