Defend Yourself and Become a Felon

I actually question how useful right-to-carry would be in the Garden State, when pretty regularly you see people defending themselves getting into trouble with the law.  This Jersey City gun shop owner had some words with individuals who were blocking him in double parking.  Not the wisest thing to do if you’re armed, but that doesn’t excuse beating someone to the ground.

Not long after, his store had a gun stolen, and officials used that as an excuse to pull his license, and not longer after that he was facing felony charges.  Hudson County prosecutors got not only one grand jury to indict the guy, but two, after the initial charges were thrown out after it was shown the prosecution lied about the gun shop owner not having a license for the gun.

What’s wrong with people in New Jersey?  I’ll be the first to admit that confronting the double parking vehicle wasn’t the smartest thing to do.  Once the situation escalated, the smart thing to do was to retreat and call the police.  But you don’t get to beat a man when he’s down on the ground.  I might, as a juror, consider charges of simple assault for the both of them, and I’d probably even accept a charge for firing the gun within city limits.  But a felony gun charge, when the guy is licensed to carry?  No way.  It looks like he got off with probation, but he’s still a convicted felon:

A former Jersey City gun store owner who fired into the air while he was apparently being attacked outside a Downtown club two years ago was sentenced today to two years probation and 100 hours of community service and ordered to undergo anger management counseling.

So he gets sentenced as if it were a simple assault, which at worst it was, since it depends on who’s story you believe as to whether he was a willing participant in the fight.  But it doesn’t, to me, appear that Mr. Murray asked to be beaten.

More on Knife Restrictions

Joe Huffman looks a bit deeper into the issue and concludes, “it appears they are pushing toward calling any knife you can open with one hand as a switchblade.”  I can open my Leatherman blade with one hand.  This should be interesting.

Shooting Steel Animals

Looks like The Ten Ring stopped by Whittington Center to do some shooting when they passed through New Mexico on the way to Phoenix.  They shot on their silhouette range.  I know Pennsylvania is a bit of a drive from where they live in Maryland, but my club does handgun silhouette first Sunday of every month.  I’d be happy to introduce Denise and Sam to the sport, or anyone else for that matter.  Silhouette shooters are always happy to have new people on the range.

Stepping Up: Civil Rights Defense Fund

In light of this week’s ruling from the Seventh Circuit, and the scramble to get the Chicago gun ban case to the Supreme Court, I’ve decided to step up and make a donation to the NRA Civil Rights Defend Fund. I have noted before that the CRDF is consistently under funded and the legal battles we must fight post-Heller are extremely expensive.

Though the CRDF will be focusing its funding on NRA v. Chicago in coming months, it also has to maintain the usual caseload of non-SCOTUS bound cases and fund research to keep Second Amendment scholarship on track.

While NRA was derided by many for not jumping on board with the Heller case at first (hindsight is always 20/20), the CRDF was responsible for bringing in the scholars, lawyers, and others who contributed to moot court sessions, and not to mention the decades of research funded by CRDF that gave us the legal footing to make some of the arguments. Heller could not have happened if it weren’t for the investment that NRA’s CRDF made in Second Amendment scholarship for decades before the case was ever filed.

nracrdfwtp Beyond the big cases, CRDF is also available to help the little guy if the case is likely to set precedent. (Being under funded means not every case can get the full funding it may deserve.) Some of the cases you may recall include the student in Virginia who was targeted by school officials and threatened with punishment for wearing a shooting sports shirt to his public school. In New Jersey, CRDF has lent financial assistance to the case against one-gun-a-month in Jersey City which has been defeated in the lower courts and now awaits a decision by the state Supreme Court. In California, it was the CRDF who stepped up to fund the case against San Francisco’s ballot-approved handgun ban.

When they aren’t providing direct funding with cases, often those involved in the Defense Fund’s network of lawyers and academics use their connections to organize on behalf of cases. Organizing all of the amici curiae for Heller was no small feat. Nearly four dozen briefs were filed in the support of Dick Heller, many of those briefs were organized to focus on a specific argument so that every topic could be covered. There was no room to be broadsided by an unexpected argument. More than 125 female state lawmakers were rounded up to sign onto a single brief. History was made when NRA worked with Congress to get more Senators and Representatives on board with one brief than ever before in the history of our country. More than 30 states were organized to submit a brief declaring their support for an individual rights interpretation. This kind of work takes serious resources. Whether you always agree with NRA’s political work or not, there is something that CRDF has either aided with funds or organizing efforts that you can support.

The CRDF supports cases for individual gun owners, FFLs, and other Second Amendment supporters. It is impossible to overstate the support Defense Fund provides for protecting the Second Amendment. Unfortunately, their work is only limited by the funds they receive. As we barrel down a likely path toward the Supreme Court again in such a short time, it is time that we make sure they have all of the resources available to fight for incorporation.

I would also add that if you are an attorney who would like to contribute your legal services to any of the cases or get the CRDF on your firm’s pro bono radar, please contact them. Other lawyers have found that firms are surprisingly receptive to adding a bit of diversity to their pro bono programs.

Barbarians at the Gate

We have invaded Italy, and are poised to sack the Rome.  That must be why the Bradys are busy building fortifications in their capital city, and trying to push the barbarian hordes back into the countryside.

Hopefully it’ll work out about as well for the Bradys as it did for the Romans.

Obama’s Quiet War on Knives

Here we’ve been worried about him taking our guns, when apparently it’s our knives we have to worry about.  Banning folding knives?  Are you kidding?  Fortunately, there’s a group for this.  I guess since guns were out of the question, well, he had to take something dangerous away from us plebes, didn’t he?

Blog Rankings

Looks like a new blog ranking site, or at least new to me.  Not sure what criteria they use, but congratulations to SayUncle for making the top 200, at 193.  The only gun blog to rank in the top 200 with all the other cool kids.  I missed the list at 218.  Something seems off with that.  Reflecting on Groucho Marx, who wouldn’t join any club that would have him a member, I’m skeptical of a rank that puts me that high, over others who run more popular blogs.

La Quinta Inn Watches My Traffic?

Michael Bane gets shut out of some Hotel WiFi for “questionable traffic,” namely, reading gun blogs:

Am on the way to the airport in a couple of minutes…I wanted to post more, but the airport hotel I’m in, La Qunita, whacked my Internet access because of “questionable traffic…” That would, I suppose, be guns. I signed off their service and booted my 3G model. Interestingly enough, the specific site that got me was The Firearms Blog, which I like to check every day.

This is why I always use an encrypted tunnel if I’m on Hotel or other WiFi that I don’t control. I can tell you this though, I won’t be staying in an La Quinta inn any time soon.