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- April 13, 1981NATIONCheap Gun, Will Travel
-
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- The origins of the .22-cal. revolver that was used to shoot
- President Reagan are in Sontheim, West Germany. A picturesque
- town built along a tributary of the Danube. Sontheim is the
- home of Rohm GmbH, a 74-year-old firm that makes drilling
- equipment and cheap handgun parts. West Germans have little use
- for Rohm weapons. The country's gun ownership laws are strict,
- and the relatively few people who do qualify to possess handguns
- tend to choose better-made and more expensive models. Thus,
- most Rohm gun parts--perhaps $1 million worth a year, although
- company officials refuse to be exact--are shipped through Bremen
- and Hamburg to the U.S., where there is one pistol for every
- four citizens, and where there is a flourishing market for
- cheap "Saturday night specials." Last year the U.S. imported
- 298,689 foreign handguns, most of them from Italy and West
- Germany, and 3.1 million gun parts.
-
- American law closely regulates the importing of entire guns.
- But there are far fewer restrictions on bringing in gun parts
- that then inserted into American-made frames. RG Industries,
- Inc., which is partly controlled by Heinrich and Gunter Rohm of
- the German firm, employs about 200 people to do that kind of
- assembly work at a shabby white concrete building in the garment
- district of northwest Miami. The cheap alloy frame is smoothed
- with a file and then placed on an assembly line where the barrel
- and German parts are inserted. Then the metal in tinted a dark
- blue. RG Industries last year sold 190,000 such weapons making
- it the nation's fifth largest handgun producer.
-
- Because of its short (1 3/4-in) barrel the model RG 14 revolver
- that Hinckley used cannot be sold legally in the Miami area.
- The one that Hinckley bought, serial number L731332 was shipped
- by Southern Gun distributors of nearby Opa-Locka, Fla., directly
- to Rocky's Pawn Shop on Elm Street in Dallas. This cluttered
- emporium, only a quarter of a mile from the site where President
- John Kennedy was shot 17 years ago, has a sticker on the door
- that reads GUNS DON'T CAUSE CRIME ANY MORE THAN FLIES CAUSE
- GARBAGE. In the window a red, green , blue, and black sign
- advertises .22-cal. revolvers for $47.
-
- "Hinckley did everything required to buy a gun," says Isaac
- "Rocky" Goldstein, 70, a cigar-chomping, gray-haired man who has
- run the shop for 51 years. "People are going to blame us for
- selling the gun that shot the President, but we have no way of
- knowing . We don't even remember him." Goldstein, who also
- sold the small handguns that were used in a series of gang
- shootings in New York City's Chinatown in 1978, has been shaken
- by events, however, and now says he is considering getting out
- of the gun business.
-
- Hinckley purchased the ammunition that was used at another pawn
- shop, this one in Lubbock, Texas. The type of bullet he chose
- was interesting--and frightening. The cartridges were
- Devastators, make by Bingham Ltd. of Norcross, Ga. These
- projectiles, akin to dumdum bullets, contain a small aluminum
- canister filled with an explosive compound. They cost at least
- twelve times as much as ordinary .22-cal. slugs.
-
- Upon impact the unstable compound is supposed to explode and
- fragment the bullet, although most of the ones that Hinckley
- shot, including the one that hit Reagan, failed to do so.
- Bingham spokesmen say that the Devastator was developed for use
- by sky marshals in hijacking cases. By fragmenting, the bullet
- would quickly incapacitate a person but would be less likely
- than an ordinary bullet to pass through him or to puncture the
- outer skin of an airplane. Because of manufacturing
- difficulties, the company stopped producing the Devastator last
- May.
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