Troubling if True

Apparently the ATF is up to no good in border states, according to NRA, who is looking into the situation:

NRA-ILA has recently received several calls from NRA members in border states who have been visited or called by agents of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives. In some cases, agents have asked to enter these people’s homes, and requested serial numbers of all firearms the members possess.

In each case, the agents were making inquiries based on the number of firearms these NRA members had recently bought, and in some cases the agents said they were asking because the members had bought types of guns that are frequently recovered in Mexico.

I guess this is part of the crackdown President Obama promised to President Calderon.

The Jamacian Gun Canard

We’ve had the Mexican canard with us for a while, that 90% of the guns recovered by the Mexican Police come from the United States.   Since the Mexican gun canard doesn’t seem to be doing its intended job, now we have the Jamacian Gun Canard, complete with its own 80% figure:

The volume is much less than the flow of U.S. guns into Mexico that end up in the hands of drug cartels — Jamaican authorities recover fewer than 1,000 firearms a year. But of those whose origin can be traced, 80 percent come from the U.S., Jamaican law enforcement officials have said in interviews with The Associated Press.

How much you want to bet that figure is how many guns are submitted to BATF for tracing, and actually do trace to US sources.  I guess the Jamacian authorities aren’t quite as good at identifying US markings as the Mexican authorities, so they couldn’t quite make the 90% figure by submitting only firearms they were sure would trace.

Packing at the Doctors

Both Joe and Robb had experiences with going to the doctors office, and having to expose their firearms.  Interestingly, both had the same reaction, which was no reaction.  I’ve heard other people speak of this too.  Do medical professionals encounter this often enough there’s a protocol?  At least an unwritten one?

Partial Weakning of Lautenberg

I’m not sure how much practical significance this is going to have, but at least some federal courts are willing to recognize that the Second Amendment has consequences.  Basically, the court is demanding a jury instruction in § 922(g)(9) cases that allow a defendant to assert that “that the individual charged under § 922(g)(9) posed no prospective risk of violence.”  This doesn’t really legalize anything, just gives your attorney more options in arguing your defense before a jury.

We’re going to be very hard pressed to ask the courts to solve all our problems with gun rights, as they will be reluctant to stand up for Second Amendment rights for wife beaters.  My problem with Lautenberg has always been more that it was retroactively applied, rather than only applied to new convictions.  I think it should be found unconstitutional on that ground.

Caleb’s Dad’s Double Awesome Meatloaf

Caleb’s dad is participating in a Food Network contest with a smoked meatloaf that looks quite excellent.  He’s asking that you go vote for his dad’s recipe.  I haven’t tried the meatloaf, but I still call it double awesome.  Why?  Because other than sounding pretty good, it’s got Columbia Crest Merlot in it, and Columbia Crest’s owners are great supporters of hunting, the outdoors, and the Second Amendment.  So go vote for Caleb’s dad’s recipe and help out the cause.

GAO Study on 90% Canard

The Government Accountability Office is an office chartered by Congress, which makes their study on the Mexican gun canard rather interesting.  Who directed GAO to study this?  Nancy Pelosi?  Are you home?  Don’t think for a minute gun owners aren’t going to punish your party over things like this.  There’s a lot of mistrust of Democratic politicians on guns, even though Pennsylvania has a rather pro-gun contingent of Democrats.  I can think of no more valuable organizing tool than telling gun owners they are going to lose their rights because the Mexican Government doesn’t have its shit together, and the US government can’t control its border.  You couldn’t really ask for a better issue.  So keep pushing it Nancy!  You only make my job easier come November of 2010!

The LA Times has already jumped on it:

In the meantime, illegally obtained U.S. weapons — including an increasing number of automatic rifles — are being used to kill thousands of Mexican police, soldiers, elected officials and civilians, the report said.

If they are finding increasing numbers of automatic weapons being traced back to the US, it’s through legal sales by the US Government to the Mexican Government.  Those aren’t coming from civilian stock.  There’s no way they could be.

But the GAO criticisms go beyond operational concerns. Some findings cited laws and policies in the U.S. and Mexico that could make it difficult to institute lasting reforms such as lax U.S. laws for collecting and reporting information on firearms purchases, and a lack of required background checks for private firearms sales.

