The Gang That Couldn't Shoot Straight

Summary


"I was just looking for an alternative way to meet people," he says. "I don't like the whole 'gay scene.'"

"Criminals are like wolves," [Andrew Greene] says. "They don't want to fight. They want to find people who won't fight back. Traditionally, that's been the gays, lesbians, bisexuals and transgendered."

"It's really scary, but if Lucas would've been armed, the outcome probably wouldn't have changed," Greene says. "But his attackers might have thought twice in the first place."

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Extract


The Gang That Couldn't Shoot Straight

Elderly ladies in prim tan suits and buttoned-up white blouses chat at a nearby table as children squeal and laugh in the adjacent booth. Attractive young waitstaff in maroon shirts and khaki pants stand around flirting with each other tittering, and posturing, because this Huntington Valley restaurant isn't all that full on this cold afternoon.

Off to the side at Calloway's-a typical family-oriented restaurant and sports bar with lots of neon beer signs wood paneling, vinyl tablecloths, video games and basketball games on big-screen TVs-an eclectic group of looking people gleefully talk about guns.

"I brought the Uzi along," says Andrew Greene, a 36-years-old self-proclaimed computer geek, former firearms dealer and Libertarian Jew from New York who now resides in Bridesburg.

Greene is a short, stout man with a large head covered in thick, dark hair. His beard covers must of his face. Wearing his glasses, he bears a slight resemblance to Jerry ...

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