true
Legal for use in warfare? Yes.
A: True
True
Issued weapons only; for all branches of the US military.
Units will coordinate with the LRS and/or the SFS for the collection and turn-in of issued weapons on R-Day for returning groups and individuals.
Some SWAT units do issued suppressed weapons.
In states where concealed weapons permits are issued, private investigators can carry weapons (if they have the permit). Also, in some states if you are a retired or active peace officer you can carry a gun with the proper endorsement.
Depends on where and who you work for. Department issued weapons are turned in on leaving the department, however many officers have their own weapons and keep them after they leave or retire.
They're kept in a unit arms room, and drawn out as needed.
You'd have to be a little more specific in your question, as to whether you were asking which weapons aren't issued by the military, which ones don't have origins in the military, etc. With regards to the second one, the weapons originally used by ninjas were actually farm implements, rather than purpose-designed weapons. So those might be considered nonmilitary weapons. In the corrections system, inmates often fashion weapons out of newspaper, razor blades, mattress springs, etc., and those weapons certainly wouldn't be military weapons. The question's a little too open to interpretation.
You'd have to be a little more specific in your question, as to whether you were asking which weapons aren't issued by the military, which ones don't have origins in the military, etc. With regards to the second one, the weapons originally used by ninjas were actually farm implements, rather than purpose-designed weapons. So those might be considered nonmilitary weapons. In the corrections system, inmates often fashion weapons out of newspaper, razor blades, mattress springs, etc., and those weapons certainly wouldn't be military weapons. The question's a little too open to interpretation.
In typical combat situations any soldier killed dies with his own weapons, or the weapons issued to him by his combat unit.Only rarely do people kill themselves with their own weapons, though suicide with one's own firearms is more common than suicide with someone else's firearms.