Wednesday, September 29, 2010

09-29-10



by permission from  Stephen P. Wenger
http://www.spw-duf.info

comments in () by the same



The RKBA and the 2010 Senatorial Elections: Will the 2011 Senate be friendlier to the Second Amendment than the current Senate? While the 2010 election will result in gains for Republicans, both parties contain pro-rights and anti-rights candidates. In 2006 and 2008, this meant that the anti-Republican deluge did little harm to the net numbers of Second Amendment supporters in Congress. While some conservatives wish that the NRA would not support pro-gun Democrats, the long-term survival of the right to keep and bear arms depends on gun rights having friends in both major parties. We saw what happened during the George H.W. Bush administration, when the White House believed that gun owners had nowhere else to go, and so Republicans could triangulate to support some anti-gun laws. This year, if N = the number of Republican Senate gains, then the pro-gun gain will probably be more than ½ N, but less than N. This gain could be significant, because it would produce enough pro-rights Senators to defeat a filibuster. On the other hand, if 2011 brings us a Democrat-controlled Senate with a Majority Leader other than Harry Reid, pro-Second Amendment bills will never get a vote. So moving from East to West, let's examine the races, taking into account the NRA grades that the candidates have received in present or past elections… (David Kopel is one of the leading legal scholars of the RKBA, not only in the US but back to the Bible and around the world. Whether or not it is by intent, his analysis seems to endorse NRA's tacit support for Harry Reid.)

http://newledger.com/2010/09/gun-rights-and-the-2010-senate-elections/

Meanwhile, on the House Side…:  The NRA's pro-incumbent instincts work out to the benefit of another endangered Democrat: The NRA-ILA has just endorsed Rep. Stephanie Herseth Sandlin of South Dakota. This might be a good time to check out my interview with Chris Cox, executive director of the NRA's Institute for Legislative Action. I didn't want to berate Cox; there's a great deal of logic to the organization's aim to establish allies on both sides of the aisle, and there's something principled about sticking with endangered lawmakers who stick with them. But it seems like a lot of rural Democrats who represent districts that voted for Bush and McCain have figured out that when they're accused of being liberals, as long as they never vote wrong on guns, they can always point to their NRA endorsement and use that as cover. I'd hate for America's foremost gun rights organization to turn into a life preserver for a bunch of liberal lawmakers who give lip service to the rest of our Constitutional rights. The Republican challenger for this seat, Kristi Noem, is a solid supporter of the Second Amendment and she won't vote for the stimulus or vote to make Nancy Pelosi Speaker…

http://www.nationalreview.com/campaign-spot/248070/noem-then-how-can-you-endorse-em

The Interview: …Chris Cox, executive director of the NRA's Institute for Legislative Action, talked to National Review Online about the group's approach to endorsements and how the organization ended up backing some figures who are not so popular with grassroots conservatives…

http://www.nationalreview.com/articles/247820/staying-target-jim-geraghty
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Lies, Damned Lies and Statistics: …Unsurprisingly, MAIG bases its claim that ten states supply the largest of proportion of "interstate crime guns" by using gun tracing reports from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives – despite the fact that such reports have long been discredited as a statistical source. Says the Congressional Research Service: "Trace requests are not accurate indicators of specified crimes…traces may be requested for a variety of reasons not necessarily related to criminal incidents." The reason, of course, is that not all guns used in crimes are traced, and that not all guns traced were used in crimes. Different law enforcement agencies have different policies on gun tracing, making the results useless for statistical analysis. I once had a firearm traced during a routine traffic stop. Is that a "crime gun?" Bloomberg would have you believe that it is… The MAIG report features all sorts of quasi-academic terms mixed with methodologically unsound conclusions. It tries to claim, for example, that certain types of gun laws (which, remarkably enough, coincide exactly with gun control advocates' wish lists) result in lower "export rates." (Never mind that a basic tenet of statistics is that "correlation does not imply causation." Simply because two things are associated does not mean one causes the other.) But one relatively new piece of fluff tries to claim that "Time to Crime" ("TTC") of two years or less – that is to say, the time from point of original sale to recovery from a crime – is an indicator of illegal gun trafficking… But watch how meaningless statistics can morph into "factoids" that "everybody knows." …Percentage of guns recovered now becomes percentage of guns sold. This went out to tens of thousands of viewers across the state, as well as those who viewed the organization's web site. Similarly, the news org gleaned from the report that North Carolina ranked in the top ten exporters of so-called "crime guns." Never mind that when factored for population, North Carolina drops to 20th in the country in "crime guns" exported per 100,000 inhabitants (a rate of 18.9), behind such crime gun dens of iniquity as Vermont (22.8)…

