Current:Home > ContactPhiladelphia Sheriff’s Office can’t account for nearly 200 guns, city comptroller finds -FutureFinance
Philadelphia Sheriff’s Office can’t account for nearly 200 guns, city comptroller finds
View
Date:2025-04-19 09:31:18
PHILADELPHIA (AP) — The Philadelphia Sheriff’s Office can’t account for 185 missing guns, according to a report released this week by the city controller’s office.
Some of the missing guns were part of the sheriff’s office’s arsenal and others were confiscated from people subject to protection-from-abuse orders.
Acting City Controller Charles Edacheril said his office conducted the review as a follow-up to a 2020 report that found the sheriff’s office couldn’t account for more than 200 weapons. That report stated that the office had haphazard recordkeeping practices and unclear procedures regarding the handling of guns.
Sheriff Rochelle Bilal, who took office in 2020, said earlier this year that all but 20 of the weapons cited in the 2020 report had since been accounted for. They had been located, disposed of or sold.
The controller, though, notified the sheriff’s office on Wednesday that there wasn’t sufficient evidence to account for 76 of its guns and 109 weapons that were surrendered to the office.
For example, 46 guns that were reported as “found” had supposedly been traded or burned. However, the only documentation offered for 36 of them was they were on a list of weapons in a folder labeled “Weapons Burn List” that did not include details such as when or where they were disposed of, the report stated.
The controller still considers the 185 guns unaccounted for and recommended that the office report them to police as missing.
Bilal did not comment on the controller’s report, but she said she planned to address the matter at a news conference Thursday.
veryGood! (29)
Related
- In ‘Nickel Boys,’ striving for a new way to see
- 'Yellowstone' First Look Week: Kayce and Monica Dutton survive into Season 5 second half
- New Hampshire resident dies after testing positive for mosquito-borne encephalitis virus
- 'I was trying to survive': Yale Fertility Center patients say signs of neglect were there all along
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- Mariah Carey’s mother and sister died on the same day. The singer says her ‘heart is broken’
- Carrie Underwood Breaks Silence on Replacing Katy Perry on American Idol 20 Years After Win
- How to watch the 'Men Tell All' episode of 'The Bachelorette'
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- Fake online reviews and testimonials are a headache for small businesses. They hope the FTC can help
Ranking
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Montana doctor overprescribed meds and overbilled health care to pad his income, prosecutors say
- US Open Day 1: What you missed as 2024's final Grand Slam begins
- Fake online reviews and testimonials are a headache for small businesses. They hope the FTC can help
- Why members of two of EPA's influential science advisory committees were let go
- Philadelphia airport celebrates its brigade of stress-busting therapy dogs
- Fanatics amends lawsuit against Marvin Harrison Jr. to include Harrison Sr.
- Lowe’s changes some DEI policies amid legal attacks on diversity programs and activist pressure
Recommendation
Realtor group picks top 10 housing hot spots for 2025: Did your city make the list?
State trooper among 11 arrested in sex sting
Spider-Man's Marisa Tomei Shares Sweet Part of Zendaya and Tom Holland Romance
Why Garcelle Beauvais' Son Jax Will Not Appear on Real Housewives of Beverly Hills Season 14
Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
Feds say Army soldier used AI to create child sex abuse images
No. 1 Swiatek shakes off tough test, Naomi Osaka wins impressively in her return to the US Open
Second Romanian gymnast continuing to fight for bronze medal in Olympic floor final