Gregory Kielma • December 19, 2025
Gun Show: Voyage to the Bottom of The TOILET…Beware……..

Gun Show: Voyage to the Bottom of The TOILET…Beware……..
The modern gun show is a sensory overload of beef jerky, political bumper stickers, and rows of black rifles, but hidden among the legitimate dealers are traps designed to separate the uninformed from their cash. While many tables offer honest surplus and fair deals, a specific subset of vendors relies on myths, modifications, and flat-out forgeries to inflate prices on otherwise common firearms. Understanding the difference between a rare historical artifact and a garage-cobbled fabrication requires a skeptical eye and a knowledge of specific manufacturing tells. The following list highlights the most pervasive “scams” currently circulating the show circuit, offering the necessary details to spot them before the wallet comes out.
1. The “Mitchell’s Mausers” Trap
For years, ads promised pristine German K98ks stored in salt mines, but these are aggressively refurbished Russian captures. The main giveaway is the bolt; original German bolts were blued, while these are polished bright “in the white” to look new. With sanded, bleached stocks and scrubbed markings, they are overpriced mix-masters sold as collector-grade artifacts rather than shooters.
2. The Mythical “Tanker” Garand
The “Tanker” Garand is a persistent myth; this short-barreled configuration was never standard issue. The U.S. military tested a prototype but rejected it for excessive muzzle blast. The versions found at shows are commercial creations made by welding cut operating rods. These modifications often cause serious timing issues, making them unreliable novelties rather than historical rarities.
3. Fake Nazi-Marked “Capture” Pistols
High prices for Nazi-marked weapons encourage forgers to apply fake eagle stamps to standard commercial pistols. A key tell is the “cold stamp” technique; if the metal inside the stamp looks bright or raw compared to the surrounding bluing, it was applied recently. Forgers also frequently use the wrong inspection codes for the specific make and model; a detail easily checked with a reference guide.
4. The Deadly Khyber Pass Copy
Originating from Pakistan’s Darra Adam Khel region, these handmade copies of British military rifles are often unsafe to fire. Built from soft, unhardened steel, they cannot withstand modern ammunition pressures. Visual giveaways include reversed letters in the stampings or a “V.R.” royal cypher dated after 1901. Selling these ethnographic curiosities as functional surplus is a dangerous scam.
5. “Re-Welded” M1 Garand Receivers
Between the 1960s and 1980s, cut-up receiver scrap was welded back together to build functional rifles. These “rewelds” are structurally suspect and hold a fraction of the value of an uncut receiver. To spot one, examine the receiver legs for discoloration in the (parkerization) or grinding marks. If the drawing number’s heat lot code does not match the serial number date, it is a welded marriage.
6. The “All-Matching” Mosin Nagant
With Soviet surplus, there is a massive difference between factory original and “force-matched” refurbs. During post-war rebuilding, arsenals swapped parts and restamped them to match the barrel. A seller claiming an “all-matching” Mosin is rare; if the font on the bolt differs from the barrel, or the floorplate has a struck-through number, it is a refurbished shooter, not a collector piece.
7. The Counterfeit PU Sniper
Genuine Soviet PU snipers are rare, leading to a flood of fakes created by drilling standard infantry rifles. A real sniper will have the scope’s serial number stamped on the barrel shank. Fakes often feature pristine wood cuts for the mount, whereas authentic stocks show patina or shellac inside the cut. If the mounting screws look like modern hardware store replacements, the rifle is a fabrication.
8. Re-Blued Colt Pythons
Coati077, CC BY-SA 4.0 / Wikimedia Commons with Colt Python prices soaring, dishonest sellers often re-blue worn examples to pass them off as mint originals. A factory finish is legendary for its mirror-like depth, while a re-blue often blurs the stamped lettering. The “rampant colt” logo may look shallow or washed out from buffing. Additionally, the side plate should fit perfectly; a visible gap or rounded edges indicate an aftermarket finish.
