Patriotic Counter-Protesters Are Out in Force This Weekend
Canada PM Justin Trudeau Somehow Managed to Out-Cringe Biden on Star Wars Day
Columbia Professor Cancels Final Exam, Gives Everyone an A for the Course
Fan of October 7 Attack Elected to Public Office in Britain
LOL: J.B. Pritzker's 'May the Fourth' Post Made Millions of Voices Suddenly Cry...
'60 Minutes' Features Two High School Seniors Who Solved 'Impossible' Mathematical Puzzle
Identity of Biden Fanboy on Election Panel Exposed and It Explains Everything
President Biden Awards Presidential Medal of Freedom to Greatest Speaker in History
Twitter Tries to Get to the Bottom of Biden's Walk with Some Solid...
ASU Students Arrested During Protests Won't Be Able to Finish Final Exams
Just for Fun: Some of the Best Tweets Leading Up to the 'Kentucky...
Student Protesters Trash Car That ‘Targeted’ Them; ‘This Wasn’t an Accident’
Protestors Compare Campus Riots to 1968 Movement but Americans Aren't Buying It
Covington 2.0? The Hill Says GOP Rep. Applauds Counter-Protesters Who Taunted Black Woman
Almost Snakes on a Plane? Miami TSSSsssSSSA Snags a Bag of Snakes From...

That Holland Tunnel gun bust was drug related, but not how you think it was

As Twitchy reported Tuesday morning, authorities stopped a vehicle with a cracked windshield on its way through the Holland Tunnel and found a cache of weapons, including a pump action shotgun, an SAR-98 assault rifle, four 9mm pistols, a .45-caliber handgun, tactical and night vision goggles, and body armor.

Advertisement

Terrorism was ruled out reasonably quickly, and ABC News reported that the guns were believed related to criminal activity, “likely heroin related.”

That’s true in a way. Tony Aiello of CBS New York relayed the back story via Twitter Tuesday night, and he describes the arrest as a misguided vigilante mission gone wrong.

It might not have been the smartest idea, but John Cramsey of Pennsylvania and two others were on a rescue mission of sorts.

CBS New York reports that the suspects claimed they were on their way through the city to rescue a friend who was being held hostage by a drug dealer.

Cramsey’s 20-year-old daughter, Alexandria, died from a heroin overdose four months ago Tuesday and he has since attended town hall meetings around the Allentown area to voice his concerns over the drug epidemic, The Morning Call newspaper in Allentown, Pennsylvania, reported.

Friends of Cramsey’s told CBS2’s Aiello he feels tremendous guilt and began an “enough is enough” campaign. He also put decals on his truck reading, “Shoot your local heroin dealer.”

“Ever since his daughter died, I think it was one of those things where he wishes he could have done something to save her, and now that she’s gone, he feels this guilt in his heart that he needs to help other people,” [friend Michael] Nickisher told Aiello in a phone interview.

Advertisement

However, gun laws are gun laws, regardless of intent. Nickisher said Cramsey, as a gun dealer, was aware of the law in New York and New Jersey but “has not been thinking straight since his daughter died.”

On the plus side, a police source told CBS New York that the girl the group was looking to extricate was found in Brooklyn and was taken into police custody.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Twitchy Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement