Wednesday, June 23, 2010

Grandmother jailed over WWII 'family heirloom' pistol

A grandmother has been jailed for five years for possessing a "family heirloom" World War II pistol. Gail Cochrane, 53, had kept the gun for 29 years following the death of her father, who had been in the Royal Navy. Police found the weapon, a Browning self-loading pistol, during a search of her home in Dundee while looking for her son.

She admitted illegal possession of the firearm, an offence with a minimum five-year jail term under Scots law. Cochrane told the High Court in Edinburgh that she had never contemplated she might be committing a crime by keeping the gun or that she might need to get a licence for the weapon. She said: "I thought it was just a war trophy." Defence solicitor advocate Jack Brown argued that the circumstances surrounding the case were exceptional and that it would be "draconian, unjust and disproportionate" to jail the grandmother-of-six.



However, Judge Lady Smith said: "I am not satisfied that a reasonable explanation has been put forward for not handing this gun into the authorities throughout the 29-year period she says she has had it in her possession." The judge said she was unable to find herself satisfied that this was one of the rare cases in which exceptional circumstances existed. She said: "The result is I have no alternative but to sentence Mrs Cochrane to a period of five years."

When interviewed, Cochrane told police that the gun had previously belonged to her father and that she had kept it when he died. She said she believed it was a real gun, but had no ammunition for it. The weapon was sent for examination by firearms experts who concluded that it was a Czech-made pistol dating back to about 1927. Cochrane admitted having the 7.65 millimetre Browning self-loading pistol at her home without a firearms certificate and possessing the prohibited weapon without the authority of the Secretary of State or Scottish ministers.

9 comments:

  1. Insolitus12:07 pm

    She must have known it was illegal to have an unlicenced gun in her house, but five years in jail seems highly unreasonable.

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  2. Atypical Kansan3:03 pm

    Why in the hell are you Scots JAILING grandmothers for simple possession of an 83 year old weapon??  If it shows no signs of use, STFU and sweep it under the rug; invent some way to cause a legal SNAFU that causes the case to go null.  Else, somebody make a back dated certificate for her to own... something.

    I think the USA is turning into a full on prison state but y'all are well ahead of us, it seems. Terribly sad.

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  3. Insolitus3:59 pm

    No offence, but saying Scotland is ahead of the USA when it comes to imprisoning people for ridiculously long time over petty reasons sounds stupid to say the least.

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  4. No kidding, Insolitus.  But in this case, I fail to see how jailing this woman does anybody any good.  The gun didn't even have bullets!  How does that make it any worse than a WWII-era paperweight?  (Could you even buy bullets for a 1927 Czech-made pistol?)

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  5. The fact that the police went and searched her house for a grandmother makes it sound like the family are no strangers to crime and violence, which does seem to hint at the reasons they have given her the 5 years

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  6. Insolitus8:29 am

    You don't need to have bullets to use a gun in a robbery, for example. As I said, she should have known better, but jailing her over this is unnecessary.

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  7. Anonymous2:03 pm

    I agree with E. Hiding a gun under a mattress hardly seems the place one would expect a forgotten war relic to be found... If it was in a cabinet or affixed to a wall her story would seem more plausable.

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  8. you people really need a revolution to get back your basic right. how draconian does the state have to get before people say "enough"

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