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Remington Pricing & Reference

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Know what your Remington firearms are worth with this up-to-date 54-page .PDF download from the 19th edition of Standard Catalog of Firearms.

* Completely updated pricing for Remington firearms with new entries and photos

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* Links to manufacturers’ websiteDownload gun values nowLearn pricing and values for these Remington firearms:Remington 2nd Model Beals Revolver
Remington 3rd Model Beals Revolver
Remington Rider Revolver
Remington Beals Army Revolver
Remington Beals Navy Revolver
Remington 1861 Army Revolver
Remington 1861 Navy Revolver
Remington New Model Army Revolver
Remington New Model Navy Revolver
Remington New Model Single-Action Belt Revolver
Remington Rider Double Action Belt Revolver
Remington New Model Police Revolver
Remington New Model Pocket Revolver
Remington Rider Derringer
Remington Zig-Zag Derringer
Remington Elliot Derringer
Remington Vest Pocket Pistol
Remington Elliot Single-Shot Derringer
Remington Over-and-Under Derringer
Remington Early Type I
Remington Type I Mid-Production
Remington Type I Late Production
Remington Type II
Remington Type III
Remington Rider Magazine Pistol
Remington Model 1865 Navy Rolling Block Pistol
Remington Model 1867 Navy Rolling Block Pistol
Remington Model 1871 Army Rolling Block Pistol
Remington Smooth No. 1 Revolver
Remington Smooth No. 2 Revolver
Remington Smooth No. 3 Revolver
Remington No. 4 Revolver
Remington Iroquois Revolver
Remington Model 1875 Single-Action Army
Remington Model 1890 Single-Action Army
Remington Model 1891 Target Rolling Block Pistol
Remington Model 1901 Target Rolling Block
Remington Mark III Signal Pistol
Remington 1911 and 1911A1
Remington Model 51
Remington Model 53
Remington Model 1841 “Mississippi Rifle”
Remington Model 1861 U.S. Rifle Musket
Remington Model 1863 Zouave Rifle
Remington Breech-Loading Carbine
Remington Revolving Rifle
Remington Beals Rifle
Remington U.S. Navy Rolling Block Carbine
Remington Model 1867 Navy Cadet Rifle
Remington Rolling Block Military Rifle
Remington Standard No. 1 Sporting Rifle
Remington Long-Range Creedmoor Rifle
Remington Mid-Range Target Rifle
Remington Short-Range Rifle
Remington Black Hills Rifle
Remington Shotgun
Remington Baby Carbine
Remington Model 1-1/2 Sporting Rifle
Remington Model 2 Sporting Rifle
Remington No. 4 Rolling Block Rifle
Remington Model No. 4 S Military Rifle
Remington No. 5 Rolling Block Rifle
Remington No. 5 Sporting or Target Rifle
Remington Model 1897
Remington Carbine
Remington No. 6 Rolling Block Rifle
Remington No. 7 Rolling Block Rifle
Remington Hepburn No. 3 Rifle
Remington No. 3 Match Rifle
Remington No. 3 Long-Range Creedmoor Rifle
Remington No. 3 Mid-Range Creedmoor Rifle
Remington No. 3 Long-Range Military Rifle
Remington No. 3 Schuetzen Match Rifle
Remington No. 3 High-Power Rifle
Remington Keene Magazine Rifle
Remington Sporting Rifle
Remington Army Rifle
Remington Navy Rifle
Remington Carbine
Remington Frontier Model
Remington Lee Magazine Rifle
Remington Model 1879 Sharps Mfg.
Remington Model 1879 U.S. Navy Model
Remington Model 1879 Sporting Rifle
Remington Model 1879 Military Rifle
Remington Model 1882 Army Contract
Remington Model 1885 Navy Contract
Remington Model 1882 & 1885 Military Rifles
Remington Model 1882 & 1885 Sporting Rifle
Remington Model 1882 & 1885 Carbine
Remington Model 1899
Remington Sporting Rifle
Remington Lebel Bolt-Action Rifle
Remington Mosin-Nagant Bolt-Action Rifle
Remington U.S. Model 1917 Magazine Rifle
Remington Whitmore Model 1874
Remington Model 1882 Shotgun
Remington Model 1883 though 1889 Shotgun
Remington Model 1893 (No. 9)
Remington Hammerless Shotgun Model 1894
Remington Model 1900 Shotgun
Remington Model 8
Remington Model 8A
Remington Model 8C
Remington Model 8D Peerless
Remington Model 8E Expert
Remington Model 8F Premier
Remington Model 81 Woodsmaster
Remington Model 81A
Remington Model 81D Peerless
Remington Model 81F Premier
Remington Model 12 & 12A
Remington Model 12B
Remington Model 12C
Remington Model 12C N.R.A. Target
Remington Model 12CS
Remington Model 12D Peerless
Remington Model 12E Expert
Remington Model 12F Premier
Remington Model 121 and 121A
Remington Model 121D Peerless
Remington Model 121F Premier
Remington Model 121S
Remington Model 121SB – Smoothbore
Remington Model 14 and 14A
Remington Model 14R
Remington Model 14-1/2
Remington Model 16
Remington Model 141
Remington Model 25
Remington Model 24
Remington Model 241 Speedmaster
Remington Model 241
Remington Model 241D Peerless
Remington Model 241E Expert
Remington Model 241F Premier
Remington Model 550A
Remington Model 550P
Remington Model 55-2G
Remington Model 30A “Express”
Remington Model 30S
Remington Model 41A “Targetmaster”
Remington Model 41AS
Remington Model 41P
Remington Model 41SB
Remington Model 33
Remington Model 33 NRA
Remington Model 34
Remington Model 34 NRA
Remington Model 341A
Remington Model 341P
Remington Model 341 SB
Remington Model 510
Remington Model 510P
