Man with automatic weapon arrested after burst of gunfire on Bowdoin Street in Dorchester, police say
A Dorchester man faces a variety of gun charges - including possession of a machine gun - after he led BPD gang-unit officers and state troopers on a foot chase Tuesday evening, police say.
Police say that gang-unit officers and troopers were on patrol on Bowdoin Street near Hamilton Street around 6 pm. when they heard what sounded like "rapid shots being fired from a machine gun" and smelled gunshot residue. They then spotted "multiple spent shell casings in the middle of the roadway."
As Officers were establishing a crime scene, additional 911 calls and witnesses provided Officers with a description of a possible suspect and the exact direction he was fleeing towards. With this new information, Officers expanded their search and located a possible suspect at 16 Olney St.
Upon seeing Officers, the suspect immediately fled into the rear of 16 Olney St, scaled a fence, and began running towards Bowdoin St. and Topliff St. Officers began a foot pursuit and apprehended the suspect on Bowdoin St. Officers recovered a firearm that had fallen onto the ground from the suspects waistband when they were placing him in custody.
District C-11 Detectives responded and the firearm was determined to be a black Glock 23 .40 Caliber with an extended magazine capable of holding twenty-two rounds of ammunition. A Syr-switch which converts a semi-automatic handgun into a fully automatic machine gun was also attached to the firearm.
John Rodrigues Carvalho, 20, of Dorchester, was charged with illegal possession of a firearm, possession of a machine gun, possession of a large-capacity feeding device and trespassing, police say.
Innocent, etc.
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Hasn't he ever seen The Friends of Eddie Coyle?
If he did, he would have known that those guilty of illegal possession of a machine gun in Massachusetts can get up to a life sentence in prison.
He'll probably beat the machine gun charge..
He'll probably beat the machine gun charge if his lawyer is savvy enough to cite the recent United States Supreme Court ruling which stated that a Bump Stock on a semi-automatic weapon (A Bump Stock on an AR15 serves the same function as a Syr-Switch on a handgun) does not meet the statutory definition of a “machinegun”.