Felon Arrested For Sale Of Gun That Killed McNair

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WASHINGTON (AP) - The father of a convicted murderer accused of selling the gun used to kill ex-NFL quarterback Steve McNair says his son has been "keeping straight" and taking care of his family since he was released from prison seven years ago.

Adrian J. Gilliam Jr., 33, of La Vergne, Tenn., was charged Friday with being a convicted felon in possession of a firearm. He admitted selling a 9 mm Bryco/Jennings to Sahel Kazemi for $100, according to court documents.
Kazemi, 20, shot McNair to death at his condo July 4 before killing herself. Authorities say she met Gilliam while she was trying to sell her car and told him she was looking to buy a gun.
A criminal complaint says Gilliam — who was convicted in 1993 in Florida for murder and attempted armed robbery — told police he sold the gun to Kazemi, whom he identified from a police photo.
Detectives traced the gun to its 2002 sale at a pawn shop. Gilliam eventually bought it from someone for $100 about a year or year and a half ago. Investigators said he told them he bought it for protection after his home was burglarized, and police reports show a burglary around that time.
Nashville Police Chief Ronal Serpas said at a news conference Friday that Gilliam decided to sell the gun because his wife was afraid to have it in their house.
Federal Public Defender Hugh Mundy said Gilliam is not married but is engaged to a woman with whom he has a 2-year-old daughter.
Gilliam has been out of jail for seven years and has had no other trouble with the law in that time, Mundy said. "No one denies this is a tragedy," he said. "Steve McNair was one of Nashville's heroes. A lot of lives have already been ruined. But Mr. Gilliam is a decent, hardworking family man and there's no reason to ruin his life too."

Gilliam's father, Adrian Gilliam Sr. of San Antonio, Texas, told The Associated Press Friday night his son had been "keeping straight" since his release from prison.
His son has been working as a car salesman "and taking care of his family," his father said.
"He's pretty good at it. He's a pretty sharp young man."
Police had said last week that Kazemi purchased "a fully loaded 9 mm pistol from a private individual" who met her in the parking lot of the mall where she worked at the Dave & Busters restaurant. That's also where she first met McNair. The sale took place two days before the shooting.
Authorities believe McNair was likely asleep when Kazemi put the pistol to his head and pulled the trigger. She put two more slugs into his chest and a fourth bullet into the other side of his head before shooting herself.
McNair, a married father of four, walked away from the NFL last year. "Air McNair" was known as a gutsy quarterback who played through serious injuries and led his Tennessee Titans to a Super Bowl.
U.S. Attorney Edward Yarbrough said Kazemi's age did not make the sale of the gun illegal. A licensed dealer is barred from selling a gun to someone younger than 21, but private sales to people older than 18 are legal, he said.
Convicted felons, however, cannot have guns. Jim Cavanaugh, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives special agent in charge in Nashville, held up a pistol similar to the one used to kill McNair and said, "A convicted felon cannot receive it, possess it, buy it, store it, hold it, shoot it, aim it, clean it, or do anything with it."
Gilliam faces up to 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine. He was in court Friday afternoon, but a hearing to set bond was delayed until Wednesday.
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Unbelievable! This guy was convicted of murder in 1993 and let out 9 years later on parole.
 

"Here we go again"
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Not sure how murderers get out on parole in 9 years, I guess to make room for that drug addict. If only the system wasn't hellbent on imprisoning non-violent offenders we could lock up sex offenders, murderers, and extremely violent criminals for life.
 
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Not sure how murderers get out on parole in 9 years, I guess to make room for that pothead. If only the system wasn't hellbent on imprisoning non-violent offenders we could lock up sex offenders, murderers, and extremely violent criminals for life.


Ahh, Yes...The Perfect World

Last I heard it was in a place down in Orlando, with a Mouse running around.

But I do agree with you.
 

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Unbelievable! This guy was convicted of murder in 1993 and let out 9 years later on parole.

Murder can have special circumstances sometimes. I worked with a guy about 12 years ago who spent 5 years in prison for murder. Apparently he was trying to be drugs one night and the drug dealer tried to rob him so he killed him. Since he was never charged with manslaughter prior to him going to trial because of his refusal to explain the story to the police. He was charged with murder and once the details of the case came out he took a plea bargain.
 

"Here we go again"
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^ I understand what you're saying, but I'd say that's the exception rather than the norm. Either way, I don't like hearing about violent criminals and especially sex offenders and murderers getting out on parole. If you're sentenced to x amount of time for your heinous crime you should serve every day of it.
 

Oh boy!
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Why don't we have violent offender tracking systems like we do for sex offenders? I guess people are more afraid of their kids getting touched or raped than they are in them getting killed.

