Crime & Safety

Pennsauken's Eric Reed Admits to Illegal Gun Dealing

The 44-year-old pleaded guilty to buying 14 guns out of state, filing off their serial numbers and delivering them to his convicted felon nephew for resale.

A Pennsauken man faces more than a decade in prison after he admitted to being an illegal arms dealer in federal court in Camden Monday, pleading guilty to charges of dealing firearms without a license and transferring a firearm to a previously convicted felon.

Eric J. Reed, 44, admitted to buying 14 guns from various Pennsylvania gun shops and gun shows, obliterating their serial numbers and transferring them to his nephew, Ammie “Beav” Steward, 37, a convicted felon who served prison time for manslaughter, according to court documents.

The purchases took place between May 2012 and Aug. 15, 2012, according to court documents, after Reed obtained a fraudulent Pennsylvania driver’s license.

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Most of the guns were 9mm handguns, but Reed also acquired two semiautomatic Intratec AB-10 pistols, two semiautomatic TEC-DC9 pistols (previously outlawed under the federal assault weapons ban), and a WASR 10/63, a Romanian variant of the Soviet AKM assault rifle.

Reed admitted to wiping out the serial numbers with a power tool, then moving them to Steward for resale. Steward sold all the guns, seven of which had high-capacity magazines and one of which came with a bayonet, to a witness cooperating with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF), according to court documents.

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In one other case, court documents indicate Reed passed a Kel Tec PLR-16 long-range pistol and a box of ammunition to Steward for resale.

All 14 guns were confiscated by law enforcement.

Reed faces up to 10 years on the transfer of a weapon to a convicted felon charge, and up to five years for the illegal firearms dealing charge, and up to a $250,000 fine on each charge. His sentencing, in front of U.S. District Judge Renée Marie Bumb is scheduled for April 22.

Steward previously pleaded guilty to dealing one count of dealing firearms without a license and one count of possession of a firearm by a previously convicted felon, and will be sentenced March 25.


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