Plan to sell gun in Pierce County parking lot turns violent — was it legal?
According to a Facebook post from the Pierce County Sheriff's Office, the victim was in the Safeway parking lot at 15805 Pacific Ave S when a car with four people — two juveniles and two young adults — drove up beside him. One of the suspects allegedly pointed a gun at the victim's head and demanded he hand over the rifle.
The post said the suspects — who weren't named in the post — took the AR-15 and a personal gun that was around the victim's waistband.
the incident happened at 6:30 p.m. towards the end of April., according Pierce County Sheriff's Department spokesperson Carly Capetto, who declined to give the exact date. The getaway driver was an 18-year-old woman and the other suspects were a 22-year-old man and two 17-year-old boys, Cappetto said.
'Thanks to witnesses who captured the license plate and description of the vehicle, deputies were able to determine the getaway car was associated with known juveniles with prior armed robbery and unlawful possession of firearms convictions,' the post said.
Police found the car a couple of hours later in the Sunrise area of Puyallup, the post said. The 18-year-old woman and one of the 17-year-old boys stayed in the car and complied with police, but the 22-year-old man and other 17-year-old boy ran out of the car and fled. Officers captured the 22-year-old man and took the three suspects into custody, the post said.
They found the fourth suspect in some bushes later on by using a K9 from the Puyallup Police Department, the post said.
Cappetto told The News Tribune the 18-year-old woman had a history of armed robbery and unlawful possession of a firearm and the 17-year-old boy who fled was recently wanted by the Orting Police Department for armed robbery.
'We [knew] that these people were out there committing these crimes,' Cappetto said. 'It was just a matter of finding them.'
The News Tribune asked Cappetto if it was legal for the victim to sell his AR-15 in a grocery store parking lot.
'It's legal if he's gone through all the proper procedures and gone through the gun store to have the background checks done on him and the buyer,' Cappetto said.
Cappetto said the victim told police he was just going to show the alleged buyer his AR-15 when they met up and then they were going to go through the legal procedures.
'Whether that was actually going to happen or not, I cannot verify that,' Cappetto said. 'If he had actually sold it in the parking lot that day without going through the proper method and filing that paperwork [it would be illegal], but how are we going to prove that, because it was stolen from him and he never actually got to meet the transaction?'
According to Washington state law, legal gun owners looking to sell their firearms have to go through a licensed dealer such as a gun store.
After they get to a licensed dealer, the buyer has to go through a background check. In order to go through a background check, they need to fill out federal, state and local forms and pay a fee. If the background check determines the buyer is ineligible to have the firearm, the licensed dealer must give the firearm back to the seller.
There are exceptions where selling or transferring a firearm to another person does not need to go through these procedures, including:
A transfer between immediate family members, which includes spouses, domestic partners, parents, parents-in-law, children, siblings, siblings-in-law, grandparents, grandchildren, aunts, uncles, nieces, nephews and first cousins.
Selling or transferring an antique firearm.
A temporary transfer of a firearm if it is necessary to stop immediate death or serious injury, such as preventing suicide.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
28 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Three dead, eight wounded in mass shooting at Brooklyn lounge
Three men were killed and eight people wounded in a mass shooting in a Brooklyn lounge early Sunday, cops said. More than one shooter opened fire in the Taste of the City Lounge on Franklin Avenue near Carroll Street in Crown Heights just before 3:30 a.m., cops said. 'We have multiple shooters involved in this shooting and we have recovered 36 shell casings,' NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch said at a press briefing outside the lounge. 'It's a terrible shooting that's occurred.' Cops recovered one firearm close by the lounge near Bedford Avenue and Eastern Parkway, she said. Investigators are reviewing surveillance video and no arrests have been made so far. Pierre Tutu, 50, heard the shots while standing near his parked car down the street, he told the New York Times. 'There were a lot of them,' he said. 'People were flying all over the place trying to save their lives.' 'I saw people, shot, all over the place,' he added. 'Sitting, waiting for help, screaming, crying.' The dead include two men, ages 35 and 27, and a third whose age is not yet known. They died at the scene. Five men and three women were wounded but survived, the oldest 61 and the youngest 27, according to police sources. They were all hospitalized and are expected to recover. Customer James Jones left the lounge around 3 a.m., returning to his home across the street, he told The Times. He went back outside after getting a call from a friend about what happened. 'Five, six people outside shot,' Jones told The Times. 'People over here shot, people over there shot.' It's the second shooting at the club in less than a year. A 28-year-old man survived being shot in the back and arm in front of the club about 4 a.m. Nov. 17, according to police. The victim told cops he was standing outside the lounge when two men he didn't know approached him and started arguing with him, cop sources said. One of them whipped out a gun and opened fire. In February, cops released surveillance footage of a suspect they were still looking for in that shooting and asked the public's help identifying him. Taste of the City serves Caribbean fusion cuisine and has a full bar with hookahs, DJs and live music. The explosion of violence at the lounge Sunday was the second mass shooting in New York City in three weeks. On June 28, Shane Tamura opened fire with an assault rifle in a Midtown Manhattan skyscraper, murdering an NYPD officer and three others before killing himself. The violence comes as the city has seen significant drops in violent crimes through Aug. 10 compared to the same period last year, including a 24% drop in murders and a 21% drop in shootings. 'We have the lowest number of shooting incidents and shooting victims seven months into the year that we've seen on record in the city of New York,' Tisch said Sunday outside Taste of the City. 'Something like this is, of course, thank God, an anomaly. And it's a terrible thing that happened this morning but we're going to investigate and get to the bottom of what went down.' _____


CBS News
30 minutes ago
- CBS News
Illinois State Police trooper hurt in crash involving drunk driver on Ronald Reagan Memorial Tollway
An Illinois State Police trooper was hurt after their squad car was hit by an alleged drunk driver on the Ronald Regan Memorial Tollway early Sunday morning. State police said the crash happened shortly after 4 a.m. on I-88 westbound at milepost 139 in DuPage County. The involved trooper was assisting another motorist and was parked behind a broken-down tractor-trailer with emergency lights activated. During this, the driver of a Tesla failed to move over and hit the rear passenger side of the squad car, causing it to hit the rear of the tractor-trailer, state police said. The trooper was inside the squad car at the time of the crash. Both the trooper and Tesla driver were taken to area hospitals with injuries. The Tesla driver, 24-year-old Sebastian G. Rodriguez of Romeoville, Illinois, was charged with Driving Under the Influence and Aggravated Scott's Law/Move Over Law violations. The trooper's squad car had to be towed from the scene due to disabling damage from the crash. According to state police, there have already been nine Move Over Law-related crashes this year. In 2024, there were 27 Move Over Law-related crashes with 12 troopers injured and one death.


Washington Post
30 minutes ago
- Washington Post
Man's death in Alexandria police custody is being investigated, officials say
A Woodbridge man died in police custody at the Alexandria jail on Friday evening after he was accused of public intoxication at an apartment complex, authorities said. Alexandria police shared few details about the circumstances of the man's death. But they later identified him as 32-year-old Allan F. Tucker II of Woodbridge and said in a news release that his death would be investigated.