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Is Roger Cox Still Alive?


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PhilOhio

I am curious since when did the Federal.gov get authority to enforce state law?

Another curious point where in the 1934 NFA act does it give Federal.gov authority to regulate an item you already own, ie. require an approval to move to another state?

In my bet in both cases probably nowhere but we have abdicated that authority to them by allowing them to regulate us as such.

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  • 10 years later...

I am very much among the living. My personal involvemen with Thompsons ended in 1983. I went back to the University of Georgia and earned my B.A. in 1985, followed by the Georgia State Univrsity College of Law, earning my J.D. in December 1987. I clerked for Prof. Alan M. Dershowitz at Harvard Law School in 1987/1988 I am admitted to the Bars of Massachusetts and Pennsylvania, as well as many Federal courts. We moved to the Pittsburgh area in 2009 from Boston, to enlarge my practice opportunities. While I continue some activity in Boston, it's winding down because of the distance, and most of my work will be in Pennsylvania now, especially in the Federal courts.While I do have some fond memories of tracking down Thompsons and their history in my 20's, I have received even greater satisfaction in my legal career. Last year, for example, I succeeded in overturning the 1997 murder conviction of an innocent man, Grant v. Lockett, 709 F.3d 224 (3d Cir. 2013).

 

I married my wife Aileen in 1989, and we have three sons and a daughter. We live in a farmhouse on 13 acres outside of the Pittsburgh suburb of Butler, Pennsylvania. My office is in Butler, but my cases are mostly in Federal court in Pittsburgh, Johnstown and Erie.

 

Roger A. Cox

Cox & Cox Attorneys

350 Greater Butler Mart

Butler, PA 16001-3284

(724) 256-8531

rogercox @zoominternet.net

 

 

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Hi Roger,

Glad to hear you are alive and well and living in a free state. I still have a couple of Colts you unearthed many years ago. The comments about your book seem to ignore the context and era. You have owned more Colt Thompsons ( as well as other machine gun types) than anyone else on earth and wrote from your observations and research at that time. Certainly additional information has surfaced in the decadeds since publication. The binding of my personal copy is completely shot from extensive use. Did you buy back the rights from Charlie Steen? ;-)

Dennis Todd

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Hi Roger!

 

Along with the others here, welcome and I am also glad to see that you are doing well. Life takes us on more than one road (or lots of branches of 1 road, lofty discussion there). You offered me an MP40 in 1973 I believe it was, all matching, very good to excellent, for $400. I didn't snap it up, my bad. Thems was the days...

 

Take care,

 

Ron Mills

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I don't understand why anyone would criticize the Cox book on Thompsons.

 

When it came out, it was no doubt the best book available. But time marches on.

 

 

The current $300 or $400 for the book is a "collector price".

 

That has nothing to do with the practical value of the book.

 

I can't think of too many books worth $300 for the printed content

Edited by buzz
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Hi Roger, glad to hear all is well. I bet it was interesting to stumble upon this thread. As a relative newcomer to Thompsons I picked up your book and paid around $300 for it. I only wish the author received commission on secondary market sales!! Well worth that price for the content.

 

To Buzz's point, I can place my hands on a couple books that I have paid that much for due to content. When the bar is lowered to $150 I have over a dozen books in that range. All of these were bought due to content not to add them to my collection. Considering what we pay for some items in our collections this price for knowledge should be considered priceless.

 

Ron

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Hi Roger,

Welcome to MachineGunBoards.com. You will find this Board the most informative source of information on the Internet about the Thompson submachine gun. It is well moderated and a great source of information to the public at large. Disagreements do occur from time to time but are civil and can be informative about how much is still unknown about this great American invention.

 

You are as much a part of the history of the Thompson gun as some of the well known employees of the Auto-Ordnance Corporation. Your company, Law Enforcement Ordnance, introduced the Thompson gun into the marketplace like no other before. Your book was a stroke of marketing genius at a time when new collectors and enthusiasts were begging for more information. We welcome your thoughts and comments to all topics. As an early Class Three dealer you were finding, obtaining and selling many unmolested guns and accessories. Your knowledge during this time period is still a great resource. I suspect many of the complete Colt guns you sold for under $2000 as shooters are now safe queens worth well over $30,000. How times have changed!

 

Congratulations on your family and new career. I can tell from your post that you approached the practice of law with the same passion you showed in the Class Three community. The result of the case you cited speaks volumes.

 

Please join us regularly on the Board as we discuss General Thompson's trench broom. I feel certain he is following along.

 

TD.

Tom Davis

 

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To Buzz's point, I can place my hands on a couple books that I have paid that much for due to content. When the bar is lowered to $150 I have over a dozen books in that range. All of these were bought due to content not to add them to my collection. Considering what we pay for some items in our collections this price for knowledge should be considered priceless.

 

 

 

 

I understand. I was making the point that the $300 price tag is a "collector price" and not a "reader price".

 

There are some books you can still buy new for $7 to read but the collector price for the 1st printing is $10,000 or more. It's two completely different sets of buyers.

