AK-47 Pistol?

I think in this case, the press might actually have it right:

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — A man carrying an AK-47-style semiautomatic pistol was detained at Radnor Lake State Park after startled hikers complained to park rangers.

Ellen Thomas told WSMV-TV she was hiking an upper trail on Sunday when she encountered 37-year-old Leonard Embody wearing a camoflauge jacket, military boots and a black skull cap. She called the encounter “scary.”

Turns out they are trying to find out if the weapon is legal, but I don’t see why it wouldn’t be. I’m going to guess it’s one of these, or something very similar. Looks like one of those cases where the police just can’t believe the activity was legal.

Health Care Obamanation Passes With 60 Votes

Now it’s onto a secret conference committee, which has already been rigged by Pelosi and Reid. There’s still a chance to stop this. Whether you’re a progressive, and believe in universal health care, or a conservative who hates the idea, I think both sides can agree this health bill is total special interest laden garbage. Call your reps and Senators and tell them to vote no on the conference report.

Defeating Yourself

Our normal Thursday club indoor silhouette matches were moved to Wednesday this week because of the holiday. Since I finished up work early, I came home to clean my pistol first. It was really gunked up. I had been having problems with FTEs and FTFs with light strikes in the rim.  With that cleared up, I tied my personal best of 35 out of 40 animals. Last week I scored 34 out of 40, so I would seem to have improved by several animals, which I am happy about since I’ve been absent from Thursday nights for a while because of work demands.

I would have had a good chance of beating it my personal best, but tonight Dave, our match director was running long runs for a brick of .22 ammo, and a set of earmuffs, so anyone who shot all ten animals could shoot off after the match for it. I shot 9 chickens, and missed the tenth, then shot 9 turkeys, and missed the 10th. The pressure was just too much. It doesn’t take much to make you rush the shot, or pull the trigger when you shouldn’t. What I’ve been good at lately is clearing the mind, mostly because I’m too busy worrying about work to think too hard or care too much about how good I am or am not shooting.

It’ll be interesting next week, to see how I do. I am off work until the Monday after the new year. Blogging might be a bit off schedule, but I will still post. Not much going on right now anyway.

Tony Martin and English Self-Defense Laws

Calling back to a great scene in a classic 80s comedy film:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rdjblkRkoPU[/youtube]

You can’t have a discussion about self-defense in the United Kingdom without gun owners pulling Tony Martin out of their asses, but I often wonder how many gun owners have a deep understanding of the case, and what the facts were surrounding it. To understand why takes a bit of delving into self-defense law in both the UK and US. While I’m far from an expert on these topics, I think I do have enough rudimentary understanding to try to explain the background, and illustrate how the Martin case shows the differences in self-defense laws between the US and the UK.

Despite common belief, English self-defense laws have changed little since 1968.  You can see the current law here, which just clarifies the common law in England a bit. Self-defense in the UK can best be described as:

A person may use such force as is reasonable in the circumstances in the prevention of crime, or in effecting or assisting in the lawful arrest of offenders or suspected offenders or of persons unlawfully at large.

For contrast, you can find Pennsylvania’s law here. Pennsylvania justifies the use of force (not deadly force) under limited circumstances, and proscribes the use of deadly force except in extreme and dire circumstances.  American self-defense laws commonly make a distinction between the use of force and the use of deadly force, where as English law attempts to cover the whole spectrum of force through a reasonableness test.  If you use deadly force or force in most of the United States, you will still be subject to a similar reasonableness test, but a jury will be asked whether you acted reasonably, as a reasonable person, in terms of the circumstances under which you acted. In the United Kingdom, the jury will be asked whether the force you used was reasonable. In American law, that’s spelled out more distinctly. Pennsylvania, for instance, allows you to use whatever force is necessary, not  reasonable, though Pennsylvania requires that deadly force is only permitted in certain dire and extreme circumstances.