http://www.examiner.com/gun-rights-in-charlotte/mayors-gun-tracing-report-latest-sound-bite-for-gun-control

…If you're interested, you can wade through statistics on trace data and exports and "time to crime"...what strikes me is, this whole effort seems more an indictment on existing gun control edicts than the lack of laws. The Gun Control Act of 1968 pretty much limits "legal" personal interstate firearm transfers to those utilizing licensed dealers, and the "prohibited persons" committing the vast majority of violent crimes are forbidden by law to even touch a gun, let alone carry and use one.  And theft, another major source for "crime guns," is illegal as well. With those basics established, what point is there in wading through the minutiae?  What's clear is that Bloomberg, a chronic control freak with taxpayer-funded armed bodyguards, is intent on dictating what guns we can own, and how we must conduct ourselves with what he allows us to possess.  The whole point of this effort is to frighten the public and pressure politicians to pass even more citizen disarmament laws that, like all the edicts that have been enacted before, will only harass the "law-abiding." It's no accident that the violent crime plague is the worst in cities already under the (illusion of) control of  Bloomberg & Co. Their "solution" is to extend their enlightened rule over the rest of us, who have no problem controlling ourselves and who just want them to leave us alone.  But that's not to be, as a sampling of opportunistic jockeying in the wake of the Bloomberg report show us…

http://www.examiner.com/gun-rights-in-national/report-shows-mayors-against-your-guns-desperation-to-be-relevant
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Campus Gun Bans: Yesterday was a sad and harrowing morning at the University of Texas in Austin. A young man with an AK-47 assault rifle fired a number of rounds into the air as he ran past frightened onlookers at 8 a.m. He then dashed into the school's library where police say he shot himself… Coincidentally, the shooting occurred on the day that conservative author John R. Lott, Jr., a proponent of concealed-handgun laws, was to speak at the University of Texas law school about crime and how it is affected by citizens who own guns and carry concealed handguns… Guns bans don't deter crime, says Lott – an argument he made yesterday evening when speaking at a local book store, near where the first shots were fired, instead of at the university's law school. "Would you put up a sign in front of your house saying 'This is a gun-free zone?" he told the Austin American-Statesman before delivering his lecture. "That makes no sense because it tells the criminal there's not going to be any guns there. Yet we put signs like that up at our schools and universities. ... There's a tremendous advantage to having concealed-carry laws, because the shooter doesn't know who has a weapon." "Some places like the UT campus are targeted by gunmen because they know the potential victims won't be armed," Lott went onto tell more than 100 people – a crowd that Students for Concealed Carry on Campus Vice President Kory Zipperer told the Statesman was larger than expected…

http://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2010/09/concealed_carry_laws_and_a_sho.html
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Federal Bill Would Protect Lead Ammo: Following continued attacks by anti-hunting groups to ban traditional ammunition (ammunition containing lead-core components) under the Toxic Substance Control Act (TSCA) of 1976, Sen. Blanche Lincoln (D-Ark.) earlier today introduced legislation to clarify the longstanding exemption of ammunition under the act.  The bill is being championed by the National Shooting Sports Foundation (NSSF) – the trade association for the firearms, ammunition, hunting and shooting sports industry. "We applaud and thank Sen. Lincoln for introducing this commonsense measure today," said NSSF President and CEO Stephen L. Sanetti. "This bill will help to ensure that America's hunters and shooters can continue to choose for themselves the best ammunition to use." … (Lincoln is obviously running scared after her infamous vote on government takeover of health care.)