I have to wonder if this was engineered by the anti-gun leadership in Congress to embarrass the White House into helping them corral the pro-gun Democrats into towing the leadership line.  That must be why the anti-gun politicians and anti-gun groups were ready to pounce on it as soon as it came out.

Victory in Commonwealth Court

The NRA has prevailed in the appeal of Philadelphia’s firearms regulations in Commonwealth Court.   The decision can be found here.  NRA tried to restore standing to challenge the other ordinances, including “Lost and Stolen,” but Commonwealth Court failed to reverse the lower court’s decision.  There is language in this decision that suggest that the “Lost and Stolen” ordinance would also be found in violation of preemption once we have a case that doesn’t have standing or ripeness problems:

Councilpersons, Darrell L. Clarke and Donna Reed Miller, filed an action seeking to have the court declare that seven gun ordinances passed by City Council and signed by then-Mayor John Street could take immediate effect and that Section 6120 was unconstitutional and did not apply to those ordinances because the ordinances did not regulate the “carrying or transporting” of firearms. The City argued that the General Assembly’s inclusion of the qualifying phrase “when carried or transported,” in Section 6120 indicated their intention to limit preemption of local firearms regulation accordingly, and would allow local regulation of any uses of firearms which does not involve carrying or transporting them. The City further argued that because our Supreme Court in Ortiz v. Commonwealth, 545 Pa. 279, 681 A.2d 152 (1996), did not address the qualifying phrase “when carried or transported,” it was not controlling. However, in rejecting the City’s arguments, we concluded that:

Given Schneck and Ortiz, we cannot agree with this construction of the Firearms Act. The ordinances struck down in those cases were not qualitatively different in that respect from those at issue here. While Petitioners point out that the qualifying phrase ‘when carried or transported’ was not specifically discussed in Ortiz, in light of its broad and unqualified language, we cannot distinguish Ortiz on this basis.

Clarke, 957 A.2d at 364.

Similarly here, the fact that the Court in Ortiz did not discuss the statutory language relied upon by the City does not provide a legitimate basis for us to ignore its holding. Unfortunately, with respect to the matter before us, while we may agree with the City that preemption of 18 Pa. C.S. § 6120(a) appears to be limited to the lawful use of firearms by its very terms, we believe, however, that the crystal clear holding of our Supreme Court in Ortiz, that, “the General Assembly has [through enactment of § 6120(a)] denied all municipalities the power to regulate the ownership, possession, transfer or [transportation] of firearms,”9 precludes our acceptance of the City’s argument and the trial court’s thoughtful analysis on this point. As the Supreme Court stated in Ortiz:

Because the ownership of firearms is constitutionally protected, its regulation is a matter of statewide concern. The constitution does not provide that the right to bear arms shall not be questioned in any part of the commonwealth except Philadelphia . . . where it may be abridged at will, but that it shall not be questioned in any part of the commonwealth. Thus, regulation of firearms is a matter of concern in all of Pennsylvania, not merely in Philadelphia . . . and the General Assembly, not city council[ ], is the proper forum for the imposition of such regulation.

545 Pa. at 287, 681 A.2d at 156.

Accordingly, we affirm the order of the trial court permanently enjoining the City from enforcing the provisions of the Assault Weapons Ordinance and the Straw Purchaser Ordinance.

I think this ruling sets us up very nicely for a future court battle on all these Lost and Stolen ordinances, provided the Supreme Court is unwilling to revisit Ortiz, which I suspect it won’t.  The City of Philadelphia is losing on virtually all their arguments.  These ordinances were never about Lost and Stolen guns, or Assault Weapons, but were merely a means for the City to regain the ability to violate the Pennsylvania Constitution at will, so it could ban guns.  It’s looking increasingly unlikely that ploy wil work.

Words I Wish I Didn’t Have to Read

Over at Jennifer’s:

Unless you’ve been glued to US sNews, you’ve heard about the recent sham of an election in Iran and resulting protests and unrest. And since our president hasn’t gotten permission to get his balls out of the jar, we have to turn to France.

Sometimes the truth is painful.