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About Portland observer. (Portland, Or.) 1970-current | View Entire Issue (July 25, 2012)
Instructor Plays Pivotal Role Oregon Music Hall honors Calvin Walker See Metro, page 9 Gun Violence in Portland Residents, police and gun control advocates are alarmed See page 3 Volume X X X X I ‘City of Roses’ Established in 1970 www.portlandobserver.com Wednesday • July 25, 2012 Number 28 Committed to Cultural Diversity - I * ’ ¡L* M b »** * . of •'community service . n * A movie theater in Aurora, Colo, is surrounded by police after a gunman terrified a packed audience at the premiere of the latest Batman movie by using teargas, a semi-automatic rifle, shotgun, and pistol to kill 12 people and injure dozens more. Authorities said the weapons were easily purchased over the Internet. Stocked-Upfor Rampage Theater shooter easily acquired deadly arsenal (AP)— In a world where Amazon can track your next book purchase and you must show ID to buy some allergy medi cine, James Holmes spent months stockpiling thousands of bullets and head-to-toe ballistic gear without raising any red flags with authorities. The suspect in the mass theater shooting on Friday in Aurora, Colo, availed himself of an unregulated online mar ketplace that allows consumers to acquire some of the tools of modem warfare as if they were pieces of a new wardrobe. The Internet is awash in sites ranging from BulkAmmo.com, James Holmes « » •tiltil» ! a sale on a thousand rifle rounds for $335, to eBay, where bidding on one armored special forces helmet has risen to $799. "We're different than other cultures," said Dudley Brown, executive director o f Rocky Mountain Gun Owners, which advocates for firearms owners' rights. "We do allow Americans to possess the accoutrements that our military generally has." Gun rights activists like Brown celebrate that freedom, but even some involved in the trade are troubled by how easily Holmes stocked up for his alleged rampage. Chad Weinman runs TacticalGear.com, which caters to police officers looking to augment their equipment, members of the military who don't want to wait on permission from the bureaucracy for new combat gear, and hobbyists like survivalists and paintballers. The site receives "thousands" of orders daily, sometimes from entire platoons that are about to deploy to war zones. On July 2, Holmes placed a $306 order with the site for a combat vest, magazine holders and a knife, paying extra for expedited two-day shipping to his Aurora, Colo, apartment. continued I I » * » I I » » « » »♦»» ****** on page 5 ’ » 1