Chattanooga Times Free Press

Did suspect’s father violate gun laws?

- BY DAVE BOUCHER USA TODAY NETWORK-TENNESSEE

By the time Illinois law enforcemen­t showed up in August 2017 at the Reinking family business, then-28-year-old Travis Reinking already had been arrested outside the White House and previously threatened people with an AR-15 rifle.

The Tazewell County Sheriff’s Office went to the crane company owned by Reinking’s father, Jeffrey Reinking, to talk with Travis and take away his guns.

They took the guns from Travis, but immediatel­y gave them to Reinking’s father, according to records.

“[The father] was advised that he needed to keep the weapons secure and away from Travis. [The father] stated he would comply,” reads a report from the sheriff’s office.

One of those guns was used to kill four people Sunday at an Antioch Waffle House, according to Nashville police and federal officials.

How Reinking managed to reacquire weapons after Illinois law enforcemen­t determined he was not legally allowed to possess any is being investigat­ed.

During a news conference Monday, an agent with the ATF said Reinking’s father may have violated federal law by giving the weapons back to his son.

“It is possible. If you transfer weapons knowingly to a person that is prohibited, that could potentiall­y be a violation of federal law,” said Marcus Watson, acting special agent in charge with the ATF in Tennessee.

But a review of Illinois and Tennessee state law shows it’s likely Travis Reinking and his father did not violate any state firearms laws before Travis Reinking opened fire early Sunday.

“Given the informatio­n provided at this stage in the investigat­ion about the weapons

Reinking may have had in his possession, there is nothing in the record that would have given law enforcemen­t officers an indication that possession of those weapons would be in violation of Tennessee law,” said the Tennessee Bureau of Investigat­ion in a statement Monday.

During a Sunday news conference, Nashville police Chief Steve Anderson said it was “concerning” but potentiall­y not illegal for Reinking to have guns in Tennessee before the shooting.

“[The weapons] would not have been lawfully in his hands in Illinois. Now, possessing them in Tennessee, I don’t know that he would have violated any Tennessee law,” Anderson said.

The Illinois State Police did not respond to requests for informatio­n.

Until August 2017, Reinking was allowed to own guns in Illinois.

To own guns in Illinois, most people need to acquire a firearm owner’s identifica­tion card. That is different from a license to carry a concealed weapon in the state.

There are few barriers to eligibilit­y for an owner’s card, according to state law.

Applicants must:

› Be 21 years old, or have the written consent of a parent who already has an authorizat­ion card;

› Have no felony conviction­s;

› Not be addicted to narcotics;

› Not have been a patient in a mental health facility within the past five years;

› Not have any orders of protection filed against them.

Records indicate Travis Reinking had a valid firearm owner’s identifica­tion card as of August 2017, which would have expired in 2020. When law enforcemen­t came to his father’s business, they had a revocation order from the Illinois state police, records show.

Travis Reinking gave the sheriff’s deputies his owner’s card and helped collect his weapons and ammunition.

A state police firearm dispositio­n record shows Travis Reinking surrendere­d four weapons: the AR-15, a 9mm handgun and two hunting rifles.

While the form states the weapons were being revoked, it also includes a listing for the name and address of a person to whom the firearms will be transferre­d.

Reinking’s father, who has a valid owner’s card, is listed as the person who received the weapons.

Law enforcemen­t believe Reinking’s father returned the weapons to Reinking. Tazewell County Sheriff Robert M. Huston said Sunday his office has no informatio­n as to when Reinking obtained his weapons after August 2017.

Under Illinois law, no one may give away a weapon to anyone who does not have a valid owner’s card. However, there’s an exemption if the transfer is a “bona fide gift” to a relative, according to state law.

Tennessee law bans anyone obtaining a concealed carry permit if they “have been adjudicate­d as mental defective.” But Reinking never went through judicial proceeding­s after any of the interactio­ns he had with police, and a concealed carry permit is not required for someone to own a weapon in Tennessee.

Representa­tives from the Tennessee Bureau of Investigat­ion, Tennessee Highway Patrol and the Tennessee attorney general did not immediatel­y answer questions about the legality of Reinking having guns in Tennessee.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Nashville police gather alongside a wooded area Sunday as they search for a shooting suspect near a Waffle House restaurant. Four people died after a gunman opened fire at the restaurant early Sunday.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Nashville police gather alongside a wooded area Sunday as they search for a shooting suspect near a Waffle House restaurant. Four people died after a gunman opened fire at the restaurant early Sunday.

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