Plots With Guns

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Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., in the Capitol in Washington, Wednesday, Jan. 13, 2021. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh) CCSD’s Jara delivers State of Schools address Strike Force concludes work to clear Nevada unemployment claim logjam 12 newcomers join 2021 Nevada Legislature Legislature convenes with near-empty building, full agenda WASHINGTON — Nevada Rep. Dina Titus on Friday called for the expulsion of Georgia Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene, after a video surfaced of her claiming the Oct. 1, 2017 mass shooting in Las Vegas was part of a plot to get Republicans to give up their guns. Titus has sponsored a short resolution calling on the House to expel Greene under Article I, Section 5 of the Constitution. The House would have to muster a two-thirds vote, or 290 members, to remove Greene. “Congresswoman Greene has encouraged executing politicians who disagree with her,” Titus said in a statement. “Her presence on the House floor is a legitimate security concern. She made the deranged allegation that 1 October – the darkest day in our city’s history – was a government plot. The victims’ families, the survivors, and our first responders deserve far better than having that vile ignorance spewed in the halls of Congress. She has openly embraced similarly disgraceful conspiracy theories about September 11th and the Parkland school shooting. Greene, a Republican, made her comments in a video in which she identifies herself as being with an organization called American Truth Seekers . It’s not clear when the video was made. Speaker […]

Click here to view original web page at Lawmaker: Las Vegas shooting part of anti-gun plot

  1. Frank says: 'Plots With Guns is my home, stories in Thuglit, Darkest Before the Dawn, Hardboiled, Beat to a Pulp, Pulp Pusher and The Talking River Review. At work on a novel. At work on a novel. Also, 'Flesh Rule' is for you Anthony Neil Smith.
  2. Online magazine of short mystery fiction. All stories feature guns.

Employees at the bank asked the Kannapolis Police Department to tow the van. Investigators found items such as $509,000 in cash, six more guns, books about making bombs and improvised weapons,. PLOTS WITH GUNS A Noir Anthology. Edited by Anthony Neil Smith (Tucson, Arizona): Dennis McMillan, 2005. First edition, first printing. Fine in full brown cloth with gilt spine stamping; in a fine, photo-illustrated dust jacket. He put down the gun long enough to pick up the Business section, which he used to read first thing every day. Back when he was a stockbroker with Pedrone Financial Group, before he was fired, thanks to Cecil Albany. Bill had pegged Albany as trouble the day the man walked into the firm promising to lead the company to new heights.

Plots With Guns

Plots With Guns Magazine

From Publishers Weekly
The short-lived e-zine from which this anthology takes its title specialized in firearm-fueled crime fiction. Smith has culled 24 of its best, and though a few seem stray shots, most hit their targets as bulls-eyes. Eddie Muller’s “Wanda Wilcox Is Trapped” is a steamy slice of period Hollywood sleaze in which a gun factors into a declining starlet’s rendezvous with her tawdry fate. In Jim Nisbet’s “Brian’s Story,” a pistol concealed in a car serves as a touchstone for a beautifully narrated memory tale of a white-trash kid’s revenge against the pusher who sold his older brother a fatal dose of heroin. The contemplative approach of these stories is counterbalanced by Kevin James Miller’s “Stealing Klatzman’s Diary,” a morbidly amusing caper with a Shakespearean body count in which two small-time thieves play crime kingpins and federal investigators against one another. Deceptively simple tales in which the gunplay is just part of a larger moral drama include Robert Skinner’s “Spanish Luck” and Sean Doolittle’s “Worth.” At their best, these stories demonstrate the breadth and creative reach of the modern hard-boiled tale.