logo
Mobile man sentenced for illegally carrying a machine gun

Mobile man sentenced for illegally carrying a machine gun

Yahoo21-04-2025

MOBILE, Ala. (WKRG) — A Mobile man has been sentenced for having a pistol that was illegally converted to a machine gun, has learned.
Local fishermen reel in a 700 pound bluefin tuna off Gulf Coast
Ryan Christopher Triplett, 21, of Mobile, was arrested by Mobile police in December 2022 following a traffic stop, according to the United States Attorney's Office Southern District of Alabama.
During that stop, police found a Glock .40-caliber pistol that was fully loaded and equipped with an illegal machinegun-conversion device, also known as a Glock switch, a USAO news release said. The Glock switch turned the single-shot pistol into a fully automatic weapon.
'During an interview with police, Triplett admitted that the pistol was his and that he knew it was illegally modified,' the release said.
United States District Judge Terry F. Moorer sentenced Triplett to 13 months in prison and three years of supervision upon his release, according to the USAO.
Triplett was ordered to pay $100 in special assessments and forfeit his pistol and ammunition to the United States, according to the release.
UPDATE: ALEA identifies man killed in I-65 Creola crash
The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives and the Mobile Police Department investigated the case, and Assistant U.S. Attorney Justin Roller prosecuted it.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Families scramble to pay for lawyers after ICE raid in Florida
Families scramble to pay for lawyers after ICE raid in Florida

Yahoo

time17 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Families scramble to pay for lawyers after ICE raid in Florida

Britney Padron hadn't spoken to her father in four days. But on Friday, she finally had three minutes to make sure he was OK. The last time her father, Jose Padron, spoke to her was on Monday from a detention center in El Paso. Days before, he was grabbed and detained by ICE in an immigration raid at a Tallahassee construction site. "He would always give us a hug and kiss our cheeks every time we left and returned home and I miss that so deeply right now," Britney said. She and other family members of those who were detained in Florida's largest immigration raid of the year are trying to raise money for lawyers to advocate for their loved ones, who can only call every so often for a few minutes at a time. They've set up GoFundMe online fundraisers, hoping others can help with the costly fees associated with the immigration process. Britney and her sister have tried to find lawyers who offer free consultations, but some immigration firms have asked $300 to $900 for a initial talk. As for taking on her father's case, she's been quoted $3,500 from one firm and $3,800 at another. Hilda Castro, whose husband was also detained, said a lawyer quoted her $5,500. Currently, her GoFundMe has raised none of the $1,600 she is asking for. Some of the detained laborers were on their way to Texas as soon as the day after the raid. Others were sent to Miami's Krome Detention Center. But not everyone could find their friends and family; ICE's Online Detainee Locator System has been unreliable in recent months. While Britney's father was in El Paso on Monday, the ICE Online Detainee Locator System only said "Texas" when she put in his information. Now, he's in the Rio Grande Detention Center in Laredo, Texas, with other laborers from Tallahassee. She was finally able to put money on his commissary tab on Friday. When Britney speaks to her dad on the phone, the call is always brief. Just three minutes, enough to check in and say "I love you." She was relieved to hear his voice on Friday. "Thank God," she said. It's a heartbreaking game of telephone to try to locate loved ones who haven't been able to update family on their removal status. Family members of her father's friends have given her information, but it's been hard to verify, which makes it even more difficult to relay that information to lawyers. Amanda Parrish said she hadn't spoken to her husband in four days, but he finally called Friday morning to say he was also at the Rio Grande Processing Center. In a public post on Facebook, Parrish shared a text-message conversation she had with his bond lawyer. "We haven't heard from him in four days. We're just really worried," Parrish wrote. "Hi, he hasn't been assigned to a judge yet. I'll see what I can do today to find out some information," the bond lawyer replied. Parrish and her husband got married in 2018, and he's been in the process of applying for citizenship since 2019. He was approved for his I-130, a "petition for alien relative," and was waiting for approval for permanent residency, also known as a Green Card. "This is unfair. This should not have happened," Parrish said. "He should not have made it all the way to Texas. He said he is fine but I know he's only telling me that because he does not want me to worry." On May 29, the day of the raid, she was outside of the chain-link fence when she saw her husband, Tino, walk onto a white school bus, hands bound. "I love you so much, and I will always fight for you. I hope you're doing OK and just know that we are doing everything possible for you," Parrish wrote in a Facebook post. Castro hasn't heard from her husband, Ramiro, since Saturday, when he called and said he was in El Paso. The Quincy resident said when her husband was detained by ICE, he was in the process of getting his I-130 as well. Castro is a citizen, and the two are married. Federal officials at the detention facility offered her husband paperwork to self-deport, but Castro told her husband not to sign anything. She's now trying to raise money for his defense. 'I found a lawyer in El Paso, but I need to figure out how I'm going to get the money to pay," she said. "I can't leave him there.' Help this family reunite NOW! ICE Raid, May 29 Tallahassee Support Legal Aid for Detained Husband Fighting for Jose Padron While Holding Our Family Together Ana Goñi-Lessan, state watchdog reporter for the USA TODAY Network – Florida, can be reached at agonilessan@ This article originally appeared on Tallahassee Democrat: GoFundMe pleas rise as ICE detainees await legal help

Colombian Senator Miguel Uribe shot at campaign event in Bogota
Colombian Senator Miguel Uribe shot at campaign event in Bogota

USA Today

timean hour ago

  • USA Today

Colombian Senator Miguel Uribe shot at campaign event in Bogota

Julia Symmes Cobb and Lucinda Elliott Reuters BOGOTA, June 8 (Reuters) - Colombian Senator Miguel Uribe, a potential presidential contender, survived an initial operation for his injuries after being shot in Bogota on Saturday, according to his wife and the hospital treating him, although he remains in intensive care. Uribe, 39, is a member of the opposition right-wing Democratic Center party and was shot in the head during a campaign event in a public park in the Fontibon neighborhood. A boy under 15 years of age was arrested after the shooting, the attorney general's office said in a statement on Saturday, adding he was carrying a 9-millimeter Glock-type pistol. The government said it is investigating if there were other potential perpetrators. Leftist President Gustavo Petro urged an investigation into who had ordered the attack in remarks late on Saturday. Campaigning is just beginning for the country's 2026 presidential election and Uribe, who is from a prominent political family, does not have a well-known platform so far. It was unclear why he was targeted in the attack. Though he has talked about the need to improve security and about having personally suffered in the country's conflict, many other potential candidates, including others from his party, have also said steps must be taken to tackle crime. Uribe's grandfather was president from 1978 to 1982, while his mother, journalist Diana Turbay, was kidnapped in 1990 by an armed group under the command of the late cartel leader Pablo Escobar. She was killed during a rescue operation in 1991. "Miguel came out of surgery, he made it. Every hour is a critical hour. He fought his first battle, and it went well," his wife Maria Claudia Tarazona told local media on Sunday. "This will take time." The couple are parents to a young son. In a statement, the Santa Fe Foundation hospital where Uribe was treated said he had procedures on his head and his left thigh, and remained in intensive care as doctors seek to stabilize his condition. Uribe's party said in a statement that armed subjects shot him from behind. Videos on social media showed a man, identified as Uribe, being tended to after the shooting. He appeared to be bleeding from his head. Bogota's mayor, Carlos Galan, whose own presidential candidate father was assassinated in 1989, addressed journalists outside the hospital overnight, saying he had asked for increased protection for all candidates in Bogota and for Uribe's family. UNDER INVESTIGATION The Colombian government is offering some $730,000 as a reward for information in the case. "For now there is nothing more than hypothesis," Petro said, adding that failures in security protocols would also be looked into. Uribe had the bodyguard protection provided for senators and other officials. Petro sympathized with Uribe's family in a message on X, saying: "I don't know how to ease your pain. It is the pain of a mother lost, and of a homeland." People gathered outside the hospital in northern Bogota, staging candlelight vigils and praying, while others carried Colombian flags. A march of support was planned for Sunday. Several nations on Sunday including Brazil, Italy, Spain, Uruguay and Paraguay condemned the attack, as did the Venezuelan government and opposition. U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said in a statement that the U.S. "condemns in the strongest possible terms the attempted assassination" of Uribe, blaming Petro's "inflammatory rhetoric" for the violence. Petro was an outspoken critic of President Donald Trump's deportation policies earlier this year, but has been less vocal since Trump threatened to impose tariffs and sanctions on the Andean country. Colombia has for decades been embroiled in a conflict between leftist rebels, criminal groups descended from right-wing paramilitaries, and the government. (Reporting by Julia Symmes Cobb and Lucinda Elliott, additional reporting by Carlos Vargas, Luisa Gonzalez, Graham Keeley, Vivian Sequera and Nelson Bocanegra, Writing by Lucinda Elliott and Julia Symmes Cobb, Editing by Christian Plumb, Michael Perry, David Holmes and Nia Williams)

Rays' Wander Franco faces new charge resulting from November gun incident
Rays' Wander Franco faces new charge resulting from November gun incident

Yahoo

time7 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Rays' Wander Franco faces new charge resulting from November gun incident

Prosecutors in the Dominican Republic have filed a formal charge of illegal possession of a firearm against Rays shortstop Wander Franco and requested a trial, several publications reported Sunday. The charge stems from an altercation Franco had in November in San Juan de la Maguana with a man in the parking lot of an apartment building. Police at the time said the incident stemmed from a fight over a woman's attention, describing it as 'a heated dispute of a passionate nature.' In a news release issued Sunday, authorities wrote: 'The prosecution body (...) requests through the instance that the opening of a trial be issued against the accused because there are sufficient elements of relevant and pertinent evidence that demonstrate that the defendant has compromised his criminal responsibility,' authorities wrote in a news release. The charge is not related to the trial currently taking place in Puerto Plata in which Franco faces charges of sexual abuse, sexual exploitation of a minor and human trafficking stemming from a relationship with a then-14-year-old girl that started in December 2022, when Franco was 21. News of the filing of the gun charge in the San Juan de la Maguana Court of Investigation was reported by Dominican newspapers Listin Diario and Diario Libre, along with other outlets. A Glock firearm with its magazine and 15 rounds of ammunition was found in the Mercedes-Benz vehicle in which Franco was traveling, both newspapers reported. Franco did not have documentation for the gun, which was registered to Branly Fernando Lugo Rodríguez. Franco identified the man as his uncle. According to Diario Libre, attorney Teodosio Jáquez said the gun was in the trunk of the car, Franco was unaware it was there, and he never touched it. As soon as Rodriguez became aware of the situation, Jáquez said, per he went voluntarily to the San Juan de la Maguana Prosecutor's Office. There, he produced documents showing his license to carry and possess a firearm, and the current renewal. Franco's trial on the sexual abuse charges is scheduled to resume Monday morning, with the prosecution introducing more witnesses. That trial is expected to last three-four months. Franco on Sunday posted a photo on social media of him playing for the Rays along with a Bible verse, Psalm 97:10, in Spanish. Translated to English, it reads:" Let those who love the Lord hate evil, for he guards the lives of his faithful ones and delivers them from the hand of the wicked." • • • Sign up for our Sports Today newsletter to get daily updates on the Bucs, Rays, Lightning and college football across Florida. Every weekday, tune into our Sports Day Tampa Bay podcast to hear reporter Rick Stroud break down the biggest stories in Tampa Bay sports. Never miss out on the latest with your favorite Tampa Bay sports teams. Follow our coverage on X and Facebook.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store