Remington Model 510 SB
Remington Model 510 X
Remington Model 511 A
Remington Model 511 P
Remington Model 511 X
Remington Model 512 A
Remington Model 512 P
Remington Model 512 X
Remington Model 514
Remington Model 514 P
Remington Model 514 BC
Remington Model 37
Remington Model 37-1940
Remington Model 504
Remington Model 504 Custom
Remington Model 504-T LS HB
Remington Model 547
Remington Model 511 Scoremaster
Remington Model 513 TR Matchmaster
Remington Model 513 S
Remington Model 521 TL Jr.
Remington Model 760
Remington Model 760 Carbine
Remington Model 760D Peerless
Remington Model 760F Premier
Remington Model 760F Gold Inlaid
Remington Model 760 Bicentennial
Remington Model 760 ADL
Remington Model 760 BDL
Remington Model 552A Speedmaster
Remington Model 552 BDL
Remington Model 552 BDL Deluxe Speedmaster NRA Edition
Remington Model 552 NRA Edition Speedmaster
Remington Model 572 Fieldmaster
Remington Model 572 BDL
Remington Model 572SB
Remington Model 572 BDL Smoothbore
Remington Model 580
Remington Model 580 BR
Remington Model 580 SB
Remington Model 581
Remington Model 581 Left-Hand
Remington Model 581-S
Remington Model 582
Remington Model 591
Remington Model 592
Remington Model 740
Remington Model 740 ADL
Remington Model 740 BDL
Remington Model 742
Remington Model 742 BDL
Remington Model 742D Peerless
Remington Model 742F Premier (Game Scene)
Remington Model 742F Premier (Gold Inlaid)
Remington Model 742 Bicentennial
Remington Model 76 Sportsman
Remington Model 7600
Remington Model 7600D Peerless
Remington Model 7600F Premier
Remington Model 7600 Premier
Remington Model 7600 Synthetic
Remington Model 7600 Special Purpose
Remington Model 7600P Patrol Rifle
Remington Model 7600 Buckmasters ADF
Remington Model 7600 Custom Grade
Remington Model Six
Remington Model 7615 Tactical Pump Carbine
Remington Model 7615 Special Purpose Synthetic
Remington Model 7615 Camo Hunter
Remington Model 7615 Ranch Carbine
Remington Model 74 Sportsman
Remington Model Four
Remington Model 7400
Remington Model 7400 Synthetic
Remington Model 7400 Weathermaster
Remington Model 7400 Carbine
Remington Model 7400 Special Purpose
Remington Model 7400 Buckmasters ADF
Remington Model 7400 Custom Grade
Remington Model 750 Woodsmaster
Remington Model 750 Synthetic
Remington Model R15 VTR Predator Rifle
Remington Model R15 VTR Predator Carbine
Remington Model 10
Remington Model 11
Remington Model 12
Remington Model 66
Remington Model 66 Bicentennial Commemorative
Remington Model 76
Remington Model 77
Remington Model 10C
Remington Model 77 Apache
Remington Model 522 Viper
Remington Model 541 S Custom
Remington Model 541T
Remington Model 541T Heavy Barrel
Remington Model 597
Remington Model 597 Sporter
Remington Model 597 Stainless Sporter
Remington Model 597 LSS
Remington Model 597 SS
Remington Model 597 HB
Remington Model 597 HB Magnum
Remington Model 597 Magnum
Remington Model Magnum LS
Remington Model 597 Custom Target
Remington Model 597 Custom Target Magnum
Remington Model 597 LSS
Remington Model 597 Synthetic Scope Combo
Remington Model 597 TVP (Target/Varmint/Plinker)
Remington Model 597 Yellow Jacket
Remington Model 597 Blaze Camo
Remington Model 597 Pink Camo
Remington Model Five
Remington Model 40X-BR
Remington Model 40X Sporter
Remington Model 40X Centerfire
Remington Model 40XB Stainless
Remington Model 40XB BR
Remington Model 40XB Tactical Rifle
Remington Model 40XR KS Sporter
Remington Model 40XR KS Sporter
Remington Model XR-100 Rangemaster
Remington Model XC
Remington Model 673 Guide Rifle
Remington Model 720A
Remington Model 721
Remington Model 721 ADL
Remington Model 721 BDL
Remington Model 721A Magnum
Remington Model 722 BDL
Remington Model 725 ADL
Remington Model 725 Kodiak
Remington Model 78 Sportsman
Remington Model 600
Remington Model 600 Mohawk
Remington Model 600 Magnum
Remington Model 660
Remington Model 660 Magnum
Remington Model 700 ADL
Remington Model 700 ADL Synthetic
Remington Model 700 ADL Synthetic Youth
Remington Model 700 BDL
Remington Model 700 BDL LH (Left-Hand)
Remington Model 700 BDL (DM)
Remington Model 700 BDL LSS
Remington Model 700 BDL SS DM-Magnum Rifle
Remington Model 700 BDL SS Short Action
Remington Model 700 BDL SS Camo Special Edition (RMEF)
Remington Model 700 EtronX
Remington Model 700 Sendero
Remington Model 700 Sendero SF
Remington Model 700 Sendero SF-II
Remington Model 700 Sendero Composite
Remington Model 700 Mountain Rifle
Remington Model 700KS Mountain Rifle
Remington Model 700 Mountain Rifle (DM)
Remington Model 700 Safari Grade
Remington Model 700 RS
Remington Model 700 FS
Remington Model 700 BDL European
Remington Model 700 BDL Stainless Synthetic
Remington Model 700 BDL Stainless Synthetic (DM)
Remington Model 700 CDL
Remington Model 700 CDL SF Ltd.
Remington Model 700 Mountain Rifle Stainless Synthetic
Remington Model 700 LSS Mountain Rifle
Remington Model 700 Titanium
Remington Model 700 Varmint Special Synthetic
Remington Model 700 VS SF
Remington Model 700 Varmint Special Wood
Remington Model 700 Varmint Laminated Stock (VLS)
Remington Model 700 VS Composite
Remington Model 700 LV SF
Remington Model 700 VS SF II
