Virginia Tech gunman bought pistol; Kazmierczak bought 9mm magazines
updated 12:03 a.m. ET, Sun., Feb. 17, 2008
MADISON, Wisconsin - The online gun dealer who sold a weapon to the Virginia Tech shooter said it was an unnerving coincidence that he also sold handgun accessories to the man who killed five students at Northern Illinois University.
Eric Thompson said his Web site, http://www.topglock.com, sold two empty 9mm Glock magazines and a Glock holster to Steven Kazmierczak on Feb. 4, just 10 days before the 27-year-old opened fire in a classroom and killed five before committing suicide.
Another Web site run by Thompson's company, http://www.thegunstore.com, also sold a Walther .22-caliber handgun to Seung-Hui Cho, who killed 32 people in April on the Virginia Tech campus before killing himself.
"I'm still blown away by the coincidences," Thompson said Friday. "I'm shaking. I can't believe somebody would order from us again and do this."
His company, TGSCOM Inc., based in Green Bay, shipped the order Monday, and records of the sale provided to The Associated Press by Thompson show Kazmierczak received the order Tuesday.
Kazmierczak carried a shotgun and three handguns into the classroom Thursday. Thompson said he had no idea whether the shooter used the holster or magazines purchased on the Web site.
Each magazine can hold 33 bullets, Thompson said. He said his site did not sell Kazmierczak any bullets or guns.
Kazmierczak bought two of the weapons used in the shooting — the pump-action Remington shotgun and a Glock 9mm handgun — legally on Feb. 9 in Champaign, Illinois, where he was a student, authorities said.
Thompson said he checked his sales records after the name of the shooter was made public Friday. The records show $105.62 in items were shipped to an apartment in Champaign and signed for by someone other than Kazmierczak.
Thompson said he contacted the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives within five minutes of realizing the latest connection Friday morning.
The Glock Web site is well-known among gun users on the Internet, so it is not surprising that someone looking for accessories for a Glock would find it, Thompson said. But being tied to both of the shootings is "unnerving," he said.
"I still feel just absolutely in shock," he said. "I feel like I was run over by a truck."
Thompson said he has no way of knowing whether Kazmierczak found out about his Web site from the publicity it got after the Virginia Tech shootings, but the thought crossed his mind. Web traffic increased after that shooting, along with phone calls and threats, he said.
It was not clear whether one site linked to the other.
Wow. So did anyone check to see if they both ate at Burger King before they flipped their nuts, or slept at a Holiday Inn, or cut the crusts off their PBJ's?
Witch hunt, anyone?
Posted by: mpd61
What is most incredulous to me is that this FFL holder who did nothing wrong, seeks out the media and alludes to "internet sales" of firearms to an individual without pointing out the dealer-dealer part of such transaction, and all the paperwork/background checks involved.
What kind of Idiot is this guy? Talk about stabbing his own vocation and industry in the back. The media and anti-gunners must be wringing their hands with this one!
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