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D.C. shop owner accused of selling stun guns

By: Michael Neibauer
Examiner Staff Writer
October 27, 2008

K&B News Emporium in Northwest D.C. The store’s proprietor was arrested for allegedly selling stun guns. ( Emily J. Reynolds/For the Examiner)
The 81-year-old proprietor of an “edgy” newsstand two blocks east of the Verizon Center was arrested last week for allegedly retailing dozens of stun guns behind a glass display case.

The rap sheet for Walter Francis Riggin, of the 4300 block of 17th Street Northwest, dates back nearly 62 years. His latest: 36 counts of possession of a destructive device after investigators say they found 36 stun guns for sale at the K&B Newsstand, his store at 1004 F St. NW.

The stun guns, three of which were of the “cattle prod type,” ranged from 1.9 million to 2.7 million volts.

According to charging documents, Riggin’s Penn Quarter shop was visited Oct. 2 by an inspector with the Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs, who called for help from the Metropolitan Police Department to identify the stuns guns. Stun guns are deemed a “destructive device” and generally banned under D.C. law.

There was no attempt to hide the illicit merchandise, police said. Quite the opposite. Riggin, nicknamed Buster, promoted it with an advertisement for “STUN GUNS” in the storefront window.

Riggin turned himself in to police on Oct. 20. A separate warrant was issued for the possession of a set of metal knuckles affixed to a Bowie-type knife, which also was for sale.

Riggin was released pending a Jan. 7 court date. Reached for comment Friday at his home, Riggin would only say the newsstand is permanently closed. He referred questions about the arrest to his attorney, who did not return calls for comment.

“It was an old, edgy store,” said Miles Groves, president of the Downtown Neighborhood Association. “The guy was friendly, had a dog. And I could buy a New York Times there.”

“Columbo,” a blogger with PQLiving.com, recalled visiting K&B a year ago and spotting Chinese throwing stars and nunchakus for sale. There was an adult video section in a back room, he said.

“He must have had that Stun Gun sign up for years,” Columbo said.

Riggin is a lifelong D.C. resident and nearly a lifelong D.C. criminal. His first larceny conviction as an adult dates back to December 1946, court records show. Prison sentences, probation and fines followed for larceny in 1947, burglary in the 1960s, illegal gambling in 1985, criminal copyright infringement in 1986 and drugs in 1993. The list goes on.

Developer Douglas Jemal, the owner of 1004 F Street, is planning an 11-story office building for the site. Riggin’s entire store was unlicensed to do business, a DCRA spokesman said, and his days there were numbered.


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Reader Comments

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Adam Smith

Oct 27, 2008

"Land of the Free?" Ha!

 

Fred Gomez

Oct 27, 2008

1) Are the DC police going to go after the other shops in DC that sell stun guns ? 2) Having been a regular customer of K & B for many years, almost every time I went into that store there was a DC Police Officer, and most times more than one, standing around at the register ( in front of the bongs and pipes and digital scales ) talking with the employee’s, basically just hanging out laughing and joking around having fun. If stun gun are illegal in DC why where these Officers just standing around, hanging out in the store while the stun guns where being sold ?

 

Alex in DC

Oct 28, 2008

This is a major dissapointment for me. Now I have to go all the way to West VA or Baltimore to get much needed 'parts'. I went down last week & saw it closed, I had no idea it was for good. Major bummer dude! Doooood...

 


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