Author: Sebastian
Due Process
The Editorial Board of the Philadelphia Inquirer would presumably be against denying suspected terrorists of their fourth amendment rights, fifth amendment rights and sixth amendment rights, without due process of law. But they are absolutely fine with, and even advocate, denying American Citizens their Second Amendment right without due process.
Party Switch
I feel a bit dirty, because I am now a Republican once again. I left the Party back in 2000 and registered Libertarian in frustration over what the GOP had become. Not that I’m any happier with them now, but we have a primary coming up, and I want to have a vote. Plus, it doesn’t do much good to try to influence a Party you’re not a member of.
I had been meaning to do it for some time, but when I got to the Courthouse today, it turns out the County Election Office is right next to the Jury Lounge, so I decided to take advantage of it.
Knife Bans
Gun Rights on the March
Reason asks Alan Gura about positive developments that have happened since Heller, and he names three. There are still people in our movement who think Heller was an abject failure, and I continue to be amazed that reasonable people can continue believing this. We saw suburb after suburb near Chicago give up their local bans under threat of lawsuit, and we saw a the San Francisco housing authority cave in on their gun ban in public housing under threat of lawsuit.
First off we have Massachusetts talking about easing their discretionary licensing scheme, a major paper editorializing in favor of it, and a very good chance this will actually pass. In Massachusetts, you need police permission to even own a handgun, and that permission can be impossible to obtain if you have an anti-gun police chief in your town. Police chiefs have full discretion in regards to handgun ownership. Even New Jersey is at least technically shall-issue when it comes to pistol purchase permits. This measure is being pushed, and has a good chance for passage specifically because lawmakers in Massachusetts know that their licensing scheme won’t pass constitutional muster even under the relatively ill-defined standard of review in Heller.
That brings us again to Delaware, which apparently has a public housing ban. This topic is being covered well by the Caesar Rodney Institute blog, which is reporting that NRA is threatening Delaware state authorities with a lawsuit if they don’t relent on the “no guns” policy. You can see the demand letter written by Robert Dowlut, NRA General Counsel here. Note the following:
Article I, § 20 of the Delaware Constitution guarantees that “A person has the right to keep and bear arms for the defense of self, family, home and State, and for hunting and recreational use.†Furthermore, the United States Supreme Court in District of Columbia v. Heller, 128 S. Ct. 2783, 171 L.Ed.2d 637 (2008), held that the right to keep an operable firearm in the home for self-defense is a core right guaranteed by the Second Amendment. Consequently, the court struck down a ban on the possession of handguns and a ban on the possession of operable firearms in the home.
Would we even be able to raise this if it wasn’t for Heller? Doubtful. I’d like to think we’re at a dawn of a pretty robust right to keep and bear arms, that will put the kibosh on the worst the states are able to do. I believe this will put our opponents in a pretty tough pickle, and while I’m not convinced gun control will ever really go away, we at least have an opportunity before us to deal its current incarnation a serious blow.
Why Philadelphia Can’t Control Its Criminals
When they do catch people, and prosecute them, under the laws we have against straw purchasing, they don’t get any real punishment. Yet they scream louder and louder every year at Harrisburg that they need more laws they won’t enforce. How are more laws going to help when they aren’t even using the ones they already have?
Gun Show Bill in VA Not Quite Dead?
The Defensive Handgun blog points out there’s still a Senate companion to the bill that was voted down in committee, in addition to one other house bill that would regulate gun shows. Dave Adams, President of the Virginia Shooting Sports Association, is rallying the troops to try to defeat SB595, the Senate companion, as well.
PA Democrats Don’t Support Gun Rights
As mentioned by Bitter yesterday, none of the Democratic candidates for Pennsylvania Governor support our Second Amendment rights. They are all in favor of radical gun control measures, including semi-auto bans, ending statewide preemption and letting local governments infringe on our rights, rationing gun purchases, and, in violation of the Supreme Court’s ruling in Heller, requiring child safety locks. But I won’t make you take my word for it, I’ll let them do the talking.