Remington Model 700 VSF
Remington Model 700 LSS LH
Remington Model 700 SPS
Remington Model 700 SPS Stainless
Remington Model 700 SPS DM
Remington Model 700 SPS Youth
Remington Model 700 XCR
Remington Model 700 XCR (Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation)
Remington Model 700 Classic
Remington Model 700 Custom
Remington Model 700 Custom “C” Grade
Remington Model 700 AWR (Alaskan Wilderness Rifle)
Remington Model 700 APR (African Plains Rifle)
Remington Model ABG (African Big Game)
Remington Model 700 Safari KS Stainless
Remington Model 700 Police
Remington Model 700 Police DM
Remington Model 700 Police Lightweight Tactical
Remington Model 700 XCR Tactical Long Range Rifle
Remington Model 700 XCR Compact Tactical
Remington Model 700 SPS Buckmasters Edition
Remington Model 700 Alaskan Ti
Remington Model 700 SPS Varmint
Remington Model 700 LSS 50th Anniversary of the .280 Remington
Remington Model 700 VL SS Thumbhole
Remington Model 700 CDL Boone and Crockett
Remington Model 700 SPS Tactical
Remington Model 700 Tactical Weapons System
Remington Model 700 VTR
Remington Model 700 ML
Remington Model 700 ML Custom
Remington Model 700 MLS
Remington Model 700 MLS Custom
Remington Model 700 ML Youth
Remington Model Genesis Muzzleloaders
Remington Model Model 710
Remington Model Model 710 Youth
Remington Model 788
Remington Model Seven
Remington Model Seven FS
Remington Model Seven SS (Stainless Synthetic)
Remington Model Seven LSS
Remington Model Seven LS
Remington Model Seven MS
Remington Model Seven AWR
Remington Model Seven Youth
Remington Model Seven CDL
Remington Model Seven XCR Camo
Remington Model Seven 25th Anniversary Version
Remington Model Seven Predator
Remington Model 770
Remington Model 770 Youth
Remington Model 715 Sportsman
Remington Model 798
Remington Model 798 Stainless Laminate
Remington Model 798 SPS
Remington Model 798 Safari
Remington Model 799
Remington Model 1816 Commemorative Flintlock Rifle
Remington Model No. 1 Rolling Block Mid-Range
Remington Mid-Range Sporter Rolling Block
Remington Model SPR18 Single Shot Rifle
Remington Model SPR22 Double Rifle
Remington Model SPR94 Combo Gun
Remington Model 412
Remington Model 10A
Remington Model 11
Remington Model 11B Special
Remington Model 11D Tournament
Remington Model 11E Expert
Remington Model 11F Premier
Remington Model 11R
Remington Model 17
Remington Model 29
Remington Model 31
Remington Model 870 Wingmaster
Remington Model 870 Field Wingmaster
Remington Model 870 Field Wingmaster 16 Gauge
Remington Model 870 Wingmaster NRA Edition
Remington Model 870 Wingmaster Jr.
Remington Model 870 Field Wingmaster Small Bore
Remington Model 870 Magnum
Remington Model 870 Express
Remington Model 870 Express Synthetic
Remington Model 870 Express Synthetic Youth
Remington Model 870 Express Jr. NWTF Edition
Remington Model 870 Express Super Magnum
Remington Model 870 Express Super Magnum Fall Flight
Remington Model 870TA Trap
Remington Model 870TB Trap
Remington Model 870TC Trap
Remington Model 870 Express Deer Gun
Remington Model 870 Express Deer/Turkey Combo
Remington Model 870 Express Left-Hand
Remington Model 870 Express Super Magnum Turkey
Remington Model 870 Express Synthetic Deer
Remington Model 870 Express Combo
Remington Model 870 Express Youth Gun
Remington Model 870 Express Turkey
Remington Model 870 Express Camo Turkey
Remington Model 870 20 Gauge Express Youth Camo Turkey
Remington Model 870 Express Small Game
Remington Model 870 Express HD (Home Defense)
Remington Model 870 Classic Trap
Remington Model 870 Special Field
Remington Model 870 Rifle Deer Gun
Remington Model 870 Brushmaster Deer Gun
Remington Model 870 SPS-T Youth Turkey Camo
Remington Model 870 Express Youth Turkey Camo
Remington Model 870 Youth Deer Gun
Remington Model 870 Security
Remington Model 870 SPS-Camo
Remington Model 870 SPS Super Magnum Camo
Remington Model 870 SPS-BG Camo
Remington Model 870 SPS Fully Rifled Deer Gun
Remington Model 870 SPS Super Slug Deer Gun
Remington Model 870 SPS-T Camo
Remington Model 870 SPS-T Super Magnum Camo
Remington Model 870 SPS-T Camo NWTF 25th Anniversary
Remington Model 870 SPS-T Camo
Remington Model 870 SP-T Super Magnum Thumbhole
Remington Model 870 Dale Earnhardt Limited Edition
Remington Model 870 Marine Magnum
Remington Model 870 SPS
Remington Model 870 SPS-Deer
Remington Model 870 SPS-T
Remington Model 870 Police
Remington Model 870 Tac-2 SpecOps Stock
Remington Model 870 Tac-3 Speedfeed IV
Remington Model 870 Tac-3 Folder
Remington Model 870 Custom Grade
Remington Model 870 SP-T Thumbhole
Remington Model 870 SPS-T Super Mag
Remington Model 870 SPS-T/20
Remington Model 870 Special Purpose Thumbhole
Remington Model 870 XCS Marine Magnum
Remington Model 870 SPS MAX Gobbler
Remington Model 870 20 Ga. Lightweight Magnum
Remington Model 870 Wingmaster 100th Anniversary
Remington Model 870 with Claro Walnut
Remington Model 870 Express Magnum ShurShot Cantilever
Remington Model 870 Express Super Magnum Waterfowl
Remington Model 870 Express Magnum ShurShot Turkey
Remington Model 870 SPS ShurShot Turkey
Remington Model 870 Tactical Desert Recon

