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Man charged after police find military-style shotgun in vehicle
Man charged after police find military-style shotgun in vehicle

RNZ News

time3 days ago

  • General
  • RNZ News

Man charged after police find military-style shotgun in vehicle

Police stopped a man driving on Penrose Road in Mt Wellington. Photo: A 34-year-old man is due in court after officers found a military-style shotgun and drugs in a vehicle in Auckland early this morning. Police stopped a man driving on Penrose Road in Mt Wellington at about 3.20am Tuesday. They searched the vehicle after noticing a strong smell of cannabis and found a military-style pump action shotgun inside a guitar case in the boot. A small amount of cannabis and four shotgun shells were also found. The man is set to appear in Auckland District Court today charged with possessing a firearm and cannabis.

Police looking for shotgun lost between Fourth Line, Mapleton and Waterloo Region
Police looking for shotgun lost between Fourth Line, Mapleton and Waterloo Region

CTV News

time30-05-2025

  • General
  • CTV News

Police looking for shotgun lost between Fourth Line, Mapleton and Waterloo Region

An Ontario Provincial Police (OPP) patch is seen in Ottawa, on Sept. 29, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Spencer Colby Ontario Provincial Police (OPP) are looking for a missing semi-automatic shotgun. The Wellington OPP said the gun fell off the back of a pickup truck while travelling somewhere between Fourth Line, Mapleton Township and Waterloo Region. The gun is described as a green Franchi Affinity 3.5 semi-automatic shotgun with a 26-inch barrel.

Man (20s) arrested following armed robbery at Dublin fast food restaurant
Man (20s) arrested following armed robbery at Dublin fast food restaurant

BreakingNews.ie

time29-05-2025

  • General
  • BreakingNews.ie

Man (20s) arrested following armed robbery at Dublin fast food restaurant

A man has been arrested following an armed robbery at a fast food restaurant in north Dublin this morning. Gardaí say a man armed with a shotgun entered the restaurant in Northwood in Santry at 7:30pm and threatened staff. He stole a sum of cash and fled the scene in a car. During a follow up operation a man in his 20s was arrested, and a car stolen in a previous burglary was recovered. The man can be questioned for up to three days. Advertisement

Loaded shotgun recovered by CHP after Oakland pursuit
Loaded shotgun recovered by CHP after Oakland pursuit

Yahoo

time20-05-2025

  • Yahoo

Loaded shotgun recovered by CHP after Oakland pursuit

OAKLAND, Calif. - The California Highway Patrol in Oakland recovered a loaded shotgun after a pursuit involving a vehicle in Oakland on Friday. What we know CHP said just before 7 p.m., they spotted a white Acura TLX with no license plate driving recklessly near the intersection of San Leandro Street and 51st Avenue. Officers attempted a law enforcement stop of the vehicle, but the driver fled, which initiated a pursuit, CHP said. The driver eventually stopped at 94th Avenue and Lawlor Street, about 3.5 miles away. Police said the driver exited the vehicle and threw a black bag into some nearby bushes. The suspect hid in a parked RV, where they remained until they eventually surrendered and were taken into custody. CHP said the bag the suspect threw in the bushes contained a loaded sawed-off shotgun. When they searched the suspect's vehicle, officers said they found a backpack that had multiple 20-gaugue shotgun shells. No other information about the suspect, including their name, was released. The suspect was booked into Santa Rita Jail for felony evasion, resisting arrest and for multiple firearms violations.

Russians Field Sawn-Off Shotgun Attachment For Consumer Quadcopters
Russians Field Sawn-Off Shotgun Attachment For Consumer Quadcopters

