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Report: Serial Number ‘Obliterated’ on Gun Used in Old Dominion Attack

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A law enforcement official just spilled to the Associated Press that the serial number on the firearm used in the tragic Old Dominion University shooting was completely obliterated. This detail, emerging from the chaos of the attack that left two dead and multiple injured, immediately sets off alarm bells for anyone paying attention to the gun control narrative machine. We’re talking about a ghost gun element here—not some factory-fresh AR with pristine markings, but a weapon that’s been deliberately scrubbed of its identity. In a post-Bruen world where the Supreme Court has reaffirmed our carry rights, this revelation flips the script on the usual suspects who rush to blame easy access to guns without missing a beat.

Dig deeper, and the implications for the 2A community are electric. Serial number removal isn’t new; it’s a tactic as old as Prohibition-era Tommy guns, often linked to criminals who don’t want their hardware traced back to a purchase or theft. ATF stats show that obliterated serial numbers pop up far more in crime guns recovered from felons than from law-abiding citizens—think gangbangers and cartel smugglers, not your average range warrior. Yet, watch the media and politicians pivot this into calls for universal serialization, microstamping, or worse, a national registry. It’s the same playbook: tragedy strikes, ignore the criminal actor (here, a shooter with a history that screams red flags), and demonize the tool. This case underscores why 2A advocates fight tooth and nail against these measures—they don’t stop determined bad guys but hamstring honest folks who serialize their guns precisely to prove ownership.

For gun owners, the takeaway is crystal clear: double down on vigilance, support lawsuits dismantling unconstitutional tracking schemes, and keep pushing the data that shows armed citizens stop threats 94% of the time (per Kleck’s research). Old Dominion isn’t a gun violence epidemic; it’s a failure of soft-on-crime policies letting monsters roam free. Stay frosty, stay legal, and let’s use this to remind America that the right to self-defense isn’t negotiable—ghost gun or not.

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