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(4 episodes, 2004-2009). (4 episodes, 2004-2005). (4 episodes, 2005-2009). (3 episodes, 2004-2006). (3 episodes, 2006-2008). (2 episodes, 2003-2004). (2 episodes, 2003-2004).

(2 episodes, 2004-2005). (2 episodes, 2004-2005). (2 episodes, 2004). (2 episodes, 2005-2006).

(2 episodes, 2006-2008). (2 episodes, 2006). (2 episodes, 2008-2010). (2 episodes, 2009-2010). (2 episodes, 2009-2010). (2 episodes, 2009-2010).

(1 episode, 2003). (1 episode, 2003). (1 episode, 2003). (1 episode, 2003). (1 episode, 2004).

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(1 episode, 2007). (1 episode, 2008). (1 episode, 2009). (1 episode, 2010).

(1 episode, 2010). (1 episode, 2010) Series Writing Credits. (creator) (156 episodes, 2003-2010). (16 episodes, 2003-2007). (14 episodes, 2004-2008).

(10 episodes, 2004-2007). (10 episodes, 2006-2010). (9 episodes, 2003-2006). (9 episodes, 2007-2010).

(8 episodes, 2006-2009). (8 episodes, 2008-2010). (7 episodes, 2006-2009). (6 episodes, 2006-2009).

(4 episodes, 2003-2004). (4 episodes, 2003-2004).

(4 episodes, 2005-2006). (4 episodes, 2005-2006). (4 episodes, 2008-2009).

(3 episodes, 2003-2004). (3 episodes, 2004-2005). (3 episodes, 2004-2005). (3 episodes, 2006-2007). (3 episodes, 2009-2010). (3 episodes, 2009-2010). (3 episodes, 2009-2010).

(2 episodes, 2004-2005). (2 episodes, 2004-2005). (2 episodes, 2005-2006). (2 episodes, 2006-2007). (2 episodes, 2008-2009).

(2 episodes, 2008-2009). (2 episodes, 2009-2010). (1 episode, 2004). (1 episode, 2005).

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(1 episode, 2006). (1 episode, 2006). (1 episode, 2006). (1 episode, 2006).

(1 episode, 2007). (1 episode, 2007). (1 episode, 2007). (1 episode, 2009). (1 episode, 2009).

(1 episode, 2009). (1 episode, 2009). (1 episode, 2010) Series Cast. Frankie Rafferty. Detective Gil Sherman /. Ramiro Valens. Toni Halstead.

Detective Pierson /. Ray Williams. Jarrod Jones. John Stillman '80 /. Officer Lennox /. Dan Saller /. Joe Mueller /.

Isaac Keller. Ryan Stewart. Burke Kelvin /. James Addison. Belen Hernandez. Mark Phillips. Lilly Rush '80 /.

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Butch Rinaldi (2003). Samantha 'Sammy' Robbins (2003). Henry Phillips (2003). Bennett Cahill (2003). Hank Dempsey.

Susan Cardiff. Mathilde 2005. Clifton Coleman - 1999, 2005. Elena Bistrong - 1978, 2005. Zelda Amatuzzi (2005). Sherry Stephens (2003). Melanie Whitley.

Terri Maxwell (2004). Wendell Foyt.

Randy Price 1985. Roger (2003). Nicole Barnes (2004).

Neil Beaudry. Nathan 'Jonesy' Jones (2004). Rudy Tanner 1998. Buck Lowman 1976. Jered Wyatt - 1988, 2005. Miguel Maldonado. Mike Odoms 2005.

Roger Raitt - 2005. Simone Marks 1972. Cindy Mulvaney - 1965.

Cyrus Tisdale. Grace Anderson. Muriel Bartleby. Boris Litvack - 2006. Gerald Carter. Tom 'Z' Zimmerman - 2007.

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Under federal law, licensed dealers must maintain records of firearm sales indefinitely (18 U.S.C. 923). Although licensed dealers must respond to specific Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) inquiries about sales of individual guns, federal law does not mandate that dealers report sales; indeed, federal authorities are explicitly prohibited by law from maintaining a database of firearm sales. In addition, there is no federal law requiring recording or reporting of firearm sales by private sellers. Several states have, however, implemented laws requiring the recording of sales, the reporting of sales, or both, for some or all sales (Cherney, Morral, and Schell, 2018). More about the policy. Several states have laws that require firearm sellers (dealers, private sellers, or both) to maintain records of all gun sales, and some have laws that require sellers to report sales information to law enforcement. Twenty jurisdictions require firearm sellers to keep records of at least some firearm sales.

Eleven states and the District of Columbia require licensed dealers to maintain records of all firearm sales, and seven states and the District of Columbia require private sellers to do so. Some states require recordkeeping for handgun sales only: Six states have such laws for dealers, and four have them for private sellers. Overall, five jurisdictions require all sellers to record all firearm sales, while the other 15 states with such laws have some lesser combinations of recordkeeping requirements.

In terms of recordkeeping by private sellers, some states require the sellers to maintain the records, and others require licensed dealers to maintain records for private sales. States differ on how long sales records must be maintained. Some do not specify the required duration, and some require the records be kept for a set number of years or permanently. Some states recently abolished their recordkeeping requirements. In 2015, for example, Alabama repealed the section of law requiring dealers to maintain detailed handgun sales records. In fact, the state enacted a section stating that, within 180 days of the new law’s passage, dealers and law enforcement must destroy any records they created to comply with the repealed law, although gun sellers’ federal recordkeeping requirements would remain.

