Not making any claims about whether or not this weapon was used, i think @OutrageousHairdo@hexbear.net makes a very valid point about how difficult it would to obtain one and how easy it would be to track people who do that through legal channels. Just saying that the casings found would not contradict this story.
What I meant was that it makes it very easy to just manually eject into a designated bucket or something if you’re going to be just straight up shooting animals in the head in some horrid room.
Compared to using just a suppressed automatic handgun where it ejects automatically.
As you can see in this video by the manufactuer, the VP9 does eject the empty casings when the bolt is pulled back:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZMCBIXhPT4U
Here’s a pdf about the gun from b&t:
https://bt-ag.ch/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/VP9_2020_04.pdf
Not making any claims about whether or not this weapon was used, i think @OutrageousHairdo@hexbear.net makes a very valid point about how difficult it would to obtain one and how easy it would be to track people who do that through legal channels. Just saying that the casings found would not contradict this story.
What I meant was that it makes it very easy to just manually eject into a designated bucket or something if you’re going to be just straight up shooting animals in the head in some horrid room.
Compared to using just a suppressed automatic handgun where it ejects automatically.
Ah, i see.
I found a YouTube link in your comment. Here are links to the same video on alternative frontends that protect your privacy: