Current:Home > InvestFour takeaways from our investigation into police agencies selling their guns -NextFrontier Finance
Four takeaways from our investigation into police agencies selling their guns
View
Date:2025-04-14 13:10:47
About nine times a day over two decades, a gun used in a crime has been traced back to its original owner: a law enforcement agency.
A joint investigation by CBS News, The Trace, and Reveal from the Center for Investigative Reporting has found at least 52,000 such incidents and identified more than 140 police agencies that sell or trade in their guns, allowing dealers to then resell them.
Here's a look at the key findings of the investigation. You can read and watch the complete investigation here.
Resold or traded-in police guns are ending up in the hands of criminals
Law enforcement agencies are selling and trading their old duty weapons — often to cut costs when upgrading. A side effect: tens of thousands of those guns have wound up in the hands of criminals.
They've been used in shootings, domestic violence incidents, and other violent crimes, according to records obtained from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives and hundreds of U.S. police agencies.
Internal ATF records show at least 52,529 police guns turned up at crime scenes since 2006, the earliest year data is available from the government.
CBS News journalists surveyed state and local law enforcement agencies coast to coast and found at least 145 agencies resold their guns between 2006 and 2022. That's about 90% of the agencies that responded.
Police sell their guns even while holding buyback events to get other guns off the street
Many of the police agencies that resold or traded in their weapons were the same ones who routinely hold gun buyback events they say are aimed at reducing the number of guns on the street.
The Philadelphia Police Department boasts on its website of having collected 825 guns in buybacks since 2021.
But records obtained in the CBS News investigation show the agency resold at least 886 of its officers' former duty guns over the past two decades.
The Newark Police Department staged a buyback in 2021, offering $250 for each firearm. People turned in 146 guns.
"Without question, 146 fewer firearms on our streets means less gun violence, fewer gun violence victims, and less risk of suicide or death," public safety director Brian O'Hara said in a YouTube post.
Five years earlier, the Newark agency resold more than five times that number of guns — nearly 1,000. One ended up in Pittsburgh, where police seized it from a convicted felon in 2019 after he allegedly fired more than a dozen shots in a neighborhood and then led officers on a foot chase.
A Newark Police spokesperson said the guns had been traded in as a cost-saving measure under a previous administration.
The data behind this investigation is data Congress voted to keep secret
In 2003, Congress passed the Tiahrt Amendment. Named after the lawmaker who introduced it, Tiahrt bars the ATF from letting the public see most trace information about guns used in crimes.
ATF cited the Tiahrt amendment in rejecting a public records request filed in 2017 by our reporting partners on this project, Reveal from the Center for Investigative Reporting.
Reveal sued. In 2020, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled ATF had to release some of the summary statistical information.
The limited records released during that litigation showed more than 52,000 guns used in crimes had been traced back to law enforcement agencies. A small sample of the underlying data showed at least 800 different agencies' old firearms ended up at crime scenes.
Some police agencies go a different way and destroy their old guns
Federal law enforcement agencies are legally required to destroy their used guns. State and local agencies make their own decisions.
Most sell or trade them in — but not all.
In Seattle, police stopped trading in handguns around 2016.
"If we're selling them out, we just don't know where those guns could end up," Police Chief Adrian Diaz said. "We don't want to contribute to the problem."
Indianapolis Police Chief Christopher Bailey told CBS News that his agency has historically traded in its weapons, but he would consider changing that policy after a recent shooting death involving a former police duty gun sold by a sheriff's office in California.
"I don't want any weapon that we owned to end up being used violently against another person," Bailey said.
After CBS News Minnesota showed Minneapolis police officials our findings, Police Chief Brian O'Hara said his department would change its policy.
"I don't want us to be in a position where a weapon that was once in service for the police department here is then winding up used in a crime, or in an act of violence against a person, or even to shoot a police officer," O'Hara said. "So going forward, we're not going to be selling any weapons at all."
You can read and watch the complete investigation here.
- In:
- Guns
John Kelly is an investigative journalist and the Vice President of Data Journalism for CBS News and Stations.
veryGood! (849)
Related
- Why Sean "Diddy" Combs Is Being Given a Laptop in Jail Amid Witness Intimidation Fears
- Hailee Steinfeld Spotted at Buffalo Bills NFL Game Amid Romance With Quarterback Josh Allen
- Cowboys look dominant, but one shortcoming threatens to make them 'America's Tease' again
- Hayden Panettiere Adds a Splash of Watermelon Vibes to Her Pink Hair
- 'We're reborn!' Gazans express joy at returning home to north
- Below Deck Med's Captain Sandy Yawn Is Engaged to Leah Shafer
- Syria’s Assad to head to China as Beijing boosts its reach in the Middle East
- What Alabama Barker Thinks of Internet Trolls and Influencer Shamers
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- Spain allows lawmakers to speak Catalan, Basque and Galician languages in Parliament
Ranking
- US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
- More Than 150 Protesters Arrested in New York City While Calling on the Federal Reserve to End Fossil Fuel Financing
- From London, Pakistan’s former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif blames ex-army chief for his 2017 ouster
- Almost 50 children from occupied Ukrainian regions arrive in Belarus, sparking outrage
- Trump issues order to ban transgender troops from serving openly in the military
- NYC Mayor calls for ‘national assault’ on fentanyl epidemic following death of child
- US issues more sanctions over Iran drone program after nation’s president denies supplying Russia
- Most Americans view Israel as a partner, but fewer see it as sharing US values, AP-NORC poll shows
Recommendation
San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
Residents Cite Lack of Transparency as Midwest Hydrogen Plans Loom
Iraq’s president will summon the Turkish ambassador over airstrikes in Iraq’s Kurdish region
Why Alabama's Nick Saban named Jalen Milroe starting quarterback ahead of Mississippi game
NHL in ASL returns, delivering American Sign Language analysis for Deaf community at Winter Classic
US issues more sanctions over Iran drone program after nation’s president denies supplying Russia
Travis Scott questioned in Astroworld festival deposition following wave of lawsuits
Former NFL player Sergio Brown missing after mother found dead