Thursday, September 12, 2024

Antique Pistols Stolen from Australian Firearms Museum

On Sunday, August 25, 2024, thieves broke into the Lithgow Small Arms Factory Museum, in Lithgown, Australia. They broke into display cases and stole 27 antique and collectable firearms.  The police have recovered 13 of the 27 firearms which were stolen.

From Police.nsw.gov.au/news:

Drug and Firearms Squad detectives with assistance from Chifley and South Coast Police Districts have charged three men for their roles in the alleged theft of 27 guns during a break and enter of a Lithgow Museum last week.

Police were called to the Lithgow Small Arms Factory Museum on Methven Street, Lithgow, about 3.30am on Sunday 25 August 2024, following reports of a break and enter.

Officers attached to Chifley Police District arrived and were told three people broke into the museum and stole a number of high-value firearms before leaving in a silver Toyota Landcruiser….

Detectives were told the handguns – which are worth more than $200,000 – could be made operational.

The Lithgow Museum is the premier firearms museum in Australia. This correspondent spent a day and a half their five years ago. The staff was wonderful. The museum extremely well done, one of the best of its kind in the world. Here is a video tour of Lithgow Museum in Australia. Unfortunately, it shows only a few highlights. The Ron Hays room is show starting at 38:00 minutes.

I took a couple hundred pictures while I was at the museum. From my photos, it appears the theft took place in the Ron Hayes Room.

Ron Hayes Room Lithgow Museum
Ron Hayes Room Lithgow Museum

If you watch carefully, the semi-circular display of Lee-Enfield rifles is briefly seen in the surveillance video, in the upper right hand corner of the image.

The semi-circular display of Lee-Enfield rifles in the Ron Hayes Room is briefly seen in the surveillance video, in the upper right hand corner of the image, against the back wall.

This correspondent took pictures that show the two display cases that were broken into.

Left of the entryway, the vertical case closest to the wall

Left of the entryway, the vertical case closest to the wall was broken into. There are several single-shot pistols shown in it, including the 1875 J. Stevens break-open target pistol. It is on the far left, the second glass shelf from the floor. The Remington XP-100 is on the left top shelf.

To the right of the entryway, the vertical case closest to the entryway was broken into

To the right of the entryway, the vertical case closest to the entryway was broken into. Several revolvers and semi-auto pistols are shown in it. A Colt Python appears to be on the far left, on the second glass shelf from the bottom.

An Australian dollar is currently worth about 2/3 of a U.S. dollar. The 27 firearms were valued at about 134,000 U.S. dollars. Most of them are antiques or rare, such as a Remington XP-100 in (as I recall) an unusual caliber or a J. Stevens single shot break-open target pistol in .22 rimfire, made in 1875. These guns are worth a lot to collectors but have little value as a fenced stolen gun. They generally have parts removed to render them non-functional. While parts can be made and replaced, the time and effort might be considerable.  Functional factory pistols, I was told, fetch about $3,000 to $5,000 on the Australian black market.

This was a nasty smash-and-grab job. The thieves used a stolen car, which they then burned. They moved quickly, because of alarms at the museum. While there are many millions of dollars of rare and collectible firearms at the museum, they only took 27 more or less mid-range handguns.

Some of the guns at the museum, in the Ron Hayes room, are likely worth close to a million Australian dollars. Truly rare and collectible guns would be very difficult to fence, much like trying to fence a Rembrandt painting.

The thieves wore masks and gloves. They used a stolen vehicle, which they burned. In my experience, the thieves were probably burned (ratted out, informed on) by associates or “friends” because they talked too much, and the goods they had stolen were too famous.

It is unfortunate but plausible that the anti-freedom forces in Australia will use this break-in to tighten the already extreme regulation of Australian arms museums.

If you visit Australia, this correspondent highly recommends you visit the Lithgow Small Arms Factory Museum. The staff is marvelous, the exhibits are wonderful, and the history is fascinating. It is a treasure of Western civilization.


About Dean Weingarten:

Dean Weingarten has been a peace officer, a military officer, was on the University of Wisconsin Pistol Team for four years, and was first certified to teach firearms safety in 1973. He taught the Arizona concealed carry course for fifteen years until the goal of Constitutional Carry was attained. He has degrees in meteorology and mining engineering, and retired from the Department of Defense after a 30 year career in Army Research, Development, Testing, and Evaluation.

Dean Weingarten



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