Wrong Apartment: Suspect Killed in Home Invasion

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At 11:11 p.m. Thursday, police received a report of a shooting at an apartment in the 1800-block of Canter Way, police said.

Police said they found an adult man outside the apartment suffering from two gunshot wounds to the torso.

The man informed officers that the suspect was still inside the apartment.Officers entered the apartment and found Roosevelt Mitchell III, 21, dead with a gun.

The victim told them he was home with his wife and several friends when two suspects forced their way into the apartment.

The resident armed himself with a gun and both exchanged gunfire, police said. The victim was taken to Kern Medical Center with non-life threatening injuries. Read more

Source: turnto23.com

 

 

Nursery Owner Detains Thief with .22

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Village of Merton — It wasn't a whole lot of cash a thief in the night was taking from W.W. Brown Nurseries.

Still, owner Randy Brown was perturbed that someone had come into his barn on a couple of nights and left with the $3 or $4 in the metal cash box each time.

So Brown said he decided to sleep in the barn several nights on bales of hay to see if he could catch the thief.

About 10:45 Wednesday night, Brown, armed with a .22-caliber revolver, surprised the thief and fired a shot into the ground to startle the intruder. Brown said the thief then threw the cash box at him.

For a time, Brown held the 24-year-old man, later identified as Andrew M. Payne, at gunpoint while waiting for Waukesha County sheriff's deputies to arrive to arrest him at the nursery, N67-W28835 Sussex Road.

The man then scuffled with Brown and attempted to wrestle the gun away from him. The gun discharged, but no one was struck, according to a criminal complaint filed in Waukesha County Circuit Court.

Payne fled before deputies got there, Brown said.

But Brown knew who the man was.

Earlier, “I insisted he give me his wallet,” Brown said.

Sheriff's Capt. Karen Ruff said deputies used identification in the wallet to determine where the suspect lived and arrested him at his residence. Read more

Source: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Sheriff Promotes Constitutional Law Enforcement

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He put forth his ideas in his book, “The County Sheriff, America's Last Hope.” Copies of the book may be ordered from www.sheriffmack.com or by writing to: PO Box 971, Pima, AZ 85543.

He believes fervently and instinctively that the freedom that is Americans' by right is being taken away from them and the Constitution is being gradually eroded. To counteract this trend, he has formed a group called “USA 1-911.” The name was chosen because members believe the country is in a top priority emergency situation.

He has pledged his life to the cause of freedom. He said, “I am dedicated to saving my country. This has consumed my life.”

His goal is to spread his message to every peace officer and citizen in the nation, especially the sheriffs. To reach that goal, he has appeared on TV shows, radio talk shows, on his Web site and YouTube, at Freedom Rallies and has spoken to hundreds of ordinary people gathered in small rooms across the country.

Mack, a fifth generation Arizonan, graduated from Eastern Arizona College and Brigham Young University with a degree in Latin American Studies and Sociology.

He spent 11 years with the Provo, Utah, Police Department, then moved back to Arizona to run for Graham County Sheriff in 1988. He served two terms. While in office, he graduated from the FBI Academy but did not become an agent. Read more

Source: wmicentral.com

 

Bloomberg to Raise Funds for Anti-NRA Effort

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“You know, the NRA doesn’t spend that much money,’’ said Bloomberg during an appearance on NBC’s “Meet the Press’’ program yesterday. “If you want to beat the NRA you have to go out and get your message out, and it costs money to do that.’’

NRA President Wayne LaPierre didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment.

Bloomberg has already contributed about $2.9 million to “Mayors Against Illegal Guns.’’ The organization of 450 city chiefs, founded in 2006 by Bloomberg and Mayor Thomas M. Menino of Boston, lobbied to persuade the Senate to defeat a measure that would have allowed gun owners to carry concealed weapons across state lines. Read more

Source: Boston.com

 

Hands On! Gerber Tool Built Just for AR Platform

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Note: Kevin Michalowski is the Editor of Gun Digest and Tactical Gear magazines.

Gerber eFECT fetaures all tools you'll need for your AR-15.If you own an AR-15 or happen to carry an M-16 or M-4 in some far-off dusty place, you also very likely have a pouch full of gadgets you use to clean and maintain that rifle. Well, now Gerber has taken all those important tools and put them together in one place in the eFECT Military Maintenance Tool.

The eFECT (Field Expedient Cleaning Tool) was developed for the distinct purpose of maintaining military style weapons. Built for the M16A/M4 it incorporates components that make field maintenance of a weapon faster and more precise.

It is compatible and interchangeable with Otis Breech-to-Muzzle components. Just unscrew the pick and you can screw in any of the Otis components. I like this because you can hook the Otis cable to the eFECT and pull the cleaning jag through the bore.

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The eFECT features all locking tools including a front sight adjustment tool that rotates for use with four- or five-pin sights. There is a carbon scraper, pin punch, and flat driver. Otis brush and curved pick and the whole unit drops into a ballistic nylon ACU Molle carrying pouch.

I was confused as to how the locking levers worked, for about a minute, but that was just operator error. Pull the levers straight back away from the tool and the tool is unlocked. Any other attempt to move the levers in a different direction proves how tough the Gerber tool is.

The handle panels are polymer and each of the tools are blackened steel and they give you all you need to conduct field maintenance on your rifle. Granted, you won't be changing a gas tube or swapping out a buttstock with this tool, but like the name says, this is a field expedient cleaning tool.  If you need to keep your AR style rifle running, this tool will make that job very easy.

Now for the downside. Gerber may not have anticipated just how popular this little baby really is. I've noticed that the eFECT is on backorder from most of the places that regularly sell one. MSRP is about $130, but I have seen them listed for $80 at some outlets. But expect a delay in shipping.


Gunsmithing: Install a Better AR-15 Trigger

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The contents of the package splayed about next to the mag well vise block and fire control-less receiver.
The contents of the package splayed about next to the mag well vise block and fire control-less receiver.

Installing a new AR-15 trigger can make a world of difference. Several companies make great aftermarket AR parts. Let's look at some.

As we all know, the AR-15 has become “America’s rifle” in more ways than one. In its latest incarnations, it continues to serve on in our armed forces. As has been shown in this column on more than one occasion, this rifle has spawned an entire host of products to improve performance, ergonomics, or just to make it look cooler.

Most owners would agree that one aspect of this firearm that needs the most improvement is the fire control system. In other words, folks want a better trigger.

While the triggers on most factory rifles work, they tend to be heavy, creepy, often gritty, and exhibit a fair amount of take-up and overtravel. The creep, long take-up, and grittiness can be ascribed to the sear engagement; the more sear engagement there is the longer it will take the trigger to “break” (take up), and poorly polished surfaces will cause the grittiness.

