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The Range
Law & Order
Supposed Misconduct with a Firearm
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<blockquote data-quote="David2012" data-source="post: 1743865" data-attributes="member: 24428"><p>These days, gun ranges face a unbelievable amount of envionmental and safety regulations... commercial ranges also pay one heck of a insurance premium. </p><p></p><p>I've known of outdoor ranges with 30 foot birms having had the EPA come in.. shut down the range and then made the owner<s> pay to mine the lead out of their birms so that the lead wouldn't leach into near by streams or into a shallow water table used as well / drinking water.</s></p><p><s></s></p><p><s>It was almost 20 yrs ago that the Oklahoma County Sheriff's office raised their 30 ft dirt birms another 20 feet using barrels of ground-up tires.. because a 9mm bullet had skipped over the birm and went though a woman's kitchen window a mile downrange.. landing in a pan and spinning around like a ball in a roulette wheel.</s></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="David2012, post: 1743865, member: 24428"] These days, gun ranges face a unbelievable amount of envionmental and safety regulations... commercial ranges also pay one heck of a insurance premium. I've known of outdoor ranges with 30 foot birms having had the EPA come in.. shut down the range and then made the owner[s] pay to mine the lead out of their birms so that the lead wouldn't leach into near by streams or into a shallow water table used as well / drinking water. It was almost 20 yrs ago that the Oklahoma County Sheriff's office raised their 30 ft dirt birms another 20 feet using barrels of ground-up tires.. because a 9mm bullet had skipped over the birm and went though a woman's kitchen window a mile downrange.. landing in a pan and spinning around like a ball in a roulette wheel.[/s] [/QUOTE]
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