Not surprising
IT managers are known to make poor security appliance purchases.
A “Walter Mitty” IT manager from Milton Keynes who bought a gun on the dark web has pleaded guilty to firearms offences. Darren Hillyer, 38, posed as a woman supposedly wanting revenge on a paedophile ex-lover. He bought a Ruger LC9 9mm pistol and 50 rounds of ammunition from a dark web “gun trader”. In reality, the seller …
So credit cards are fine for small arms them
Oh, credit cards are fine for everything. Just do not expect to have any credit left on it by the time you get back to wherever you have decided to spend the night. So those small arms may end up being a bit on the expensive side.
Jokes aside. This is from 15 years back, but trust me around those parts nothing has changed (it may have only gone worse).
After the collapse of the trade in the ex-Soviet block lots of enterprising individuals started doing "blockade runs" and ferry "goods of interest" like technical literature, spare parts, etc from Russia to the ex-soviet block. A person I know (and used to buy books from 15+ years ago) was driving his van with a load books somewhere around South Ukraine/Moldova towards the border. A guy comes out on the road with an AK47. He stops. The gunman says "20 bucks". Well, you pay up your road toll if you want to live.
Next run, the blockade runner (who is an ex-army nuthead) stashes a handgun in the van, prepares the gun before entering the "interesting area". 20 km from the border a man comes out on the road again. This time with a Strela-2 launcher. The fact that it is AA does not matter, if it is fired at you from point blank range you are dead. The guy says "60 bucks". Our man grudgingly pays. The man with the Strela gives him the missile and says "Thank you, pleasure doing business with you". At this point instead of getting rid of the launcher he stashed it in a hidden compartment in the van.
You probably do not believe me at that point. Well, I did not believe him either until 3 years later he was arrested for being drunk and disorderly and threatening his mother in-law with a Strela-2 in an apartment block. That was on the news at the time, so the article can be found if you search for it (I cannot be arsed).
I was chatting to a guy in a pub in Basingstoke. His brother in law had bought some sort of soviet military jeep 4x4 thing for $150 a couple of years after the collapse. He got map coordinates to go pick it up (it was in the middle of nowhere) and off he went. As he started getting closer, he crossed onto a section of disused railway track followed that for a couple of miles until he came to an entire train load of the things. Rather than nick one to order, they'd nicked a whole convoy/delivery of several dozen of them
Moron. He could have gone on an excursion to Ukraine instead. You can buy anything around those parts, up to a howitzer if you pay cash.
Yeah, but getting it through Customs might be a bit problematic: "Sir, is that a howitzer in your pants, or are you just happy to see me?"
Back in 1989 when I worked in Switzerland my boss took a last minute holiday. He returned about a week later and I asked why the sudden departure. "Well, you know that I collect military vehicles?" Yes I did, he had a lot of tanks that he drove around his farm. "I got a call from a contact in East Germany and he said if I was quick and had cash I could buy a SCUD launcher."
I asked "How did you get it back home?"
"I drove it".
"How did you get it through the border post at Basel?"
"I showed my passport, I'm a Swiss citizen they can't refuse me entry."
I have no idea if the launcher was decommissioned. I suspect not.
Yes it is an LC9 but El Reg is not renown for its knowledge of firearms and one picture of a gun is equal to any other.
Personally I would go with the MAC 50, Browning Hi Power or in my latter years the Beretta 92f.
It would have been easier for this chap to have gone down to Lunnon and to have spoken with a few geezers down Morden or Mitcham way. He would then have had access to some of the finest firearms that the Balkan people ever produced.
Failing that he could have come to my local pub had a few pints and then walked across the road and bought any pistol up to 7.65 legally.
Muppet and a walt extraordinaire.
"Bloakeys El Reg colleagues described him as a “fantasist” and a “Walter Mitty type character”"
I do not have any El Reg Colleagues !!! Go over to ARSSE and you will me find me chatting amongst my peers about military life in foreign climes, ooh and same nomenclature as well.
My I.T. degrees seem a bit like fantasy, all that alcohol and all that free time, those were the days.
"It would have been easier for this chap to have gone down to Lunnon and to have spoken with a few geezers down Morden or Mitcham way. He would then have had access to some of the finest firearms that the Balkan people ever produced."
Was going to call you out on this ... and then remembered, seeing as I actually live next to Morden, that you're actually right on the money. Primarily Czech stuff, funnily enough...
"Was going to call you out on this ... and then remembered, seeing as I actually live next to Morden, that you're actually right on the money. Primarily Czech stuff, funnily enough..."
Ahh, well there you go, twas ever thus and the Krays were regulars in the pub opposite Morden cemetary. I live far away now but still have a house In Merton Park as a pension investment.
CZ pistols, hmmm, they do a very good PPK.
"An potential possession in what can only be described as Weapons Of Mass Destruction in a country that fears anything above the fruit knife."
How dare you sir. A fruit knife that is smaller than the palm of your hand, is sheathed in a steel scabbard and securely locked with a Chubb lock and stored in a steel cabinet with various dead locks is perfectly acceptable.
It is butter knives that are the menace and are the cause of death for more wealthy Dowagers than the police would care to admit.