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d-rxQkachrQ[/youtube]
Some things you will miss in this video, is the scant applause gun control receives from even this very progressive crowd. There’s maybe two to four people in the back clapping after every answer, whereas on other topics, like health care, the candidates get rousing and loud applause from the room. What does the Democratic Party think it has to gain in Pennsylvania by continuing to hammer away on this losing issue? Let’s teach them a lesson in November. Eight years is long enough to have a gun grabber in the Governor’s mansion.
State Authorities in NH Screw Up Royally
Basic gist of it is, a guy gets a domestic restraining order slapped on him. His guns were consigned to a local FFL who was trying to sell them on his behalf. Local authorities went to the FFL, and seized the guns:
Krajenka said he simply was following Judge Paul H. Lawrence’s order out of Goffstown District Court.
“The court ordered the weapons to be taken. The weapons were taken,” Krajenka said.
And while Hillsborough County Attorney Robert Walsh insists Krajenka acted appropriately — especially in light of a domestic murder/suicide in Manchester last fall, in which guns should have been seized but were not — firing-range owner James L. McLoud has filed in court against the chief demanding the guns be immediately returned to him.
No, they were not taken appropriately. Legally they were in the custody of the FFL, and they were in his possession under federal law. I would file a Lost/Theft report with ATF, and let them sort the problem out.
Krajenka threatened to arrest him at his business, McLoud said, adding that he was tempted to get arrested to prove a point.
“(Krajenka) was very rude and disrespectful,” McLoud said. “I said, ‘You’re in my place of business. You need to shut your mouth.'”
McLoud hired Concord attorney Jason Major to argue in Goffstown District Court, in what is known as a writ of replevin, that the weapons should be returned to McLoud immediately.
“(Murphy) has the right to get (85 percent of) the money if they sell, but from a legal point of view, the guns are not leaving the range until someone passes a federal background check,” Major said.
“From our point of view, the guns were in the inventory of the company and under federal law couldn’t be returned Michael Murphy,” he said.
I’ve shot at Manchester Firing Line, actually, and is a very nice range. Kudos to the proprietor for standing up for himself. He’s in the legal right on this one and will win. I wouldn’t be surprised if a federal civil rights suit isn’t filed thereafter, since the seizure would have been a violation of his Fourth Amendment rights. Krajenka acted under color of law here.
Debate over Home Protection in Western New York
While the rest of the country is busy giving homeowners more leeway, it would seem the Buffalo, New York media is trying to stir a debate about whether home defense with deadly force should be allowed at all:
Cherry, a soft-spoken and polite Army veteran, said he was protecting himself from a home burglary at about 11:20 a.m. Jan. 21, when he fired 15 shots from a military-style assault rifle at the vehicle of a fleeing intruder.
OK, that’s a legitimate prosecutable offense, and the fact that it was his step-daughter probably isn’t going to play well in front of a jury. But this shouldn’t be a debate, and I see no reason to drag other, legitimate home defense cases in with this one:
• Willie J. Carson, 52, shot Parrish C. Spencer Jr., 22, in the chest Jan. 20, after the younger man broke into Carson’s 25th Street home and went upstairs, Niagara Falls police said.
No charges have been filed against Carson, but police have said the case has been turned over to the Niagara County district attorney’s office for further investigation.
• An 82-year-old Niagara Falls man, apparently scared and confused after a group of teens attempted to break into his home Jan. 15, fired one shotgun blast at police after they entered the home and found him hiding behind a closed door.
No one was hit, and the elderly man was not charged.
• Charles E. Gidney Sr., an off-duty Buffalo police officer, shot and killed one intruder, Reno D. Sayles, 36, and seriously wounded another inside his Buffalo home last April 22.
In his statement to police, Gidney said he grabbed his handgun, pointed it at the two men, one wearing a ski mask, and ordered them to “freeze.” Instead, they rushed at him, and he fired several shots, he said.
With the exception of the old man mistakenly shooting at police, all of these look pretty legitimate, even for New York. Fortunately, the Buffalo News goes on to describe the legal distinctions when it comes to using deadly force to defend the home. I think it’s OK for papers to cover this, but it’s not really a “debate” per se. I would find it hard to believe juries even in New York will convict people for shooting home invaders. Shooting at someone fleeing is a different matter.