[[File:Luther CO19 PSG1 4.jpg|thumb|none|600px|Close-up of the trigger and selector switch.]]
[[File:Luther CO19 PSG1 4.jpg|thumb|none|600px|Close-up of the trigger and selector switch.]]
==M4A1 Carbine==
==Colt Model 933==
Owen Lynch ([[Sam Spruell]]), the sniper antagonist of Episode 2, uses an [[M16_rifle_series#M4.2FM4A1_Carbine|M4A1 Carbine]] fitted with a scope during his spree.
Owen Lynch ([[Sam Spruell]]), the sniper antagonist of Episode 2, uses an [[Colt Model 933]] fitted with a scope during his spree.
[[File:Colt m4 commando 03.jpg|thumb|none|500px|Colt Model 933 - 5.56x45mm]]
[[File:Luther Owen M4Carbine.jpg|thumb|none|600px|Owen Lynch ([[Sam Spruell]]) opens fire with an M4A1 Carbine.]]
[[File:Luther Owen M4Carbine.jpg|thumb|none|600px|Owen Lynch ([[Sam Spruell]]) opens fire with an M4A1 Carbine.]]
[[File:Luther Owen M4Carbine 2.jpg|thumb|none|600px|Lynch firing the Carbine.]]
[[File:Luther Owen M4Carbine 2.jpg|thumb|none|600px|Lynch firing the Carbine.]]
Revision as of 10:07, 27 October 2012
Luther is a British crime series that first broadcasted on BBC One in 2010. Detective Criminal Inspector John Luther (Idris Elba from The Wire) is a brilliant but obsessive London policeman with a hot-temper who struggles with his home and work life as he hunts down sadistic and dangerous criminals.
Daniel Sugarman (Ross McCall), the American Diamond Thief in Episode 5, carries a Beretta 92FS Inox. It is later taken from him and used by DCI John Luther (Idris Elba) and DCI Ian Reed (Steven Mackintosh). An officer describes it as being a "9mm Beretta".
FN FNP-9
DCI Ian Reed (Steven Mackintosh) uses an FN FNP-9 with a stainless slide during a standoff with DCI Luther in Episode 5.
Glock 26
The murder weapon in the Pilot is found to be Glock 26. DCI Ian Reed (Steven Mackintosh) disassembles one for DCI Luther's benefit, describing it as a "Glock 26 lightweight compact pistol, weighs less then 16 ounces, carbon steel spring and barrel, polymer frame and components". Luther later determines that the Glock was chosen because the barrel could be melted down; the murder weapon was placed in the throat of a dog with the knowledge that it would be cremated.