This time thieves used a concrete truck to run through the type 4 barriers and Ballards to smash the front gate.
No links yet to the news website yet.
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This time thieves used a concrete truck to run through the type 4 barriers and Ballards to smash the front gate.
No links yet to the news website yet.
Wow! Makes you wonder if this a local crowd doing the stealing or a nation-wife group?
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They got the garbage truck idea from a Bruce Willis movie. I'm guessing they trashed the place.
Based on the latest on tv, it looks like they just hooked up cables to the doors and yanked them off the storefront instead of ramming the doors. Maybe the plan was to take the biggest truck they could steal and ram it . . . but then decided pulling the doors off with cabels would work fine.
https://kdvr.com/2018/12/04/cement-t...wood-gun-shop/
For those still waiting for a link.
I wonder if my gun on consignment was stolen?
I guess I will need to follow-up with them in a day or two.
This is area where our new liberal masters can act- all retail guns stored in safes at night.
^^^THIS. Now, before the crowd of shop owners chime in with the "It only takes an angle grinder and 5 minutes to defeat a gun safe"... Yes, you are correct. However, these thieves are looking for a quick grab. They aren't going to want to spend time cutting into a safe and hoping they get the guns they are specifically looking for. Not to mention, I'm guessing Lakewood PD was on-scene pretty quick. Is it a pain in the butt to put the guns away in safes every night? Yep. Is it better than having them all stolen? Yep. The criminals likely cased the store before hitting it. Probably around closing time to see if the guns were put away after hours. Just guessing though.
Maybe they should use cardboard display guns like American Furniture Warehouse.
On a serious note, I don't like this trend one bit.
At Silverbullet we put the firearms away every night.
Every single night.
"It only takes an angle grinder and 5 minutes to defeat a gun safe"
Some guys put a container of "black powder" in the safe. Sparks and stuff , you know.
Concrete evidence.......
They were a**holes when I visited a couple times, I wonder if they pissed off someone really badly?
A video surveillance system should have been able to detect activity in time to alert someone before the crooks were able to gain access.... I know my own house has several cameras in front and back, and the motion detection sends me text message alerts. I do get a false alarms when it picks up cars driving by in the middle of the night, but I'd expect a gun shop could take it a step further and have a monitoring service that could call police for actual suspicious activity.
If you make yourself a target...
All guns should be in a safe or vault after closing. Especially after all the smash and grabs last year. No excuses.
No, really we had a store where we kept blackpowder in the safe. In other news, there was a concrete truck in Pueblo...
https://koaa.com/news/covering-color...ver-in-pueblo/
Bass Pro keeps (or kept) their BP in a small Type II rolling magazine that most definitely would count as a safe.
Seems like it'd be pretty easy to just build slightly more robust display cases for pistols and steel grates can be locked on every night. Same for guns stored on walls. It'd be the same as putting on hurricane panels every night. Take up less space and cost a lot less than a bunch of safes.
Poor guy. His insurance is going to skyrocket. He will likely get dropped by his current carrier and have to go to what's called a sub-standard carrier. High premiums and poor service. That will be another way "THEY" will strangle the industry. Underwriting will deem covering retailers too risky and not offer coverage.
Surplus lines carrier is what you're thinking of. Not necessarily sub-standard, but more equipped to handle higher risk. Assuming they are insurable at all.
It is easy but not cheap. I looked into it when working for a metal fabrication shop. I can build you a sweet case that bolts to the floor in several places and has "hurricane" glass but it's gonna cost several thousand dollars just for the glass. Most gun shops can't afford them. Jewelry stores can but they rarely get hit. They have awesome security systems and usually lock everything up in safe rooms at night.
That's asking a lot from employees. My design is stand alone, no extra work needed. A framing hammer needs multiple blows to get through the glass, a sledge a few less. Hopefully enough time the police can respond before the jerks leave.
Another problem is most shops are in leased spaces limiting the security measures the tenant can take.
If you can afford to open a shop, you should be able to accommodate at least 1 quality safe. I bet good money that A LOT of members here have some very high quality safes in their houses. Also, if you take care and caution when moving guns in/out of a safe that is properly lined, you won't be beating up the guns. Insurance companies may give you a break on your premium if you store them in a safe as well, thus saving you money.