9. The “Vietnam Bring-Back” Story
Sellers often price standard SKS or Tokarev pistols at triple value based on unverifiable stories of them being “taken off an officer.” Without the official DD Form 603 capture papers, the firearm is legally just a standard import. Dealers rely on emotional storytelling to close the sale, but the golden rule of collecting applies buy the gun, not the story. Without documentation, the history is worthless.
10. The “Unfired” Commemorative Winchester
In the 1970s, Winchester produced endless “Commemorative Edition” rifles featuring gold plating and medallions. Sold as instant investments, they were made in such high numbers that they possess little collector scarcity today. Sellers often price them high, hoping a buyer mistakes “shiny” for valuable. The gaudy plating makes them poor shooters, and they often sell for less than standard models.
11. No-Name “Custom” AR-15 Builds
Tables covered in “custom” AR-15s with bright anodized parts often hide cheap components behind flashy aesthetics. These builds are frequently assembled from bottom-tier parts and out-of-spec receivers yet carry price tags over $1,200. Unless the seller provides a build sheet listing reputable manufacturers for the barrel and bolt, these are often overpriced “Franken-guns” worth less than an entry-level rifle.

About Edward Bailey: Why We Should Support Edward Bailey for Manatee County Commissioner, District 2
Why We Should Support Edward Bailey for Manatee County Commissioner, District 2

Being Prepared for the 2026 Hurricane Season By Gregory Kielma, Tactical K Training & Firearms The 2026 Hurricane Season is shaping up to be another year where preparation isn’t optional it’s essential. Florida has seen record heat, rising insurance pressures, rapid population growth, and increasingly unpredictable storm behavior. None of that is meant to create fear. It’s meant to reinforce a simple truth: preparedness gives you control, confidence, and options when the weather turns. Whether you’re protecting a home, a business, or a family, the goal is the same build layers of readiness before the first storm forms. Start With Awareness and a Plan Storms don’t give you time to “figure it out later.” Your plan should be written, practiced, and known by everyone in the household or workplace. Key elements of a solid plan: Where will you go if evacuation becomes necessary Multiple routes out of your area A communication plan if cell networks fail A designated out‑of‑state contact A plan for pets, elderly family members, and anyone with medical needs For businesses, include: Who secures the building Who handles digital backups Who communicates closures and reopening A plan removes panic. It replaces it with action. Strengthen Your Home or Business Before the First Storm Florida structures take a beating every year. Small improvements now prevent major losses later. Exterior protection: Inspect your roof for loose shingles or soft spots Clear gutters and drainage paths Trim trees and remove dead limbs Install or test shutters Reinforce garage doors—one of the most common failure points Interior protection: Surge protection for critical electronics Elevate valuables and important documents Know how to shut off water, power, and gas If you own a business, walk your property as if you were a storm: What can break? What can blow away? What can flood? Fix those points now. Build a Realistic, Usable Supply Kit For Your Home or Business A hurricane kit isn’t about stockpiling, it’s about independence. After a major storm, help may take hours or days to reach your area. For homes and families: Water: 1 gallon per person per day (minimum 3–7 days) Non‑perishable food Medications and medical supplies Flashlights, headlamps, and batteries Battery bank for phones First aid kit Copies of important documents Cash in small bills Tools, gloves, tarps, duct tape For businesses: Backup power for essential systems Printed employee contact lists Hard copies of insurance documents A plan for securing inventory and equipment Preparedness isn’t about fear it’s about not being dependent on luck. Protect Your Digital Life In 2026, digital readiness is just as important as physical readiness. Back up important files to the cloud and an external drive Photograph your home, business, and valuables for insurance Store digital copies of IDs, insurance policies, and receipts Keep chargers, power banks, and a small solar panel if possible When the power goes out, your digital preparation keeps you moving. Understand Post‑Storm Safety Most injuries happen after the storm, not during it. Be cautious with: Downed power lines Flooded roads Carbon monoxide from generators Unstable structures Contaminated water If you evacuated, don’t rush home. Wait for official clearance. Your safety comes first. Mindset: Prepared, Not Paranoid Preparedness is a discipline, not a reaction. It’s the same mindset we teach in every Tactical K class awareness, planning, and responsible action. A hurricane is a natural event. Your response is a choice. When you prepare early, you protect: Your family Your property Your business Your peace of mind And you set an example for your community. Kielma’s Parting Shot The 2026 Hurricane Season will bring challenges, just like every season. But Floridians are resilient, and preparation is part of our way of life. Start now. Strengthen your home, your business, and your plan. Build your layers of safety before the first storm forms. If you need help building a plan, creating a checklist, or preparing your family or business, Tactical K Training is here to support you with practical, real‑world guidance.

