Sunday, May 5, 2024

Netherlands Update: Hans Teeuwen “Pistol” Was An Air Gun, As We Predicted…

Dutch Comedian Teeuwen with wig, flower, and object on table.

Link to video of arrival of the police and the original comedy skit.

On March 12, 2024, Dutch absurdist comedian Hans Teeuwen posted a video mocking the mayor of Amsterdam, Femke Halsema.  As part of the video, a vaguely pistol-looking object was on a table, at the edge of the screen, next to him.

Three hours later, the police were at his door. The came in and confiscated the object, which was still on the table. AmmoLand covered the story. In the AmmoLand article, this correspondent noted the object was most likely a Webley air pistol.

Coverage of the incident continues in the Netherlands. Nos.nl confirms the object was an air pistol. From nos.nl as translated by deepl.com:

Amsterdam police stopped by the home of comedian Hans Teeuwen to take an air pistol. Teeuwen had used the weapon for a persiflage (bantering) film of Amsterdam mayor Femke Halsema. The air pistol, which bears resemblance to a real gun, appears to be a reference to the firearms affair involving her ex-husband Robert Oey and their son.

Air pistols are legal and for sale in the Netherlands.It appears a person has to be 18 years old to purchase one. Replicas of real firearms are much more highly regulated. Some of the air pistols for sale in shops in the Netherlands appear to look more like an actual firearm than the old Webley design.  It may take a court case to determine if the old Webley design too closely resembles an actual firearm to be legal in the Netherlands. Hans Teeuwen indicated he did not expect the case to drag out over a long period. From nos.nl:

According to him, it was an old gun, which he says he doesn’t even remember how it works. “So this was a parody of the case about banned gun ownership that was going on around the mayor, and two hours later the police are on the sidewalk. That’s incredibly stupid. Especially after Sunday,” said Teeuwen, referring to the opening of the Holocaust Museum in Amsterdam, which was partially disrupted by shouting and yelling protesters. Halsema received both criticism and acclaim after that demonstration.

This correspondent is not certain the case will be handled quickly in favor of Teeuwen. Weapons bans tend to become stricter and stricter over time. It seems governments who ban the common ownership of weapons by their subjects often do not like for them to think positively about weapons ownership.  Consider the mindset of government officials who believe the mere ownership of something that looks like a gun should be forbidden, or at least very highly regulated.

This is a Webley Tempest air pistol that I own. When placed at a similar angle, the resemblance to the object on Hans Teeuwen's table is remarkable.
This is an image of a Webley air pistol from the author’s collection. Notice the distinctive rear sight on the object close to Teeuwen.

This is not about controlling weapons. It is about controlling thoughts. Good luck to Hans Teeuwen in his upcoming court case. Perhaps the judge will throw it out based on a simple reading of the law.

A message has been sent. Mock the Mayor, and police may show up on your doorstep in a few hours.


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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