I asked a lawyer this one time and he said "well murderers rarely get out of prison". Stupid fucker!
 

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Why don't we have violent offender tracking systems like we do for sex offenders? I guess people are more afraid of their kids getting touched or raped than they are in them getting killed.

I asked a lawyer this one time and he said "well murderers rarely get out of prison". Stupid fucker!

I have wondered the samething. I always felt that the sex offender registry is double jeopardy, but since the courts allowed it. Do it for murders.
 

Oh boy!
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I have wondered the samething. I always felt that the sex offender registry is double jeopardy, but since the courts allowed it. Do it for murders.

Just because courts allow it doesn't mean they are following Constitutional law. Just think of the Supreme Court rulings are not always unanimous. This means that people in the highest court in the land will disagree with another honored judge in how the Constitution should be interpreted.

I just did a Google search on sex offender recidivism (return to their crime). This web site says that sex offenders are less likely to re-offend. I'm not vouching for the accuracy of the web site, just that they make that statement:

http://www.csom.org/pubs/mythsfacts.html

It is noteworthy that recidivism rates for sex offenders are lower than for the general criminal population. For example, one study of 108,580 non-sex criminals released from prisons in 11 states in 1983 found that nearly 63% were rearrested for a non-sexual felony or serious misdemeanor within three years of their release from incarceration; 47% were reconvicted; and 41% were ultimately returned to prison or jail (Bureau of Justice Statistics).
 

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The "Sex offender" registries are over 90% people who have never demonstrated predator behavior and/or a one time act of violence (rape usually).

Such registries for offenders who have successfully served their criminal sentencing hampers healthy reintergration into the community at large.

It also delivers a faulty message to the community at large that such offenders are incapable of redemption.
 

Oh boy!
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The "Sex offender" registries are over 90% people who have never demonstrated predator behavior and/or a one time act of violence (rape usually).

Such registries for offenders who have successfully served their criminal sentencing hampers healthy reintergration into the community at large.

It also delivers a faulty message to the community at large that such offenders are incapable of redemption.

I always enjoy your posts regarding the law.

I think it also gives the public a false sense of security that they are safe from sex offenders if their names are posted. Simply knowing someone's address does little to prevent an offender from finding another victim if the offender is so inclined. Perhaps you can tell your children not to go to that house but by no means is it keeping re-offenders from kids.

After all is said and done it smacks to me of the scarlet letter. We read of the adultress in the middle ages who is forced to wear the letter A so she can be identified as an adultress. We do the same thing with offenders. Some communities have also gone as far as labelling vehicles of people who have a DUI record. I guess we are regressing back to the Dark Ages.

:ohno:
 

Honey Badger Don't Give A Shit
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It's even more specious than you describe.

I don't have the precise numbers for past couple years, but I know when we last had a young girl (age 9 or 10) disappear here in central Florida in 2007 and later found murdered by a guy in a trailer park nearby to her home, I researched and found that the number of underage kids reported taken by non-family members each year is less than 400 nationwide. And the number who actually are killed is about half that. The Brucie (2007) girl happened to be the third underage girl taken and killed within about a four year period here in Florida. And only one of the three killers had a previous criminal record that might have qualified him for being on an RSO (registered sex offender).

Horrible tragedies for each and every one.

But hardly the stuff which should motivate well-intentioned parents of young girls (it's almost always girls) from losing sleep wondering if one of the literally hundreds of RSOs within just my county alone (or one of the thousands statewide) will some day or night roll up on their daughter and snatch her away to a horrible death.

See, it's not that (as you wrote) the public "might get a false sense of security that their kid(s) are safe from kidnap or death from an RSO."

It's inverse. The RSO registries cause the public to get a false level of FEAR that something might happen to their kids due to an RSO.

The seemingly well-intentioned public policy response is so irrationally driven that it stimulates a counterproductive state of mind within the portion of the community (parents of adolescents and young teens) who the policy aims to relieve. Rather than thinking, "Law enforcement and appropriate state agencies are doing their best to deal with the tiny portion of our population that might want to harm kids", they too often begin to think, "Holy shit...law enforcement and the social agencies cannot possibly keep up with all these freaks."

Lock up your daughters, Lock up your wives.
 

Rx God
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Not sure how murderers get out on parole in 9 years, I guess to make room for that drug addict. If only the system wasn't hellbent on imprisoning non-violent offenders we could lock up sex offenders, murderers, and extremely violent criminals for life.

Screw that life stuff, just execute them !

No sentence over 5 years, if the crime calls for more than that....kill'em.
 

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