A JUDGE HAS ordered the forfeiture of a .44 Magnum “Dirty Harry” handgun that was discovered in a Dublin postal depot after a shipping blunder.
The revolver, which gained most of its fame from the 1971 film starring Clint Eastwood, had been purchased by English antique dealer and huntsman Colin Brummitt.
It was mailed from the United States, but a mix-up led to it being sent to Ireland.
Officials seized it at the Dublin Parcel Hub, Centre Oak Road, Knockmitten, Dublin 12 last year. Revenue made an application before Dublin District Court today to have it forfeited.
Mr Brummitt, of March Road, Turves, Peterborough, Cambridgeshire, initially indicated he was going to challenge the civil proceedings in the hope that Judge Anthony Halpin would make his day.
However, he withdrew his objection shortly before the hearing.
On February 13, 2024, a customs and excise officer was on duty at Dublin Parcel Hub, Centre Oak Road, Knockmitten, Dublin 12, when a parcel dispatched from the US addressed to the respondent was X-rayed and found to contain the handgun.
Solicitor Kieran Binchy, who moved the application, told Judge Halpin, “The item in question in this case, and it’s worth setting it out briefly. It’s a .44 Magnum, which I only know in my own capacity as being the gun that Dirty Harry uses in the Clint Eastwood film. It’s a very substantial firearm”.
“You’ve clearly done your research,” Judge Halpin shot back, after querying whether the weapon was real or a replica.
He was told the gun was genuine and had turned up in the Irish postal service to the surprise of everyone, including Mr Brummitt.
Mr Binchy said the label stated it was going to the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, and it was mistakenly sent to Ireland.
The solicitor said, “We have some of the strictest gun laws for historical reasons in this country, and they must be obeyed when the item enters this country.”
He explained that it was designated an illegal firearm.
However, Mr Brummitt wrote to the Revenue acknowledging that there were different laws in Ireland, although he believed it was legal in the UK.
He had wanted to contest the case, but shortly before the hearing, he emailed to say, “He can see which way this is going and he is not going to turn up.”
The court heard that he paid around £900, and Revenue gave it a value of €1,500.
The application was made pursuant to Sections 19(4) and 20(2) of the Customs Act, 2015, which provide for the forfeiture and condemnation of the gun.
The solicitor said a customs official was available to give more information about the legalities of the .44 Magnum. But Judge Halpin declined, saying, “Dirty Harry did it for me”, and he granted the order sought.