Overtravel is the distance the trigger moves backwards after it breaks. Trigger pull weights are almost entirely a function of the hammer spring power, which forces the hammer’s sear engagement surface against the sear. A more powerful spring will increase the trigger pull. A more powerful trigger return spring will also have some effect on the pull weight, but it’s minor compared to the effect from the hammer spring.

Like all the other systems on the gun, there are aftermarket parts — really good ones — to improve your trigger function. In fact, several manufacturers use these triggers as OEM parts in some of their product offerings. A number of two-stage systems are available, including modular units, from Jard, Jewell, Chip McCormick, Geissele, Timney, and from several of the rifle manufacturers. Single-stage trigger units are available from Jard, Chip McCormick, and JP Enterprises. (I’m going to go out on a limb and assume that the reader knows the difference between a single stage and a two-stage trigger).

The setup covered in this column is the unit from JP Enterprises. It’s the single-stage trigger kit I have the most experience with and one that is very, very good. JP offers a kit that includes only the trigger with spring, another that includes and entire fire control package with hammer, springs, disconnector, and anti-walk pins. It also offers a modular fire control unit that drops into the empty hole in a lower receiver with an adjustable selector/safety included.

One reason to write about this package is it’s often installed incorrectly — to be more precise, not correctly enough. The kits come with an extensive instruction sheet and installation CD that are more than adequate for the beginner. But I’m going to replicate this installation more concisely, touching on the “not so correct” points.

The first step in the adjustment process. The overtravel screw. Hammer would be cocked for this step but is up for illustration purposes. Note the blood red hammer spring and bright yellow trigger return spring.
The first step in the adjustment process. The overtravel screw. Hammer would be cocked for this step but is up for illustration purposes. Note the blood red hammer spring and bright yellow trigger return spring.

Let’s Get Started

Get a magazine well vise block from Brownells and put it in your vise. The first thing to do with the parts is to separate and degrease them thoroughly, particularly the screw threads on the trigger. Clean out your lower, as there’s no sense installing a super-cool trigger and other stuff if you don’t bother to clear the housing of filth.

Put a small dab of red Loctite on two of the trigger pin screws. Screw these onto one end of each of the trigger/hammer pins. Make sure the pins will fit in your receiver; they’re slightly oversized and may be a very tight fit. (In rare cases, if the pins will not slide in or gently tap in with a plastic mallet, then the holes will have to be reamed.)

You’ll likely have to knock the very top corner tip off the safety engagement surface on the back end of the trigger in order to clear the selector as you push the trigger down into the receiver. Take the trigger, place the trigger return spring on it, and insert it into the receiver.

Here’s where it helps greatly to have two simple tools: Buy two extra firing pins and grind or cut the tips off. These make a perfect “slave pins” for installation and are inexpensive. Use them to retain the trigger and hammer in the receiver during the installation process.

Hammer Springs 101

Important point: Thanks to poor advice given on the internet, it’s become popular to make a lighter trigger pull by reversing the hammer spring on the hammer so it’s installed backwards.

This doesn’t work. Springs are designed to work in one direction. By putting the hammer spring on backward (it’s easily done), the spring force is inconsistent: The hammer will not always fall with enough force to ignite the primer because the spring isn’t building up and releasing the energy it was designed to produce.

The JP kits come with your choice of three different hammer spring strengths. Yellow is three pounds, red is 3.5 pounds, and gray is 4.5 pounds. The yellow is most often used for match or varmint setups, red for match (enhanced reliability) and duty use, and gray for duty and DCM matches.

Adjust, Adjust, Adjust

Once the trigger and hammer are installed, you can add the overtravel adjustment screw. Cock the hammer. Take the shorter of the two small headless screws, dab a bit of red Loctite on it (don’t skimp, you can always wipe off the excess), and screw it in all the way.

Place your least favorite thumb in front of the hammer to prevent the hammer from hitting the receiver. Then hold the trigger back and unscrew the screw until the hammer falls. Do this a couple of times and then go just a teeny bit farther. There should be just the tiniest bit of trigger jiggle, with no interference with the hammer once the trigger is pulled.

If you’re holding the trigger back and you hear a slight scraping noise when you rotate the hammer, you don’t have enough overtravel.

Unscrew it a tiny bit more until the scraping goes away. If there’s more than a tiny jiggle, you’ve got too much. This is why you do it a few times — to “feel” it out. It’s easier than it sounds. Just go to release and add a small bit more. If you’re one of those clowns who actually likes lots of overtravel, then by all means, turn the screw out to your heart’s content.

Now set the sear adjustment screw. With the hammer cocked and red Loctite on the remaining headless screw, turn the screw in until the hammer falls on your thumb. Back it out a bit, recock the hammer, and do it again. Repeat five more times. The bent leg of the hex wrench gives a good clock measurement for this task.

Once you’re sure you know where the trigger breaks — say, 6 o’clock from your vantage point — back the screw out one full turn. Then screw it one-quarter turn back in and stop. This will give you three quarters of a turn of sear engagement.

For safety reasons, don’t reduce this. You’ll find that this is more than adequate and is about one millionth the engagement of a standard factory trigger.

The author illustrates the correct and only reliable orientations that the hammer and trigger springs are to be installed. Also visible is the polished edge of the trigger pin hole on the trigger.
The author illustrates the correct and only reliable orientations that the hammer and trigger springs are to be installed. Also visible is the polished edge of the trigger pin hole on the trigger.

Connect the Disconnector

Now install the hammer pin. Take the disconnector and insert it into its slot on the trigger. If you’re lucky, the whole assembly will work perfectly now. For those of you not so blessed, we now need to time or “fit” the disconnector.

This is arguably the most important piece of the fire control unit. It keeps the gun from slam firing, not firing, and doubling. It happens to be very cheap and easy to replace if you screw this up, as it is also the same part that everyone uses in their semi-auto ARs.

The usual fitting issue involves the disconnector hook on the hammer. It almost always has too much engagement so the trigger won’t reset when it is released.

The solution is very simple. Take the disconnector back out and stone off the tip of the hook on the disconnector a bit at a time until the interference is just barely there. When the hammer is being cocked it should just nick the disconnector. This will give maximum disconnector engagement with the minimal amount of trigger reset.