Ban them I say, think about the children growing up to be dowagers.
"Vanishing culture, my eye! I forbid you to mention my name in the classroom . . . And you can tell that professor of yours, I've got a good mind to drive up to Amherst, with this pistol-handled butter knife on the seat beside me, and cut off his anthropological balls!"
Aunt Harriet, in A.R. Gurney's play "The Dining Room"
Is entrapment legal in the UK? Anyway, he didn't 'buy a gun' he ATTEMPTED to buy a gun from a rip-off merchant. Does the dark web eBay provide any guarantees for recompense when ripped off by suspect dealers? Is it legal for the filth to offer guns for sale? Failing that can he sue the filth under the Consumer Protection Legislation as the goods were a) not as described and b) not fit for purpose.
Bit of a prat though...
Probably finely nuanced ...
The key question is "would the defendant have acted as they did, if the police had done nothing ?"
In this case it would seem the defendant would have - they seem to have dreamt up the idea of buying a gun, and if it hadn't been for the actions of the police, may very well have got one. A real one. And like people who want to be MPs, the very last person who should have a gun, is someone who wants to have a gun. They are - by definition - dangerous people.
So in this case, big up for plod --->
<snip>
"A real one. And like people who want to be MPs, the very last person who should have a gun, is someone who wants to have a gun. They are - by definition - dangerous people."
<snip>
Rubbish. Tell that to ex squaddies. hunters. Olympic shooters etc.
Oh, and how dare you compare potential murderers, mass shooters and gun nuts to politicians, it is slander of the worst type. Paedophiles, rapists, spammers, PSI companies, lawyers and politicians all live in the same bucket as far as I am concerned.
Not sure this goes as far as entrapment as that would require the police to try to entice the suspect to buy the weapon rather than the suspect going looking for the weapon. Also he wasn't done for "buying a weapon" he was done for a conspiracy to import. You don't have to carry out the final act to be part of the conspiracy to commit that act.
He could have had a defence of saying that he was planning to write a book about the 'dark web' and knew that there were not any real goods available on the dark web and was setting out to buy what he knows would end up being a fake weapon. Therefore he set out to buy a fake weapon and that is what was delivered.
the VCRA makes buying a 'Realistic Imitation Firearm' illegal without a defense as put out by the act, for example a registered Airsoft skirmisher, theatrical production etc.
Although deactivated guns are of course, not covered by this act and pretty much anyone can buy one.
Its worse than that. I own a Umarex replica MP5 which fires steel BBs and is powered by a C02 cartridge. As its classed as an air weapon, i can walk into the shop and walk out with it. However, to replace my P90 replica plastic bb battery powered gun, i need to jump through hoops. The law is an ass in this regard.
"Entrapment" is poorly named; it's generally OK for plod to set a trap, provided they are not actively encouraging people to take the bait. So it's okay to set up a fake gun store, where Walter comes looking of his own volition, but not okay to say "you should buy a gun."
The undercover "store" operators would have had to tread lightly though; they'd have to make sure nothing they said could be taken as encouraging the purchase. For example if they 'upsold' ammunition or tried to get Walter to take a different model to what he had asked for.
It sounds like he approached the officers (although unknowingly) in order to attempt to purchase the gun. The officers didn't approach him and attempt to sell it to him... so not really entrapment? He couldn't argue that he was unlikely to commit the offence otherwise, as he actively sought to do so in this case.
Is entrapment legal in the UK? Anyway, he didn't 'buy a gun' he ATTEMPTED to buy a gun from a rip-off merchant
It is not entrapment if the illegal activity is initiated by the suspect without any encouragement or suggestion from the undercover contact. That's why undercover operations always have to wait for the suspect to make the deciding move (which is the nervous part of a sting - if the suspect walks away they have no case).
If it was sport he'd get himself a pistal licence and join a club.
Or just get an air pistol (they're legal) for target purposes.
If it was just to wave around to impress people, he may as well have got an airsoft pistol (looks the same).
If he just wanted to fire a pistol, he could join a gun club.
How deeply, deeply embaressing for him. If I lived in the US I would probably get a gun for sport purposes. But the difference is it's legal there.
If he wanted a realistic airsoft gun he would need to get a UKARA membership.
Which isn't hard but you do need to play at a registered site at least 3 time in under a year, and then the site would need to vouch for your membership.
Otherwise he could only buy a two tone gun.
Airsoft pistols do look the part but all the weights in the magazine and the slide spring is a lot weaker.
He'd have to make sure no one ever touched or he be busted.
He'd have to make sure no one ever touched or he be busted.
Growing u pin the UK I could not tell the difference between an air pistol or a real gun, but I would know he was lying about the next bit
"Workmates said Hillyer claimed that he that worked for the intelligence and security services who had issued him a gun."
If that was true, he would no brag out it, or even tell anyone, and definitely not show anyone a gun. The security services selection criteria is very strict and amounts to one very good candidates in almost every aspect failing one just one aspect. e.g. Giving away information to a potential women, can't find the exact link at the moment, but the role of a honey trap is detailed at http://www.telegraph.co.uk/history/world-war-two/11110440/Agent-Fifi-deadlier-than-the-male.html