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‘Weird cultural’ significance: Expert says veterinary pistol may have killed insurance CEO

Investigators are exploring the possibility that a pistol used by veterinarians to put down sick or wounded animals was also the assassin’s weapon used to gun down UnitedHealthcare’s CEO early Wednesday.

Aside from being “practically silent,” the B&T VP9 also carries with it cultural significance, according to John Miller, CNN’s chief law enforcement and intelligence analyst.

“It’s a 9 mm round and it's meant for close-up killing,” Miller said on Friday. “It's meant for vets to kill an animal by shooting it in the head or somewhere, you know, that's going to be fatal. But it would work the exact same way on humans very effectively and extraordinarily quietly.”

Miller revealed that New York police sought out a firearms expert who examined the video evidence of the crime and raised the prospect of what the weapon, which also has a unique way of firing, could be.

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“Now, as you see it has this large extended silencer that is screwed onto a threaded rather short barrel,” Miller told CNN’s Anderson Cooper. “But the way the gun works is you fire it with that trigger and then it doesn't automatically load the next round, you have to pull back on the rear of that slide and then let it go to eject one round and feed the next in.”

The analyst said the surveillance video being pored over by investigators – and the country, stunned by the brazen killing of insurance executive Brian Thompson – shows the gunman doing just that. But he added that only so much could be gleaned from the “blurry shot” of the video.

“It may be another weapon, even a ghost gun with a large suppressor or silencer,” he said. Miller then noted the “weird cultural thing” involving the weapon.

“You wouldn't be committing a professional murder with a veterinary gun, but this gun is based on the design of something called the “Welrod,” Miller said. “And even going back to the British and the allied forces in World War II in the 1940s, the “Welrod” was the assassin's weapon. When you fire it with that suppressor, you get a sound like a book hitting a table in a library.”

Watch the clip at this link.

Arkansas Families Blame Fracking for 'Thousands of Quakes'

LITTLE ROCK (CN) - Fracking by Chesapeake oil and Billiton Petroleum caused "thousands of earthquakes" that damaged homes and caused the state's largest earthquake in the past 35 years, two Central Arkansas families claim in court.

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Lawsuit: Ark. Cop Chased and Tased Woman After She Refused to Show Him Her Breasts

LITTLE ROCK (CN) - A city cop in Arkansas chased a woman through her workplace, shooting a Taser at her, because she refused to show him her breasts, the woman claims in court.
     Ashlea Bennett sued the City of Haskell, Ark. and its police Officer Brandon Carter, in Federal Court.
     She claims Carter "demanded that she expose her breasts to him" after he entered her workplace while on duty and wearing his uniform.
     "Carter's demands to the Plaintiff to expose herself to him occurred multiple times," she says in the lawsuit.
     It continues: "That the Plaintiff refused to show her breasts to Carter.
     "That, upon her refusal, Carter drew his City of Haskell-issued electroshock Taser weapon from his utility belt, pointed the weapon at plaintiff, and threatened to deploy the same against her if she would not expose her breasts to him.
     "That, upon seeing the threat of unlawful force, the plaintiff took physical flight and ran from Carter."
     Officer Carter then "proceeded to physically chase the plaintiff through her place of employment," the complaint states.
     It continues: "That, while chasing the plaintiff, Carter activated and deployed his electroshock Taser weapon in 'drive stun' mode numerous times at or directed at the plaintiff. That Carter did these actions with the intention of causing fear, imminent fear of bodily harm, and/or emotional distress to gain the plaintiff's compliance with his sexual demands."
     Bennett claims that before this Dec. 13, 2011 incident, Carter had made "inappropriate sexual comments" to her on multiple occasions "and demanded that she expose herself to him."
     She claims that before Carter chased her around her office, "the City of Haskell was aware, or should have been aware, of complaints made about or issues concerning Carter's conduct, including, but not limited to, his inappropriate sexual actions occurring under color of law."
     Haskell, pop. 3,990, is about 30 miles south of Little Rock in Saline County.
     Bennett seeks compensatory and punitive damages for constitutional and civil rights violations, assault, failure to train and supervise, negligent supervision and outrage.
     She is represented by Clinton W. Lancaster of Benton, Ark.

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