But despite the differences, to the extent that self-defense in danger across the pond, it’s largely because of shifting cultural attitudes away from the use of deadly force in self-defense. If you brought the self-defense laws of England over to the United States, practically speaking not much would change about self-defense, because most Americans believe that using deadly force on a home invader is reasonable, while Englishmen do not embrace the concept to such a great extent anymore. In addition, American jury verdicts require unanimity, whereas English juries do not require it. These factors promote differences in the kinds of cases that will be prosecuted in each of those respective jurisdictions. Prosecutors are going to respond to what they know they will get out of a jury. Practically speaking, even in a state like Pennsylvania, which does not have Castle Doctrine, a prosecutor is going to be reluctant to bring a case of a homeowner shooting a home invader because that case is highly likely to end in acquittal. He will take care to make sure the facts of the case show a serious wrong or error on the part of the actor, more care than his English counterpart, because his English counterpart only has to get 10 out of 12 jury members to believe that the homeowners use of force was out of proportion, and therefore not reasonable. While it’s still theoretically justifiable to use deadly force in self-defense in England, it is much more likely to result in prosecution there, because it’s much more likely to result in conviction. Self-defense has not been eradicated in the UK, but it has been weakened. Changing mores about self-defense are only part of the story. There’s a much larger story at play here, a big part of which is an increasing belief that jury trials themselves are anachronistic and outdated, as has been shown in the recent decision that juries in criminal trials are not strictly necessary in England and Wales.

It is in these two contexts that you have to consider the case of Tony Martin. To see details of the case, I would encourage folks to read this appeals ruling in the Marin case. From this you can get a hint of how the English legal system deliberates on the topic of self-defense:

So now we have the background on the appeal, whether Martin, who was found guilty of using excessive force against burglars, can be convicted of murder, or is merely guilty of manslaughter. But in the appeal, we have the facts of the case, and from that we can see where Mr. Martin likely got into trouble:

When he was interviewed under caution he gave an account to the police officers which was basically similar to that which he gave in evidence. He stated particularly that he wanted to make it clear that when he fired his gun he genuinely thought that his life was in danger. He asserted that he had never got to the bottom of the stairs and had gone no further than was necessary to see into the hallway; that was about as far as he dared to go.

He was cross-examined on the basis that his evidence and the account he had given in interview was untrue; that he had heard the two men approaching the house and had readied himself so that by the time they entered the breakfast room he was downstairs, lying in wait in the hall with his gun already loaded; and that he had stepped out into the breakfast room and fired three times with the intention of killing. Mr Martin denied this version; although he acknowledged the effect of the expert evidence about two of the shots at any rate, he insisted that he himself never got below halfway down the stairs, and that when he was interviewed he was clear as to where he had been

The problem Martin had was that the forensic evidence the Crown put forward did not match Martin’s statement, but rather matched up with those of the burglars.

Two areas of shot damage were found on the far wall of the breakfast room from the door at the foot of the stairs, one below the window out of which the two men exited, and one to its right in a door. All the experts agreed that these two areas of damage were not in the direct line of sight of a person standing anywhere on the stairs, so that the shots that caused that damage could therefore not have been fired from the stairs.

Under the circumstances described in this appeal, in many US jurisdictions, prosecutors would still have had statutory legal grounds to bring charges for murder (though there are a number where they would not). But statutory law is not necessarily the law as juries see it, since a jury and a prosecutor aren’t necessarily going to view the same set of circumstances the same way. I’m not certain that Martin would have been prosecuted in the US, because most juries are going to tend to acquit a homeowner for shooting a burglar, let alone two burglars, especially when the actor is an old man, and the burglars young men. I suspect had Martin had better representation from the start, and not given a statement to police without the advice of counsel, he might have been able to escape conviction in England as well. The Martin case isn’t as simple and straightforward as many imagine it to be, but in looking closely at the facts and rulings in the case, you can see clearly how the our respective cultures are parting in their treatment of self-defense.

