This image shows the replica handgun recovered after a 13-year-old boy
was shot and wounded Wednesday by a plainclothes detective. The
Powerline logo can be seen circled in red. It indicates the gun was made
by Daisy Outdoor Products.
Photo: Baltimore Police Department
A replica handgun that led a Baltimore detective to shoot a boy
non-fatally Wednesday would have been banned in the state of Maryland
under recent legislation opposed by the National Rifle Association.
The Baltimore Police Department said the 13-year-old boy was shot around 4 p.m. EDT after being pursued by two plainclothes detectives in East Baltimore, a blighted, economically depressed section of the city.
The officers saw the boy wielding what they believed was a handgun. After the boy was shot, the detectives learned the boy had been carrying a Daisy BB gun designed to look like a Beretta 92, the civilian version of the popular Italian-made semi-automatic pistol.
The bill was lambasted by the National Rifle Association.
“This legislation is poorly drafted and short-sighted,” the pro-gun-rights group said of the bill. “It will ban the BB and pellet guns that many parents use to teach their children safe gun handling and marksmanship.”
The NRA got its way. Last month the bill was withdrawn following an unfavorable view by state senators.
The Baltimore Police Department said the 13-year-old boy was shot around 4 p.m. EDT after being pursued by two plainclothes detectives in East Baltimore, a blighted, economically depressed section of the city.
The officers saw the boy wielding what they believed was a handgun. After the boy was shot, the detectives learned the boy had been carrying a Daisy BB gun designed to look like a Beretta 92, the civilian version of the popular Italian-made semi-automatic pistol.
An image of the replica gun posted by the Baltimore Police Department depicted the “Powerline 340” logo of the Daisy BB pistol, available online for $24.99.
At a relatively short distance, this spring-air pistol could easily be
mistaken for the far more dangerous handgun it’s made to resemble.
The shooting took place while Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake
was attending an event on the west side of the city commemorating the
one-year anniversary of the riot that followed the funeral of Freddie
Gray, who died from injuries suffered while in police custody. Gray's
death left a stain on an already beleaguered police department. Six
officers face charges in connection with Gray's death.
The boy shot Wednesday was taken to a local hospital to be
treated and was expected to survive. His name was not disclosed because
he is a minor.
Fearing the shooting could spark unrest, police
described the case as a legitimate law enforcement action. Police
Commissioner Kevin Davis said
at an urgently arranged evening news conference that there was "no
reason to believe that these officers acted inappropriately in any way.”
Police brought the boy’s mother in for questioning, claiming
she knew the boy left home with the air gun. It’s unclear what law the
mother might have broken because Daisy air guns are legal for minors to
possess and are often promoted as trainers for youth before they
graduate to firearms.
Air guns are exempt from laws covering toy guns,
which require bright orange colors to indicate the object is a toy.
Manufacturers like Daisy are also permitted to sell air gun replicas of
actual firearms without any markings that could inform officers from a
distance that the gun fires BBs instead of bullets.
In February, a bill proposed by State Delegate Jill Carter of
Baltimore would have banned the sale of so-called “imitation firearms”
under threat of a $1,000 fine and up to a year in prison. The bill
defined an imitation firearm as any “toy, device or an object that
substantially duplicates or can reasonably be perceived to be a firearm
or a handgun.”The bill was lambasted by the National Rifle Association.
“This legislation is poorly drafted and short-sighted,” the pro-gun-rights group said of the bill. “It will ban the BB and pellet guns that many parents use to teach their children safe gun handling and marksmanship.”
The NRA got its way. Last month the bill was withdrawn following an unfavorable view by state senators.
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