How Guns from N.H. Ended Up in the Hands of the
Indonesian Secret Service
A photo of Feky Sumual on his
Facebook page.
On October 9th, 2015, a man named
Feky Sumual walks into Stateline Guns, Ammo & Archery, a gun shop in
Plaistow, New Hampshire, where he buys seven 9-millimeter handguns.
Because of the number of guns
involved, and because 9-millimeters are common in gun smuggling rings, the
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms begins to investigate.
Listen to the broadcast version of
this story. https://cpa.ds.npr.org/nhpr/audio/2017/11/ind_guns_web.mp3
[Editor's note: we highly recommend
you listen to the audio of this story.]
Agents stake out the Dover
address Feky Sumual provided on the purchase forms, but for
weeks, he doesn’t show up at the apartment.
“And while that surveillance was
going on, we got a bit of a break in the case,” says William Morse, an
assistant United States Attorney in Concord, New Hampshire.
“A woman walked into the Dover
Police Station, and reported some information about Sumual.”
The woman who walked into the Dover
Police Station on November 11th, 2015, was Feky Sumual’s wife, Tuti Budiman.
The information Budiman wanted to share with the police was for who exactly her
husband was buying those handguns.
“And the information that she told
the Dover Police was that her husband was buying guns for
By Richard Monteith
_____________________________________________________________________
members of the
Indonesian secret service.”