Ginsburg’s Comment

I wouldn’t read a whole lot into the anti-Heller comments by Justice Ginsburg at a luncheon of the Harvard Club in Washington D.C. — a venue where Heller, no doubt, is not all that popular a decision. I guess I agree most with Orin Kerr on this one:

I don’t think a lunch speech at a restaurant for a college alumni group on the general topic of dissents — a topic she has talked about before — is the place to plant an idea in the public consciousness. Plus, I don’t think the public consciousness includes a view on overruling the Slaughterhouse cases.

If the report is accurate, though, it raises the possibility that the remaining dissenters in Heller may stick to their Heller dissent and conclude that the the right recognized in Heller doesn’t doesn’t apply to the states because Heller is wrong. In that case, the case presumably boils down to Kennedy and Sotomayor.

There’s been speculation that perhaps some of the dissenters in Heller would be willing to rule in favor of incorporation, Heller being a done deal and a lost argument. This would seem to indicate that might be a bit optimistic. If the dissenters are still in firm believe that Heller was wrongly decided, they are not going to agree to further entrench the decision.

This makes the work Dave Hardy, David Young, and others are doing a lot more important in discrediting the historical basis of the Stevens dissent, and works like Dave Kopel’s are important for discrediting any modern reliance.  A majority of Americans believe that the Second Amendment protects and individual right, and that right includes keeping a handgun in the home for self-defense.  That much should not be controversial.  We can argue over the rest of the details as they come up.

DeMint on Healthcare Reform

Looks like he’s planning to force a vote on its constitutionality. Not sure how much good it will do, but here’s what he says:

“Forcing every American to purchase a product is absolutely inconsistent with our Constitution and the freedoms our Founding Fathers hoped to protect,” said Senator DeMint. “This is not at all like car insurance, you can choose not to drive but Americans will have no choice whether to buy government-approved insurance. This is nothing more than a bailout and takeover of insurance companies. We’re forcing Americans to buy insurance under penalty of law and then Washington bureaucrats will then dictate what these companies can sell to Americans. This is not liberty, it is tyranny of good intentions by elites in Washington who think they can plan our lives better than we can.”

I would also point out that auto insurance mandates are state mandates. Regulating vehicles on the public roads has long been held to be within the states’ police powers. Unfortunately, the Commerce Clause jurisprudence today allows the federal government to regulate pretty much anything called “commerce.” Whether that extends to the government forcing people to buy a product is an interesting question, but there’s plenty of precedent that would suggest they indeed do. The “takings” argument is an interesting one, but you know, Kelo worked out so well, didn’t it?

Our government is out of control, and there’s nothing we can do about it until 2010. That’s just how it is. Whether we want to admit it or not, this is the Government the people thought they wanted. If they are having voters’ remorse, I feel for them, but there were plenty of voices out there telling people exactly what they were going to get out of this President and this Congress.

Methods of Legislating

While people were concerned about the holidays, it would seem the New Hampshire legislature secretly ran through a ban on firearms in the state house. Any legislation passed this time of year is done in the hopes that people are too busy with the holidays to pay any attention. Seems that’s been happening a lot lately. Also out of fashion: reading bills, debating bills, and transparency with the public.

California Body Armor Statute Tossed for Vagueness

Via RideFast, it looks like the California ban on possession of Body Armor by convicted felons has been tossed out by a California appeals court.  You can find the ruling here. It’s largely a problem of how California defines the term “body armor.”  The federal standard is probably better for those purposes, which can be found in 18 USC 921:

(35) The term "body armor" means any product sold or offered for sale, in interstate or foreign commerce, as personal protective body covering intended to protect against gunfire, regardless of whether the product is to be worn alone or is sold as a complement to another product or garment.

Now, in this case, the federal law might not apply, since the jacket in question was a flak jacket, and stated clearly it didn’t protect against small arms fire. But the federal definition only hinges on how the product is marketed, not on its actual capabilities. This would prevent an absurd result, such as possession of boiler plates by felons being unlawful, under the theory that they can stop some bullets, and could possibly be worn underneath clothing.