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Talk:American Gangster

From Internet Movie Firearms Database - Guns in Movies, TV and Video Games
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Richie Roberts

Anybody see that the real world Richie Roberts plead guilty to theft. He admitted to stealing form his clients to make alimony payments.

From the "New Jersey Globe" dated July 23, 2019:

Richie Roberts, the former narcotics detective and prosecutor whose efforts to take down drug kingpin Frank Lucas became the story of film "American Gangster", pleaded guilty today to stealing $20,000 from clients of his law firm.Roberts, 81, agreed to accept a plea deal on the second day of his criminal trial and admitted that he stole money from his attorney trust account to make alimony payments.Roberts worked as an undercover detective for the Essex County Prosecutor’s office while attending law school at night, and worked as an Assistant Prosecutor for four years, where he ran the Narcotics Task Force. He started his own firm and Lucas was among his first clients.He became well known for defending homicide cases.“Instead of upholding the law and acting with honesty and integrity, as was his duty as an attorney, Roberts stole funds from his clients,” said Attorney General Gurbir Grewal. “He betrayed his oath and the clients who trusted him.” An investigation by the Attorney General’s office found that he and his former law partner, Gerald Saluti, conspired to steal about $140,000 form four clients. Saluti was on the witness stand today.Roberts admitted that he lied to law enforcement official that he never authorized a firm employee, Gabriel Iannacone, to make alimony payments on his behalf. Iannacone, now deceased, pled guilty to conspiracy charges related to Roberts in 2017.Russell Crowe’s portrayal of Roberts in American Gangster was viewed as largely fictional.He faces the permanent loss of his law license, which was suspended in 2015. Roberts will be sentenced on August 29.

2011 shot show

smith and wesson put on display guns used in various movies and said it was a model 64 used by russell crowe.


Incomplete Tag

To clarify, I added the "Incomplete" tag due to the M16/M203 combo being listed, but not having screenshots. That should be all that's needed to complete the page.--PistolJunkie 23:54, 9 February 2011 (UTC)

It also looks like in the drug raid scene there is a Winchester 1300 shotgun used. --2ndChoiceName (talk) 02:14, 3 February 2013 (EST)


Unknown Pistol (Possibly Beretta or Taurus?)

There's one scene where Frank Lucas prepares to confront Detective Trupo by loading and pocketing what appears to be either a Beretta or Taurus automatic, but the shots are too blurry/not at the right angles to tell for sure. Since both the Beretta 92F and Taurus PT92 were first produced in 1983 and the film takes place around 13 years earlier, either of these guns would be anachronisms. One could argue it was an older Pre-F Beretta 92, but even the earliest model, the original Beretta 92, was first produced between 1975 and 1976 in limited numbers, still around 3 or 4 years before the time period of the film. --Caldwellb734 (talk) 15:13, 8 December 2015 (EST)

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Beretta 92FS - 9x19mm
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Taurus PT92AF (blued) - 9x19mm
























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Frank Lucas (Denzel Washington) retrieves an automatic from a dresser drawer (Apologies for the blurry shot).
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Frank appears to keep the weapon in the drawer with the magazine removed, but with a round in the chamber as he racks the slide back and a shell ejects before he inserts a magazine and drops the slide forward. The cutaway slide of the Beretta and Taurus automatics can clearly be seen here.