Police issue warning about look-alike guns
Sue Doyle
COSTA MESA -- Police officers who responded to a 911 call last week were
startled when a teen reached underneath his shirt and pulled out a what
looked like an automatic pistol.
The teen held the gun at his side, then put it down when authorities drew
their weapons. It turned out that the boy’s gun was a look-alike that
fired pellets, not bullets.
Authorities searched the teen’s car and found another pellet gun inside,
said Costa Mesa Police Officer Jeff Graham.
Look-alike pellet guns are a growing trend among Newport-Mesa teenagers,
police said. In the last few weeks, authorities have encountered several
situations with these replicas and even confiscated some of them.
It is difficult to distinguish an actual automatic handgun loaded with
lethal bullets from one of the replicas, which fire BBs or pellets.
On the streets, with only a split-second to make a decision, police may
shoot a suspect armed with a weapon that looks like a real gun.
Police say they cannot explain why the teenagers are carrying the
look-alike guns.
“I don’t think kids recognize the dangers of them,” said Graham. “Kids
don’t recognize it’s such a serious situation.”
Authorities, concerned that they will see more teens carrying the
replicas during summer vacation, are turning to parents for help. Graham
said the pellet guns should only be used in a supervised environment,
such as target shooting, and should not be fired in public.
Costa Mesa residents can legally carry pellet guns, but are not allowed
to fire them within city limits. And police can arrest a person who
threatens someone with a look-alike gun.
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