Convicted Felon Sentenced to 87 Months in Trafficking Nine Firearms, Including to Buyer Who Said He Was ‘At War’ Thursday, April 30, 2026 U.S. Attorney's Office, District of Columbia WASHINGTON - Brandon Smith, 34, a previously convicted felon residing in the District of Columbia, was sentenced today in U.S. District Court to 87 months in prison for conspiring to traffic at least nine firearms to a prohibited buyer over the course of six months, announced U.S. Attorney Jeanine Ferris Pirro. “Brandon Smith was already on supervised probation for a violent felony when he chose to traffic firearms, and he continued even after being told the buyer intended to use them for violence,” said U.S. Attorney Pirro. “Over the course of six months, he arranged the sale of at least nine guns—including one with an obliterated serial number—to a prohibited individual. This was not a momentary lapse in judgment, but a sustained and deliberate effort to arm someone who could not legally possess firearms. My office remains committed to holding accountable those who endanger our communities by trafficking illegal guns.” On Jan. 9, 2026, Smith pleaded guilty before Judge Howell to conspiracy to commit trafficking in firearms. In addition to the 87-month prison term, Judge Howell ordered Smith to serve three years of supervised release. Federal prosecutors had requested a 108-month prison term. According to court papers, beginning in November 2023, ATF opened an investigation after a confidential source reported that Smith, then on supervised probation for a violent felony, was actively advertising firearms for sale by texting photographs of guns to prospective buyers, including individuals with prior felony convictions. During the next six months, Smith sold or arranged the sale of nine firearms to a buyer on six separate occasions. During the transactions, Smith sold his own personal carry firearm on multiple occasions when a supplier failed to deliver, then purchased a replacement for himself afterward. In early January 2024, as Smith and the buyer discussed an upcoming transaction, the buyer told Smith he needed the firearms because he was “at war” after his cousin had been killed. Smith proceeded with the sale. The buyer had also told Smith he was serving a criminal justice sentence at the time of the transactions. Smith acknowledged that he, too, was “on papers.” Smith arranged a total of six transactions from Nov. 30, 2023, through May 30, 2024, resulting in the sale of nine firearms. At least one of the firearms had its serial number obliterated. On Oct. 26, 2024, MPD officers conducted a traffic stop on the 1600 block of 16th Street SE and found Smith in the front passenger seat of a parked vehicle. Officers observed open containers of alcohol and discovered a satchel at his feet. Inside the satchel, in plain view, was a loaded Glock Model 19X 9mm handgun with a round in the chamber and 16 additional rounds in the magazine. The bag also contained a bank card and government-issued identification in Smith’s name. Smith has prior convictions for Simple Assault (2011), Attempted Robbery (2013), and Robbery and Possession of a Firearm during a Crime of Violence (2016), for which he was sentenced to five years in prison. He was serving a term of supervised probation from the 2016 conviction at the time of the firearms trafficking conspiracy. This investigation was conducted by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives Washington Field Office, and the Metropolitan Police Department. The matter was prosecuted by Special Assistant U.S. Attorney Brendan M. Horan. Convicted Felon Sentenced to 87 Months in Trafficking

