When you stone that hook on the disconnector, it will slowly become a facet instead of a point. That’s okay, just keep that flat parallel with the trigger pin hole in the disconnector. It’s kind of like finding the North Star by following the imaginary line extending down from the rightmost two stars in the big dipper. Just extend the imaginary line through the center of the hole.

Now put the selector on safe. You can’t do it, can you? You need to take the trigger back out and slowly grind down the safety pad extending from the back of the trigger until, when cocked, the selector will engage on safe with miniscule to no trigger jiggle when safed. The selector should be able to go about halfway to safe when the unit is uncocked.

When this is done, insert the trigger pin, and top the two pins off with their final screws, each with a dab of blue Loctite. This will allow you to get them out later with minor effort, yet will keep the screws from backing out on their own.

Testing the Result

With your thumb in place, cock and fire the trigger multiple times, each time holding the trigger back until the hammer is recocked. Releasing the trigger should then release the hammer from the disconnector, allowing the trigger to fully reset.

If the hammer falls on the block when the trigger is released, then somewhere along the way you took too much material off the front of the disconnector. To remedy this, slowly remove material from the bottom of the nose — that pointy thing on the front of the disconnector — until it will properly engage. The trigger when released should come to rest precisely as the hammer is released from the disconnector.

Once you have that perfect, cock the hammer with the trigger held back to engage the disconnector. Now flick the hammer by pulling it further back and releasing it. The disconnector should catch it. If it doesn’t, try increasing the disconnector hold on the hammer by stoning the nose.

If this doesn’t work, send the whole shebang to JP to have them do it. JP has special triggers held in reserve to fit in receivers with this issue.

The trigger pull should be extremely crisp, light and have no discernable take up or creep. Remember that this is a single stage trigger and will break quickly and cleanly, and has a remarkably short reset.

You may have noticed that there is a lot “take this part out, adjust it, and put it back in” action going on here. If you’re a gunsmith, you should be used to this, and it should be no problem. If you’re not a gunsmith, do it anyway. This is a fire control unit that is designed to be adjusted to your desired settings (safety first overall) and then left alone.

Going in after the fact to change something, other than springs, pretty much involves redoing it. Do it right the first time. Be sure to watch the video. I like to see things done before I actually do them myself.

After initial safety testing, let the Loctite set overnight. Finally, the safety fit can be avoided by using JP’s adjustable selector. Just fit the trigger parts and set the safety with the set screws in the adjustable selector. It saves lots of time.

Go Shoot It

I used to think that standard triggers were not too bad. Not anymore. For the cost of a big sharp-edged free-float Picatinny handguard tube, you can refine the feel of your rifle to a far better result, and improve your accuracy with this JP trigger kit.

New Jersey: One Handgun Per Month Now The Law

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“The law will take effect in early January…A task force is reviewing its potential impact and will make recommendations this fall.

“Corzine and gun-control advocates argue that roughly a quarter of what they call ‘crime guns’ recovered in New Jersey come from within the state.  It’s not clear how many of those came from the type of multiple purchases that Corzine wants to stop … Critics say the law would impinge on the constitutional rights of law-abiding citizens in New Jersey, which already has some of the most strict gun laws in the nation.”

Said Scott Bach, president of the Association of New Jersey Rifle and Pistol Clubs, “Trying to reduce gun crime by rationing guns to law-abiding citizens is as absurd as trying to reduce drunk driving by rationing cars to non-drinkers.”

 

Prospects Dim for Mexican Firearms Treaty?

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President Obama's call for the Senate to ratify a hemispheric small-firearms treaty dominated his last visit to Mexico, but in the four months since, both the treaty pledge and the drug violence that prompted it have dropped off the radar – a victim of Congress' full schedule and gun politics.

That means on Sunday Mr. Obama will go with an empty hand to Mexico, which blames the U.S. for many of the weapons used by drug cartels that have violently thwarted a crackdown by Mexican authorities.

And even though Mr. Obama and his administration have accepted that blame, prospects are dim for passage of the treaty, which calls on countries to license gun manufacturers and try to control illicit trafficking in firearms, ammunition and explosives.

The chief U.S. negotiator for the 1997 treaty, known by its Spanish acronym of CIFTA, says it was written specifically to avoid forcing the U.S. to change its laws, and says it does not give any other country a say over what is legal or illegal in the U.S. – and that gun-rights groups were even involved in writing parts of the treaty.

But the National Rifle Association now claims CIFTA could hurt hunters and says U.S. Second Amendment interests should not be controlled by an international treaty. Key senators such as Majority Leader Harry Reid, a Nevada Democrat whose gun-rights credentials may be crucial to his winning re-election next year, was cool to Mr. Obama's call for ratification in April, and a spokesman said nothing has changed since. Read more

Source: washingtontimes.com

Packing at School: Guns on Campus One Year Later

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For Thweatt and his board, the decision was pure mathematics.

The school, which sits in the middle of a prairie, was too far from law enforcement for police to come in time to fend off would-be attackers. The students and staff would be safer if on-site, trained staff members were equipped to handle a crisis at a moment’s notice, they decided.

Thweatt had already installed a $100,000 state-of-the-art security system in the school. Now, arming certain unnamed school staff members by allowing them to strap a firearm under their clothing was the final flourish.

In the year since that historic decision, a gun was never brandished or fired at the school. There were no problems, Thweatt said.

However, one week after school began, police busted a methamphetamine lab set up in an abandoned house that sat 50 feet from the school property.

A deputy had peered inside and “saw something in the walls and windows and called for backup,” Thweatt said. “They made it to the abandoned house in 15 minutes. We had figured it would take 18 to 20 minutes in a typical situation.”

Had that been an armed intruder at his school, response time would have been too slow.

“We’re the first responders. We have to be,” Thweatt said. “We don’t have 5 minutes. We don’t have 10 minutes. We would have had 20 minutes of hell” if attackers had targeted the school.

Harrold students, who grew up on ranches and in the middle of the North Texas gun culture, were unperturbed by the school district’s new gun policy. Read more

Source: reporternews.com

Highlights of Old Barn and Alderfer Auctions

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Old Barn Auction held a summer firearms sale June 26-27 in Findlay, Ohio. Several hundred people attended the show with half the bids coming in by phone. Along with the surge in gun sales as a result of the presidential election, organizers suggested that people are more comfortable investing in collectible antiques than they are investing in the turbulent financial industry. Total sales for the auction came to $628,177.50. Old Barn's next auction will be held in late October.

