From the
Express & Echo:
A train passenger carrying an illegal handgun has been jailed for five years after his dramatic arrest at Exeter St David's station.
Robert Tuck was ordered to lie on the floor of a platform by British Transport Police, after the drunken burglar revealed he had a gun in his pocket, Exeter Crown Court heard.
The 39-year-old, from Bristol, was carrying an illegal handgun, which was unloaded, and had tried to start a fight with a passenger.
Tuck pleaded guilty to possessing a prohibited firearm, possessing ammunition without a certificate, a public order offence and burglary. He also admitted these offences breached a conditional discharge he was given for carrying a hidden stun gun while shopping at a Bristol branch of Tesco.
Prosecutor James Taghdissian said Tuck burgled a woman's house in Truro, Cornwall, in June last year. He was then arrested while travelling on a Virgin cross-country train from Bristol to Cornwall, on Saturday October 31, pestering a passenger and suggesting, 'let's have a fight'.
Tuck was arrested on board and taken onto a platform at St David's station, around 5.45pm.
Mr Taghdissian said: "British Transport Police then asked if he had anything, to which he replied, 'I've got a gun in my pocket.' It was a genuine handgun, but no firing pin, and it was unloaded. He was told to get into a prone position to be searched. He became verbally abusive to officers, shouting to passengers for help."
Police then found 36 rounds of ammunition in a search at his Bristol home.
He has 23 convictions, including violence, and told officers he found the gun six weeks before and was travelling to dump it in a quarry in Cornwall.
Defence counsel James Tucker said his client did not threaten anyone with the gun. Mr Tucker said: "He's taken to the floor on the platform and there's a bunch of football fans shouting and jeering at police. Police become nervous and restrain him and it's only at that point that he becomes agitated."
Judge David Tyzack QC said he did not entirely accept Tuck's explanation for his journey, when he could have dumped the gun nearer his home, but added there was no evidence to suggest a more sinister purpose.
Detective Constable Dean Jeffery, of British Transport Police, said after sentencing, that uniformed and plain-clothed officers regularly patrol the city's train stations and surrounding areas and have equipment to detect weapons.
Det Con Jeffery said: "The carrying of any weapon, let alone a gun, on the railway network will not be tolerated and those guilty of such offences will be brought to justice. I must add that this incident is a one-off, but the sentence given to Mr Tuck today should go out as a warning to those people who may think of travelling on the railway in possession of any type of weapon."