Sent to the Argus' news editor, who can be reached at lucy.pearce@theargus.co.ukDear Lucy
I read with some confusion this unbylined story on the Argus website regarding the "firearms" found by police at a house in Larkfield Way. http://www.theargus.co.uk/news/11328416.display/
The seventh par, by your anonymous reporter, reads as so: "The revolver used to shoot Lee Rigby in London last year was a 1912 Belgian infantry officer’s pistol from the First World War."
Lee Rigby was not shot. As the copy below this BBC graphic (http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-25298580) makes clear, the revolver - an obsolete antique, in law - was not loaded. Moreover, as the trial coverage made abundantly clear at the time, Rigby's murderers carried out their attack with a car, knives and meat cleavers, not the revolver.
This report appears to be based solely on a press release from its sole "interviewee", Professor Peter Squires of Brighton University. I suggest your reporter applies some basic common sense before recycling such press releases, especially those from academics with books to sell and thus a vested interest in "sexing up" the issue of gun crime and making false assertions - as it appears was the intent of Professor Squires' original press release here: http://www.brighton.ac.uk/about-us/news ... -guns.aspx
A quick look at Sussex Police's website reveals this press release (http://www.sussex.police.uk/whats-happe ... n-brighton) which makes it clear that the majority of the guns were deactivated and therefore could not have posed the threat that Professor Squires asserts in his canned quotes. Even a police spokesman could have provided some balance.
I look forward to seeing a prominent correction and apology for publishing a clear untruth as fact, and I trust your reporters (and web subs, if you have any) will be suitably rebriefed.
Regards
Gaz
Cheers for posting this, Ginger. I was quite tempted to go direct to the Press Complaints Commission as this is the sort of thing they love getting their teeth into. Section 1 (accuracy) of the PCC Code of Practice refers, from memory.