In addition to recordkeeping requirements, 11 states require that sales records be transmitted to a law enforcement agency. Four of the states require records of all sales to be transmitted, including those by licensed dealers and private sellers. Similarly, the District of Columbia’s registration requirement gives law enforcement access to all sales records. Five states require dealers and private sellers to report only handgun sales to law enforcement.

Washington requires dealers to report only handgun sales. As with laws requiring the reporting of lost or stolen firearms, laws requiring the recording and reporting of gun sales are designed to facilitate law enforcement traces of weapons used in crimes. Without such laws, tracing crime guns typically identifies where a gun was first legally sold, and to whom. However, secondary markets appear to be the leading source of guns used in crimes (Harlow, 2001).

By requiring a record of each subsequent transfer or sale of a firearm after its initial sale by a licensed dealer, ATF and other law enforcement agencies would gain valuable investigative information. Presumably, requiring recordkeeping and reporting of private gun sales could also deter illegal sales. Furthermore, law enforcement access to sales data could facilitate identification of firearm owners who have become prohibited possessors. For instance, California passed Proposition 63 in 2016, which, among other things, requires courts to search California’s centralized records of firearm sales and transfers whenever an individual is convicted of an offense that makes him or her a prohibited possessor. When such individuals are found to have purchased firearms, they will be required to relinquish or dispose of them.

Required recordkeeping and reporting may impose costs to sellers of maintaining compliance, and concerns about privacy may deter some individuals seeking to acquire a firearm for self-protection or recreational gun use, with consequences for gun sales. Because the principal intended benefit of laws requiring firearm sales to be reported concerns crime investigation, the data most relevant to understanding the effects of such laws would include firearm crime clearance rates, or the rates at which law enforcement is successful in identifying suspects in firearm-related crimes, including violent and property crimes, and firearm trafficking crimes. In California and other states that use these records to identify prohibited possessors with weapons, data on firearm-involved crime and violence perpetrated by prohibited possessors would be valuable, but such data are not generally available. Notes. The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms (2002, p.

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A-3) defined crime gun as “any firearm that is illegally possessed, used in a crime, or suspected to have been used in a crime. An abandoned firearm may also be categorized as a crime gun if it is suspected it was used in a crime or illegally possessed.”. Calif.

Penal Code, Sec. California, Connecticut, Delaware, Illinois, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, New Jersey, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, and the District of Columbia.

Penal Code § 28100; Conn. § 29-31; Del.

24 § 904; 40 Ill. 65/3, 720 Ill.

15 § 455; Mass. 140 § 123; Mich. Laws §§ 28.422, 28.422a, 750.232; N.J. §2C: 58-2, N.J. Code § 13:54-3.14; Oreg. §§ 166.412, 166.434; 18 Pa.

§§ 6111, 6102; R.I. Laws §§ 11-47-35, 11-47-35.2; D.C. California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Illinois, New York, Rhode Island, and the District of Columbia. Penal Code § 28210; Colo.

§ 18-12-112; Conn. § 29-31; Del. 11 § 1448B, tit. 24 § 904; 40 Ill. 65/3, 720 Ill. Law § 898; R.I.

Laws §§ 11-47-35, 11-47-35.2, D.C. §§ 7-2505.02, 7-2504.04. Colorado, Maryland, New York, North Carolina, Vermont, and Washington. § 12-26-102; Md. Code §§ 5-120, 5-145; N.Y. Penal Law §§ 265.00, 400,00; N.C.

§ 14-402; Vt. 13 § 4006; Wash. Code § 9.41.110. Maryland, New Jersey, Michigan, and Pennsylvania. Code § 5-120 (private sellers are required to maintain copies of the application, not a sales record); N.J. § 2C: 58-3 (private sellers are required to maintain copies of the permit); Mich.

§§ 28.422, 28.422a, 750.232; 37 Pa. California, Delaware, Illinois, Rhode Island, and the District of Columbia. Connecticut, Illinois, Maryland, Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Rhode Island. § 29-31; 40 Ill.

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65/3, 720 Ill. Code § 5-120; Mich. §§ 28.422, 28.422a, 750.232; 37 Pa. § 33.111; R.I.

Laws §§ 11-47-35, 11-47-35.2. California, Colorado, New York, and the District of Columbia. Penal Code § 28210; Colo. § 18-12-112; N.Y. Law § 898l; D.C. §§ 7-2505.02, 7-2504.04.

For example, Massachusetts, Michigan, New York, and the District of Columbia. Laws Ch. 140 § 123; Mich. Laws §§ 28.422, 28.422a, 750.232; N.Y.

Law § 898; D.C. For example, three years in Maryland for handguns (Md. Code § 5-120), five years in Oregon (Oreg. § 166.412), six years in Rhode Island (R.I. Laws §§ 11-47-35, 11-47-35.2), ten years in Illinois (40 Ill. 65/3), and 20 years in Connecticut and Pennsylvania (Conn. §§ 29-33, 29-37a; 18 Pa.

New Jersey requires records be kept permanently (N.J. § 2C: 58-3, N.J. Code § 13:54-3.14).

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47, amending Ala. Code § 13A-11-79. California, Connecticut, Hawaii, and Massachusetts.

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Penal Code §§ 1106, 27545 (private sales must be conducted through licensed dealers, who in turn must report); Conn. §§ 29-33, 29-37; Hawaii Rev.

§ 134-2; Mass. 140 §§ 123, 128A. §§ 7-2502.08, 22-4510. Maryland, Michigan, New Jersey, New York, and Pennsylvania.

Code §§ 5-120, 5-124 (firearm applications for private sales must be reported); Mich. Laws §§ 28.422, 28.422a; N.J. § 2C:58-2; N.Y. Penal Law § 400.00; 18 Pa.

This entry was posted on 13.03.2020.