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Roger: I was just a lad of five when your book came out, but since 8th, I've wanted a Thompson. I got a chance to buy one of the guns you rescued from Philadelphia pd. fella bought in 1977 from you and I got it in 2012! Great book and detective work on all the Thompsons you put back into circulation! You are a remarkable fellow and pioneer! Congrats on your achievements post class III! Tony
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Roger

 

A big welcome to the board.

 

Like many here I was enthralled about Thompsons when I was young, your book when published made me yearn even more. Unfortunately at the time I lived in Commiefornia, so I was not able to fill the desire. Eventually I escaped and was able to begin collecting NFA firearms including Thompsons, and during that time found out it is very addicting in a fun way.

 

Best wishes to you and your family and even more wishes on your success like you accomplished in overturning the murder conviction of an innocent man.

 

michael

 

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I am very much among the living. My personal involvemen with Thompsons ended in 1983. I went back to the University of Georgia and earned my B.A. in 1985, followed by the Georgia State Univrsity College of Law, earning my J.D. in December 1987. I clerked for Prof. Alan M. Dershowitz at Harvard Law School in 1987/1988 I am admitted to the Bars of Massachusetts and Pennsylvania, as well as many Federal courts. We moved to the Pittsburgh area in 2009 from Boston, to enlarge my practice opportunities. While I continue some activity in Boston, it's winding down because of the distance, and most of my work will be in Pennsylvania now, especially in the Federal courts.While I do have some fond memories of tracking down Thompsons and their history in my 20's, I have received even greater satisfaction in my legal career. Last year, for example, I succeeded in overturning the 1997 murder conviction of an innocent man, Grant v. Lockett, 709 F.3d 224 (3d Cir. 2013).

 

I married my wife Aileen in 1989, and we have three sons and a daughter. We live in a farmhouse on 13 acres outside of the Pittsburgh suburb of Butler, Pennsylvania. My office is in Butler, but my cases are mostly in Federal court in Pittsburgh, Johnstown and Erie.

 

Roger A. Cox

Cox & Cox Attorneys

350 Greater Butler Mart

Butler, PA 16001-3284

(724) 256-8531

rogercox @zoominternet.net

Welcome to the forum.

You said "My personal involvemen with Thompsons ended in 1983"

Are you really out? Completely out?.... Once bitten by the Thompson bug, you are hooked for life. There is no cure. You will be back.

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I am very much among the living. My personal involvemen with Thompsons ended in 1983. I went back to the University of Georgia and earned my B.A. in 1985, followed by the Georgia State Univrsity College of Law, earning my J.D. in December 1987. I clerked for Prof. Alan M. Dershowitz at Harvard Law School in 1987/1988 I am admitted to the Bars of Massachusetts and Pennsylvania, as well as many Federal courts. We moved to the Pittsburgh area in 2009 from Boston, to enlarge my practice opportunities. While I continue some activity in Boston, it's winding down because of the distance, and most of my work will be in Pennsylvania now, especially in the Federal courts.While I do have some fond memories of tracking down Thompsons and their history in my 20's, I have received even greater satisfaction in my legal career. Last year, for example, I succeeded in overturning the 1997 murder conviction of an innocent man, Grant v. Lockett, 709 F.3d 224 (3d Cir. 2013).

 

I married my wife Aileen in 1989, and we have three sons and a daughter. We live in a farmhouse on 13 acres outside of the Pittsburgh suburb of Butler, Pennsylvania. My office is in Butler, but my cases are mostly in Federal court in Pittsburgh, Johnstown and Erie.

 

Roger A. Cox

Cox & Cox Attorneys

350 Greater Butler Mart

Butler, PA 16001-3284

(724) 256-8531

rogercox @zoominternet.net

 

Roger,

Great to hear from you on this board.

Edited by Bob
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Roger glad to hear you chimed in. sill have the pics on the visit in 1975. and the letters and phone call's.and the old J . Curt EARL Fiasco we handled... now retired myself. and in Arizona.

 

the group owes you a Big Thanks.

 

Helmer is still kickin also. but sad to say around 50% of the others are gone for good. Well stay safe healthy and for the family the same blessings.

 

best regards Ron Kovar/ Colt21a,

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Roger,

 

glad to hear you are doing well in your personal and professional life. I owe you a great debt of gratitude for taking the time back in the mid 1970's to share leads with me on collecting machineguns, when I called from my dorm room in central Ohio. I found the oddest assortment of Thompsons, BARs, German MG's, a Stoner 63a and even some Vietnam bring back MGs. Almost to a person, everyone I contacted mentioned that you had been in contact with them and how honest they felt you were in dealing with them. I think I had better timing than you since the economy was in such bad state then, and I was able to close many deals on great items.

 

I also owe you for warning me about a character located in the suburbs of Chicago. I did truly have to count my fingers after shaking hands with him, and even though I never completed a deal with him - it did come up during my background check for my first job at the Dept of Justice that he had fingered me as a possible buyer of MG's......no sh*t. I had the tax stamps to prove it.

 

Semper Fi,

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