The point I was making if you work that gun over, polish bits recrown etc...that gun can't be linked to anything at all.I know that lol. All I said is that the guns that are often seized have been "linked" to several shootings. There was a case where I was living and some wannabe big shot was caught with a gun that had been linked to 20 shootings or something. All I was saying is that you're not gonna get a "clean" gun if you go to some hoodlum, even though that is most likely the easiest way to get one, in my experience at least.
As for LDN, I was there in the mid-2000s up to the mid 2010s, back and forth between the city and other places. Gentrification is the biggest change for the rough areas I think The worst places in the southeast and the east where the street gangs were always shooting each other in the early-to-mid 2000s are gentrified as fuck now, like Pecknarm, Brixton, Deptford and other parts of Lewisham and much of Hackney and most of the bad boys have been moved out to the overspill shitholes in the surrounding areas because of the gentrification (it was cheap to get a rent for some art graduate in Peckham and so they move there and set up shop, i.e. some trendy cafe and then the rent becomes too high for the people who were living there previously, mostly black people I might add). Parts of Kent and Essex are where these overspill estates exist. But I only properly know southeast London and bits of East London, up to North (places which are considered north but are still Hackney basically).
Even still, kids are stabbing each other everywhere now over nothing. Suburban kids who put on the whole roadman act and carry blades around, stabbing each other over nothing. There was that big mess in Bath of all places. But I'd say that parts of Brum now are more like what places like Peckham used to be like in terms of the chaotic nature of the violence. And some places stay the same, thinking of other cities notorious for guns and all that. Birmingham has always had this problem of course and it is passed down the generations but the places where that kind of violence is mostly located haven't been touched by gentrification in the same way that the traditionally violent parts of London have been.
EDIT: @Arnold
I found the specific gun I was talking about, "Britain's most used gun" even though that claim may be hyperbole, but I remember when this lot were taken down as I was living nearby. The Beretta had been linked to 19 shootings across England and Scotland, here is a quote from the article:
“Thanks to the sterling work of the National Ballistsics Intelligence Service, which was able to identify the Beretta and the Uzi submachine gun..."
So I don't know what your disagreement with me was or is. The point is that guns on the street get sold on and moved around the country and end up in the hands of low-level OCGs like this lot in the article. What struck me was that it took a couple of Google searches to even find this case and I was expecting to see it in the Echo but there are reports of shootings going on right up until recently in Liverpool at least and so if you search "shooting gun linked to many shootings" or whatever, you have to be more specific because there are so many and they haven't stopped.
My theory was that it was largely due to the Encrochat busts that more violence started to occur as people tried to fill voids left by bigger fish that were caught. As that was all happening, there was a surge in shootings but by the time that poor wee girl Olivia was shot by that idiot Thomas Cashman, I didn't want to be in that city any more. People still remember it happening to Rhys Jones and these dickheads never learn. I floated this idea to a cop that I unfortunately know through my ex's friends and he tried to say it was due to the Albanians and all that but he doesn't work in Liverpool and even though the Balkan groups are there, Scousers pretty much run that city (even though I heard that some of the emerging big shots became bigger by working with the Irish (Kinahan) gangsters which pissed off a lot of the older types as Scousers were famed for running things themselves.
But it seems to be out of control, there are kids stabbing each other all over the place in suburban areas and daft towns and cities where this was not a problem traditionally and then you have the chaos within organised crime at low-to-mid levels due to competition and people trying to step up. What was going on in Liverpool reminded me a bit of what happened in Salford when people finally decided to take out Paul Massey and a stupid tit-for-tat was already underplay, with tracking devices and all that. But those were big shoes to fill - I knew people who wouldn't even say his name when talking about "him".
Then good auld Glesga of course and the chaos there which I don't even want to go into. It is tiresome frankly to even think about it.
BTW I saw you talking about making guns. What about those "slam guns" which can fire shotgun shells? And have you seen much about the 3D printed guns that have been made? Other parts still need to be imported but much of the actual guns can be made using 3D printers. Quite a few arrests have been made. Surely just one gadgie with a 3D printer could make the parts that he is able to make and then order in the parts that have to be ordered in?
Idiots don't do that so the ballistics expert can link that gun without any problems to all the shootings.
If you get a dirty gun you can make it a clean gun, it ain't hard.
I'm glad that I'm out of London. Never ever going to live back there.
In my days you didn't have moped muggings mobile phone thefts, smart phones weren't even about then.
You could use your 3310 as a weapon or other mobile phone as a brick.
Social media was mainly responsible for the London riots.
Nopes don't keep myself busy with slam guns or 3D printed guns.
There is a reason traditional weapons are made out of steel and iron and even they can sometimes blow up.
You're risking your fingers or hand with the slam and 3D printed guns.
The latest 3D printed guns seem to hold up to pressure but it's just a matter of time before they blow up.
There are only a few bits out of metal.