What A Joke! FedEx Driver Sentenced For Stealing Selling Firearms

SPREAD THE WORD

BA WORRIED ABOUT 5G FB BANNER 728X90


Summary

➡ A FedEx driver in Massachusetts was given a six-day jail sentence after admitting to stealing three guns from packages he was supposed to deliver and trying to sell them to an undercover cop. The government had suggested a ten-month sentence, but the judge decided on a shorter punishment. The driver, who could have faced up to 30 years in prison and a large fine, will also have to do 250 hours of community service. The author of the article believes this is an example of being too lenient on criminals.

Transcript

A FedEx driver has been sentenced to six whole days in prison after pleading guilty to stealing three firearms from out of state packages he was supposed to deliver and attempting to sell those to an undercover police officer in two controlled buys. Let’s talk about this, because you I would get probably 30 years for this. Before I jump into it, I want to thank the sponsor of the video blackout coffee.

You can save 20% right now, store wide with our code blackout love. It’s our Valentine’s Day sale. It is waking me up right now because it’s rainy and cold and I’m dragging and it can do that for you, too. We have coffees, teas, hot chocolates, swag shirts, coffee cups, tumblers, everything. 20% off with code blackout love won’t last long. Jump on it now. Blackoutcoffee. com gng First, I’m going to start out by reading the, I guess, the victory lap of a press release by the Department of Justice on this.

And then we’re going to come back and talk about real talk. Here’s a press release from the US attorney’s office, and this is from the District of Massachusetts where this guy was a driver. It says a Middleborough, Massachusetts man was sentenced to six days in prison for stealing and selling three firearms from FedEx packages he was responsible for delivering. The government recommended a sentence of ten months in prison.

Go soft on criminals, baby. Massachusetts, the blue swamp Frank P. O. Toole, 40 years old, was sentenced on February 2, 2024, by US district Court Judge Angel Kelly to time served, six days and three years of supervised release, during which period he must complete 250 hours of community service. On June 16, at 23, O’Toole pleaded guilty to two counts of possession or sale of a stolen firearm. O’Toole previously worked as a FedEx delivery truck driver in the facility in Middleborough, Massachusetts.

Between October 21 and June of 22, O’Toole stole three packages sent from out of state, which he was responsible for delivering, each containing a firearm, specifically two rifles and a shotgun intended for a federal firearms licensee. O’Toole subsequently sold the three firearms to an undercover agent during two separate control purchases on August 9 of 22 and August twelveth of 22. Acting us attorney Joshua Levy. Blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.

Okay, so let’s delve into this soft on crime approach that I’m talking about here. He pleaded guilty, he stole three firearms. Pleaded guilty to two of them. So, hey, we’ll make a deal with you, bucko. We got you dead to rights, but we’ll go easy on you. All right, now, the charge of possession of a stolen firearm carries a maximum of ten years in prison for each violation and a fine of up to $250,000 per.

So he was looking at 30 years and three quarters of a million dollar fine. If you or I did it, that’s probably what we would be facing. But it’s Massachusetts. We go easy on criminals. Well, they do. I don’t live there anymore. They go easy on criminals. So rather than to put the people away who do the crime, they go easy on them. Six days. Six whole days in prison he was sentenced to.

That’s what’s wrong. That’s part of the problem with this country. We go soft on criminals because of feelings. Maybe. I don’t know. Maybe he was the judge’s FedEx driver. I don’t know. But I’m glad they caught the cat. I’m glad he’s being kind of held responsible. I mean, it’s a really light slap on the wrist. I’m sure if Jared of guns and gadgets was in possession of three stolen firearms, then I would be looking at 30 years and three quarters of a million dollars without a break yet.

Massachusetts, go easy on them criminals. California, go easy. New York, go easy on them. Don’t hold them accountable. Don’t hold them responsible. That’s the voting base. Just want to let you know, because I’ve been reporting on this case for the entire time, including the video floating above of when he got locked up. And I want to thank you all for being friends of the channel. If you love coffee as much as I do, check us out@blackoutcoffee.

com. Gng and save 20% storewide with code. Blackout love. Thank you all. I’m going to go now. I need this. .

See more of Guns & Gadgets 2nd Amendment News on their Public Channel and the MPN Guns & Gadgets 2nd Amendment News channel.

Author

Sign Up Below To Get Daily Patriot Updates & Connect With Patriots From Around The Globe

Let Us Unite As A  Patriots Network!

By clicking "Sign Me Up," you agree to receive emails from My Patriots Network about our updates, community, and sponsors. You can unsubscribe anytime. Read our Privacy Policy.

BA WORRIED ABOUT 5G FB BANNER 728X90

SPREAD THE WORD

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

How To Turn Your Savings Into Gold!

* Clicking the button will open a new tab

FREE Guide Reveals

Get Our

Patriot Updates

Delivered To Your

Inbox Daily

  • Real Patriot News 
  • Getting Off The Grid
  • Natural Remedies & More!

Enter your email below:

By clicking "Subscribe Free Now," you agree to receive emails from My Patriots Network about our updates, community, and sponsors. You can unsubscribe anytime. Read our Privacy Policy.

15585

Want To Get The NEWEST Updates First?

Subscribe now to receive updates and exclusive content—enter your email below... it's free!

By clicking "Subscribe Free Now," you agree to receive emails from My Patriots Network about our updates, community, and sponsors. You can unsubscribe anytime. Read our Privacy Policy.