Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
PD sells them that’s how it’s a police trade in and not a used gun an officer carried once.
Say your department has 500 officers using Glock "A" or in the wayback you had S&W model 10's and 14's and you are upgrading to something new and exciting.
You post a request for bids on where ever you post this crap and any FFL company can submit a bid. Many offers will say something like, "We'll pay your department a flat rate of $125 dollars per gun for every serviceable current issued sidearm and $7 dollars per serviceable magazine returned to our company in credit towards a new firearm and magazines." Then the department offers up 500 current sidearms and 3,000 magazines to the vendor.
So the department would get $83,500 dollars in credit towards it's purchase and it would be able to legally and thru proper FFL channels get rid of it's old crap and not carry hundreds of unwanted guns on it's books.
And typically, the department would stipulate officers who want their current duty gun can purchase it from the vendor or option to have it transferred to a FFL for the contracted price plus fees for transfer to them.
My buddy bought all the shotguns from a state patrol under a similar deal. Any trooper who wanted his shotty could buy it back for his bid price plus $35 for the paperwork, the troopers had first right of refusal if they attached their names to the guns. Many of them were pissed because they had a side deal with the guy they expected to win and he bid $100 bucks a gun or something. My buddy bid $150 and won. They were roundly pissed to pay more and drive further to get their guns back.
^^^ This, exactly this.Say your department has 500 officers using Glock "A" or in the wayback you had S&W model 10's and 14's and you are upgrading to something new and exciting.
You post a request for bids on where ever you post this crap and any FFL company can submit a bid. Many offers will say something like, "We'll pay your department a flat rate of $125 dollars per gun for every serviceable current issued sidearm and $7 dollars per serviceable magazine returned to our company in credit towards a new firearm and magazines." Then the department offers up 500 current sidearms and 3,000 magazines to the vendor.
So the department would get $83,500 dollars in credit towards it's purchase and it would be able to legally and thru proper FFL channels get rid of it's old crap and not carry hundreds of unwanted guns on it's books.
And typically, the department would stipulate officers who want their current duty gun can purchase it from the vendor or option to have it transferred to a FFL for the contracted price plus fees for transfer to them.
My buddy bought all the shotguns from a state patrol under a similar deal. Any trooper who wanted his shotty could buy it back for his bid price plus $35 for the paperwork, the troopers had first right of refusal if they attached their names to the guns. Many of them were pissed because they had a side deal with the guy they expected to win and he bid $100 bucks a gun or something. My buddy bid $150 and won. They were roundly pissed to pay more and drive further to get their guns back.
I would love to buy some trade-ins.
Most would probably have a lot of holster wear and very few rounds down the barrel and not what I would call"well taken care of."
There would however, be a few that are well shot, clean and taken care of and have nothing other than tear stains upon them.
Those should go to the Officers who carried them. They would have first dibs were I selling them and they would be more than affordable.