Highlights of the sale included:

Henry U.S. Purchased Rifle – SN#3686 This gun is U. S. Inspected, 1 of 1200 issued to the 1st District of Columbia Cavalry in 1864, it has matching numbers on the barrel, frame, buttstock, butt plate and even the screws in the butt plate – the rifle was shipped and received by the D.C. cavalry in March 1864,  some time in 1864 the gun was lost, or captured by the confederates and issued to one of their soldiers who engraved his name S.R. Heckman, and the date 1864 on the side of the receiver S.R. Heckman, during the Civil War served in 3 Confederate Units, Co. E. 136th Infantry Co. D. 146th Infantry and Co. D. Virginia Reserves Infantry. He was born 1821 and died 1903, buried Mt. Cavalry Cemetery Tremont City, Virginia, included is a book The Historic Henry Rifle by Wiley Sword with much information on Henrys – the rifle is in very good to fine condition $34000

Flintlock Indian Trade Fowling Gun - Sold for $3000
Flintlock Indian Trade Fowling Gun with Dragon Side Plate, converted to percussion, 36 5/8” barrel, lock marked with setting Fox within a circle “Hollis” marked behind hammer, brass hardware 1/2” upper tang broken off – a rare gun $3000

Plus:
Henry Rifle, 44 Rimfire, 24” barrel, Brass frame is a dark mustard color SN#9112, barrel is dark gray and smooth with lettering clear, stock has a few minor dents & dings, but nothing major, sling is from the period, overall the gun is very good and appears all original $24000

Browning “Olympian” Grade Bolt Action Rifle – 243 caliber, SN#987188 Beautiful extra fine checkering with floral carving outline, mountain lion engraved on floor plate, Leupold 2 x 7 Vari-Xscope – excellent $4500

Alderfer

Alderfer Auction held a firearms sale on July 20 in Hatfield, Pennsylvania. Strong turnout and sales culminated in solid gun prices. Highlights of the sale:

Smith & Wesson 27 sold for $632.50
Smith & Wesson 27 double action revolver. Cal. 357 Mag. 8 1/4″ bbl. SN S210495. Blued finish with checkered walnut grips. Excellent. $632.50

Smith & Wesson Model 629 - Sold for $687.50
Smith & Wesson 629-1 double action revolver. Cal. 44 Mag. 8 1/2″ bbl. SN AFB7694. Stainless steel finish with checkered walnut grips. Excellent. $687.50

Smith & Wesson Model 60 - Sold for $990.00
Smith & Wesson 60 double action revolver. Cal. 38. 2″ bbl. SN AYP7044. Stainless steel finish with custom ivory-style grips, firearm is highly engraved. In factory box with manual and factory grips. Excellent. $990.00

Colt Single Action Army - Sold For $1045.00
Colt Single Action Army single action revolver. Cal. 32 WCF. 4 1/2″ bbl. SN 334809. Reblued finish on metal with bone style grips. Very good. (C&R) $1,045.00

Colt Woodsman Match Target Model - Sold for $1243.00
Colt Woodsman Match Target Model semi-automatic pistol. Cal. 22. 6 5/8″ bbl. SN MT9932. Blued finish with walnut target grips. Target Sights. Very Good. $1,243.00

Wildey Semi-Auto .45 Win. Mag sold for $1356.00
Wildey semi-automatic pistol. Cal. 45 Win Mag. 8 1/2″ bbl. SN 45-1526. Stainless steel finish with checkered walnut grips, adjustable rear sight, adjustable gas regulator. In factory box with manual and 2 magazines. Excellent. $1,356.00

Browning Superposed O/U 12 ga. - Sold for $880.00
Browning Superposed over/under double barrel shotgun. 12 ga. 26″ bbls. SN 8553. Blued finish with steel receiver, checkered walnut stock and forend, double triggers, auto ejectors and rubber butt plate. Very good. $880.00

AH Fox Sterllingworth SXS 12 ga. - Sold for $1210.00
AH Fox Sterlingworth side by side double barrel shotgun. 12 ga. 30″ bbls. SN 73236. Blued finish, case colored receiver, checkered walnut stock and forend. Very good. (C&R) $1,210.00

Semper & Krieghoff 16 ga. Sold for $990.00
Semper & Krieghoff drilling. 16 ga./7.8mm. 26″ bbls. SN 12333. Reblued finish with case colored receiver, checkered walnut stock and forend with raised cheek piece has minor handling marks, plastic butt plate. Stock has had a large piece broken off which has been repaired. Good. (C&R) $990.00

Buy the gun collectors' ultimate reference - The Standard Catalog of Firearms!Buy the gun collectors' ultimate reference – The Standard Catalog of Firearms!

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Gun Digest Collectors' Forum

65 Years of Gun Digest: Historic 3-DVD Set Released

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The 3-DVD Set containing all 65 years of Gun Digest book are now available! 

The Gun Digest 3-DVD Set contains all 65 editions from 1944-2009 in PDF format.

In writing of his early interest in Gun Digest, Dan Shideler — the publication's newest editor — reflects:

“Gun Digest literally needs no introduction,” writing in his article A book for All Ages: Gun Digest. “In the long-gone Indiana of the 1960s, my brother and I eagerly awaited the day when our father would bring home the new edition of Gun Digest. When it came, we read it for weeks on end, eventually reducing it to coverless tatters. Dad called it ‘the greatest bathroom book of all time.' My brother and I called it pure gold. Think of it — where else could you find articles on virtually any firearms-related topic, all written by the greatest gunwriters who ever put pen to paper?”

Now Gun Digest is proud to introduce the Six-Decade Digital Collection — a 3-DVD set containing all 65 years, 1944 through 2009 — in fully-searchable PDF format. The 3-DVD set contains a digital menu, allowing you to navigate by year to the edition you want to open. And each issue contains a linked Table of Contents and bookmarks that allow you to browse easily to articles or the vast reference sections of the book.

