(AP) -- CLEVELAND, Texas - Federal investigators are trying to determine whether 500 weapons missing from the evidence room of a southeast Texas police station are part of a firearms trafficking ring.
It became clear the guns were missing during an inventory last year of the Cleveland Police Department's evidence room, the Houston Chronicle reported Wednesday.
The U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives confirmed the investigation but declined to elaborate.
Court documents connect Capt. Harold Kelley of the Liberty County Sheriff's Department and others to an alleged gun-trafficking scheme. As custodian of the police department's evidence room, Kelley had one of two keys. The other key was held by Henry Patterson, who was Cleveland's assistant police chief at the time.
ATF agents recovered 112 missing guns during a search at a Humble gun shop, according to court documents. Of those weapons, 98 had been listed by Kelley as destroyed. The whereabouts of the other guns remain a mystery.
Among the missing weapons are 12-gauge shotguns, Glock pistols and revolvers.
The Texas Rangers, which had been looking into the missing weapons, found the sale of the weapons to a gun shop "suspicious and irregular," according to the court documents. Generally, Texas law enforcement departments destroy contraband firearms themselves, using smelters, crushing machinery and shredders, the court documents said.
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