Times Chronicle & Public Spirit

Ex-correction­al officer to face trial for gun traffickin­g

- By Carl Hessler Jr. chessler@pottsmerc.com

NORRISTOWN » A Bucks County woman, a former Philadelph­ia correction­al officer, must answer to charges in Montgomery County Court that she illegally purchased and transferre­d multiple firearms while using so-called “straw purchase” schemes in Montgomery County.

Amanda L. Barr, 37, of the 2500 block of Kay Avenue, Trevose, was held for trial, after a recent preliminar­y hearing before District Court Judge Cathleen Kelly Rebar, on charges of unlawful sale or transfer of firearms, dealing in proceeds of unlawful activities and unsworn falsificat­ion to authoritie­s in connection with multiple incidents, some of which allegedly occurred during gun shows held at the Greater Philadelph­ia Expo Center in Oaks, Upper Providence, beginning in January 2018.

Barr, who remains free on $500,000 unsecured bail, waived her May 18 formal arraignmen­t hearing on the charges in county court and a trial date will now be set by a judge.

The investigat­ion by the Montgomery County Detective Bureau’s Violent Crime Unit and multiple federal, state and local partners into Barr’s gun traffickin­g activity began after two of the firearms she purchased were found in the possession of individual­s who, due to previous felony conviction­s, were unable to legally purchase or carry firearms, which is indicative of straw purchasing, detectives alleged in court papers.

A “straw purchase” occurs when a person with a clean background purchases firearms specifical­ly on behalf of another person to conceal the true ownership of the firearm. Persons who are unable to legally purchase a firearm would include convicted felons, domestic violence offenders, juveniles and mentally ill individual­s.

Detectives investigat­ed Barr’s firearms by reviewing copies of federal and state purchasing forms at gun stores. The investigat­ion found that from January 2018 to March 2019 Barr purchased seven firearms, according to the criminal complaint. The guns included 9mm and .40-caliber semiautoma­tic handguns, detectives alleged.

Six of the seven firearms were purchased at gun shows at the Greater Philadelph­ia Expo Center in Oaks. Barr, authoritie­s alleged, reported two of the firearms she purchased as stolen two weeks after their purchase in February 2018, but the other five were no longer in her possession.

On Nov. 23, 2021, agents from federal Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives interviewe­d Barr, who at the time was employed as a correction­s officer in Philadelph­ia, about her firearms purchases and recovery of two of those guns in the hands of persons not to possess a firearm, according to court documents.

“Although she claimed she legally sold the firearms she was unable to produce any of the paperwork generated from a legal transfer of a firearm,” detectives alleged.

Detectives ultimately determined that Barr utilized a social media platform to advertise and illegally sell five of the seven firearms at prices ranging between $500 and $600, according to the arrest affidavit.

“Barr and the prospectiv­e buyer would communicat­e via the social media platform and then meet for the illegal firearms transfer,” detectives alleged.

Following the interview with the ATF, Barr resigned her position as a correction­al officer, according to authoritie­s.

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Amanda Barr

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