Featured on these three DVDs is firearms content from all 65 annual editions of Gun Digest –– from the rare 1944 1st edition to the 2009 edition. From the great gunwriters of the past such as Elmer Keith and Jack O’Connor to today’s leading authorities.

Gun Digest DVD menu allows easy navigation to all years
Each disc on the Gun Digest DVD contains a digital menu, allowing you to click to the edition you want to read.

Nearly all of these editions are out of print and are very rare and difficult to find. For the first time ever they are available through this exclusive DVD set.

Product Snapshot:

– Thousands of articles and gun reviews, reports from the field and practical how-to instructions for serious shooters.

– Information from the nation’s top dealers, manufacturers and firearms distributors dating back to 1944.

– Access a rich repository — your own digital gun book library — of gun and accessory information and technical data on guns, including ballistics charts.

– An easy-to-use format that lets you find what you’re looking for — fast.

Order Now »

Bonus Interview with Gun Digest Editor Dan Shideler

Q: You're the new editor of Gun Digest, and have written that your interest in the book goes back to your youth. What's your reaction — as a life-long fan of Gun Digest — about the release of this historic 3-DVD set, containing all 65 editions?

Shideler: This groundbreaking DVD set is our response to the thousands of Gun Digest readers who have requested back copies and reprints over the years.

Gun Digest Editor Dan Shideler
Gun Digest Editor Dan Shideler

Unlike many of its competitors who have come and gone, Gun Digest is much more than an illustrated gun catalog: it's the shooter's first, best source of gun-related history, scholarship, information and entertainment.

Like MGM Studios, Gun Digest can boast “More Stars Than There Are in the Heavens.” Since 1944, Gun Digest has been the home of the greatest gunwriters of all time, such as Elmer Keith, Jack O'Connor, Chas. Askins, Lucian Cary, George Nonte, John Taffin, and countless others. We're particularly proud of the fact that Larry Sterret and J. B. Wood — both of whom wrote for Gun Digest when it was edited by our “patron saint,” John T. Amber — are still writing for Gun Digest today.

In these days when so much gun-related writing is no more than thinly-veiled advertising for this or that new product, Gun Digest was, and is, a truly independent voice, a resource that shooters have trusted for more than six decades.

For everyone who remembers Gun Digest as the shooter's greatest “Wish Book,” this three-DVD set is an absolute must.


You might also be interested in:

 

Order the Gun Digest 2010 Annual book. See why this is the World's Greatest Gun Book.Gun Digest 2010, 64th Edition

 

Stay on top of what's happening in the ever-changing world of firearms. Gun Digest 2010 is your #1 source for:

– Test-fire reports from the field
– Illustrated firearms catalog with current arms & accessories
– New product reports and feature articles
– Arms trade directory – find dealers quickly and easily
– BONUS DVD included giving you a “sneak peek” into the dealers-only annual SHOT Show

Gun Digest 2010 brings together into one easy-to-use resource the details found in many manufacturers' catalogs, product reviews from the top gun writers and authoritative articles from leading industry experts. This is what has made it “the world's greatest gun book” for 65 years strong.

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Philadelphia Pizza Shop Owner Shoots Back

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A pizza shop owner in Philadelphia fought back when a man tried to rob him at gunpoint.

The attempted robbery happened inside Tony's Place pizza shop on the 2900 block of Frankford Avenue in the city's Port Richmond section.

Police say an armed gunman walked into the pizza shop at 11:45 Saturday night demanding money, but the owner pulled out his own gun and shot the robber in the back.

Source: abc.local.go.com

Senate Confirms Anti-Gun Sotomayor

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All the Democrats in attendance voted for Sotomayor, while nine Republicans joined their ranks.

The Republican Senators who voted for Sotomayor were:  Lamar Alexander of Tennessee, Christopher Bond of Missouri, Judd Gregg of New Hampshire, Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, Richard G. Lugar of Indiana, Mel Martinez of Florida, George Voinovich of Ohio and Susan Collins and Olympia J. Snowe of Maine.

Many Democrat Senators campaigned on a pro-Second Amendment platform, yet voted to confirm a nominee who does not believe you have a fundamental right to self defense or an individual right to possess a firearm.

Placing the prerogatives of President Obama over their constitutional “Advice and Consent” duty, many so-called pro-gun Senators reneged on their promises to voters that they would support the individual right to keep and bear arms.

The common refrain heard in the Senate before the vote was:  “The President deserves his pick.”

Of course, Senator Barrack Obama did not hold that view in 2006, when he opposed President Bush’s pick of Samuel Alito to the Supreme Court.  Then-Senator Obama said:

There are some who believe that the President, having won the election, should have the complete authority to appoint his nominee, and the Senate should only examine whether or not the Justice is intellectually capable and an all-around nice guy. That once you get beyond intellect and personal character, there should be no further question whether the judge should be confirmed.

I disagree with this view. I believe firmly that the Constitution calls for the Senate to advise and consent. I believe that it calls for meaningful advice and consent that includes an examination of a judge's philosophy, ideology, and record.

Thankfully, we are seeing more and more Senators stand up to Obama’s radical agenda.  You will remember that GOA encouraged you to lobby other gun groups so that gun owners across the country could speak with a unified voice in opposition to Judge Sotomayor. Read more

Source: Gun Owners of America

Republicans Defect to Support Anti-Gun Sotomayor

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Bond, R-Mo., decried the effects of partisanship “infecting” the political system and said that nothing had emerged in Senate hearings that cast doubt on her capacity to serve on the high court.

If Republicans want conservative justices, he said, then they need to work harder to win presidential elections.

Here is a text of Bond’s remarks delivered before Sotomayor’s confirmation:

“Mr. President, I rise today to speak on the nomination of Judge Sonia Sotomayor to the Supreme Court of the United States.

“Few positions carry more honor, or solemn duty, than becoming a Justice of the highest court of the greatest democracy.

“Few duties carry more honor, or solemn responsibility, than giving advice and consent on who should become a Justice on the highest court of the greatest democracy.

“The walls of that Supreme Court form the vessel that holds the great protections of our liberty.

“Those black robes give life to the Constitution’s freedoms and the flourishing of our ideas and beliefs.” Read more

Source: stltoday.com

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