Forbes

time16-05-2025

  • Forbes

Russians Field Sawn-Off Shotgun Attachment For Consumer Quadcopters

A Russian soldier demonstrates a simple drone shotgun firing tube Drone technology has advanced rapidly during the conflict in Ukraine. Just a couple of months ago we reported on a Ukrainian project mounting a shotgun on a drone with an ingenious method to cancel recoil. Now the Russians are fielding an alternative drone shotgun mount which looks even simpler and more efficient. More significantly, the ease of construction means the new design is likely to spread fast. Shotguns are handy for shooting down other drones, but the recoil is a problem. The weapons are notorious for their heavy kick, unavoidable when throwing out a large mass of lead at high speed. Such recoil is difficult to manage on a fragile. lightweight drone. The Ukrainian approach negated recoil by putting two shotgun cartridges back-to-back and firing them together, for a zero net recoil. The Russian version is even simpler: the shotgun cartridge is fired from a tube which breaks away from the drone on firing. OSINT analyst Roy posted about the new development on Twitter/X, noting that that the 12-guage cartridges are fired from fiberglass-reinforced polypropylene tubes attached to the drone with plastic clips. As Roy notes, the clips are not in fact 3D printed as first thought: they are household hardware supplies, normally used for securing water pipes. This is real low-tech stuff. The ammunition is a standard shotgun cartridge, modified by drilling a small hole in it, removing some of the powder and fitting an electric match so the round can be fired by an electrical impulse rather than a mechanical one. As with many drone drop mechanisms, the device is triggered simply by turning on the drone's LED signal light. This means the shotgun can be easily attached to any existing drone, in particular the ubiquitous DJI Mavics favored by Russian troops. 'I believe the Russian 'breakaway' shotgun attachment is a better solution for mounting on a Mavic than Ukrainian recoilless designs,' Roy told me. 'It's the simplest and lightest solution for Mavics especially, which don't have much extra payload capacity.' Roy notes that the firing tube may be joined to the drone with a tether to catch it when it breaks away, so the tube is not expended each time. According to the Russians, different versions carry 12-guage or 16-guage cartridges and have an effective range against drones of 20 meters/22 yards. Many videos show Ukrainian shotgun drones shooting down Russian Mavics and the Russians now seem to be doing the same. This video, originally posted by Russian drone company KB ATL was captioned 'A new way to fight birds. Works mainly on DJI Mavic and hexes [hexacopter drones with six rotors].' The video shows several engagements in which a drone with two shotgun barrels shoots down quadcopters, mainly carrying bombs. In most instances the shotgun blast damages the drone and the target plunges to the ground, in one (at 0:29 in the video) the drone payload detonates spectacularly. 'Mavics with their thin, brittle plastic are not as tough as carbon-fiber-framed FPVs,' says Roy. 'Standard, widely available 12-guage shotgun cartridges are certainly enough at close range for their destruction.' Birdshot may not be enough to take down bigger drones, in particular the Ukrainian 'Baba Yaga' multicopter heavy bombers, some of which are reportedly armored. The same applies to other aerial targets. 'Recoilless designs with much heavier custom loads are needed for mounting on FPV interceptors hunting big, fast-moving fixed-wing reconnaissance UAVs, or elusive enemy FPVs,' says Roy. These are the loads used by Canadian drone interceptor pilot Butcher who takes down Russian scout drones and Lancets at high altitude. KB ATL do not market a shotgun attachment, and the actual source of the video is unknown. Snowy scenes indicate that some of the videos are not recent. But similar images of Russians assembling drone shotgun units indicates they are already in widespread use. As many observers have already noted, drone evolution in Ukraine has followed the same lines as aerial warfare in WWI, when simple biplanes were first used for scouting, then adapted for bombing, then for shooting down other aircraft and finally for fighting each other. In the next stage we are increasingly like to see quadcopter dogfights as armed drones encounter other armed drones. Bombers will need fighter escorts, or they might start to carry defensive armament of their own. FPVs, with their greater payload capacity, can carry many more shotgun tubes tubes, and a 'fighter bomber' with a mix of grenades and shotguns is clearly possible. The shotguns might also be effective against ground targets at short range, even throug 'anti-drone' netting.. A similar Russian drone shotgun attachment Software is likely to be the most important factor in future drone-on-drone actions, but it will need cheap readily-available hardware. And, as the Russian videos show, the next stages of evolution are unlikely to come from the big aerospace companies or even drone makers. Field workshops and garage tinkerers can experiment with the technology and maybe improve on it further. 'Anyone with a little skill and a shotgun cartridge can turn their retail drone into a weapon,' says Roy.

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