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The next day, within a privately-owned shooting range in Chiang Mai, Song Heping, wearing noise-canceling headphones and holding a Glock 17, kept up a rapid-fire at a target 25 meters away. After emptying a magazine, he swiftly replaced it and began to shoot rapidly again.
Hunter and Grey Wolf wouldn't arrive in Chiang Mai until the next day, so Song Heping found himself at a loose end when he got up early the following morning.
Therefore, he found a shooting range to practice his marksmanship.
Thailand is a country where gun possession is legal. Firearms can be legally owned by simply processing the relevant legal documents and paying a certain management fee.
Of course, this only applies to Thai nationals. Foreigners must purchase a gun, register it under a local person's name, and keep it in the shooting range's locker. It can be used only after an application for its use is submitted.