http://www.rightsidenews.com/2010092911782/us/politics-and-economics/senator-introduces-bill-to-protect-traditional-ammunition.html
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Both Sides Unhappy with New Jersey CCW Bill: …Last week, Van Drew introduced legislation to allow New Jersey  residents who pass background checks, complete a course in firearms safety, pass a test on the lawful use of force and pay a $500 annual fee to carry a pistol or revolver. Under current state law, only someone who demonstrates to the local police chief a "justifiable need" to carry a gun and gets badge of approval from a state judge can be issued a permit to carry a handgun. Relatively few citizens prove their case… Van Drew sees the $500 annual fee as a way to put dollars in the depleted state treasury. He also thinks changing the carry laws now could mitigate possible lawsuits challenging the constitutionality of current state carry laws in light of U.S. Supreme Court decisions striking down handgun bans in Chicago and Washington, D.C… Van Drew knows getting his bill through the majority Democratic legislature will be an uphill battle and will probably be opposed by both sides of the gun controversy. He's right. Scott Bach, president of the Association of Rifle and Pistol Clubs, termed the $500 fee outrageous and the provisions of the bill to qualify for the carry permit "excessive." Brian Miller, executive director of Ceasefire NJ, accused Van Drew of kowtowing to the "pro-gun forces of darkness." … (Linked page includes poll.)

http://www.nj.com/hudson/voices/index.ssf/2010/09/morgans_corner_both_sides_like.html
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California City Waffles on Open-Carry Arrests: The story is not over, if anything it is just beginning. Here is the latest move by the City of Manhattan Beach. The Manhattan Beach Hometown Fair has backed down on its threat of arrests. Today, the Chief of Police Rod Uyeda issued a two page press release which read as a condemnation of our individual, fundamental, Constitutional right to carry weapons for the purpose of self-defense, which the United States Supreme Court declared in its Heller Decision back in 2008 and left no doubt that it also applies to all States and local governments this June in its McDonald Decision. Although the Fair has backed down from its threats of arrest, the City has taken upon itself to redefine what constitutes a school ground under California Penal Code 626.9 - Under the law of the State of California, possession of firearms on public property within 1,000 feet of a school ground are restricted to being unloaded and in locked containers unless the school has granted written permission…

http://www.examiner.com/la-in-los-angeles/fair-backs-down-police-relegate-open-carry-to-back-of-bus

A South Bay group that advocates carrying guns in public will wear unloaded weapons to this weekend's Hometown Fair in Manhattan Beach despite threats that members will be arrested if they go near American Martyrs Church and Grandview School. Harley Green, the leader of South Bay Open Carry, said members want to promote their constitutional right to carry guns and believe the city is using the church to try to keep them away. Police Chief Rod Uyeda said state law - the California Gun Free Zone Act of 1995 - prohibits anyone from coming within 1,000 feet of a school, and American Martyrs Church includes a school…

http://www.dailybreeze.com/news/ci_16198985
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Oops, Wrong Grocery Store: Police say an armed robbery suspect is facing robbery and weapons possession charges after he tried to rob a grocery store on W. Brighton Avenue. According to police, a store employee shot the robbery suspect. The attempted robbery happened just before 9pm at the Los Amigos grocery store in the 200 block of W. Brighton Avenue. Police say Rauwshan Johnson, 29, tried to commit the robbery, when he was shot in the torso by a store employee. The suspect was taken to University Hospital for treatment, released, and taken to the Onondaga County [NY] Justice Center.

http://www.9wsyr.com/news/local/story/Grocery-store-employee-shoots-attempted-robbery/2pbkUHU0h06tPLFdKVXjew.cspx
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Oops, Wrong House: A woman who opened fire on four men who tried to kicked in her door on Friday said she's fighting back and won't become a victim. The incident happened Friday in the 1100 block of Woodville Drive, police said. Stephanie, who didn't reveal her last name because she said she fears for her life, said she was awakened at about 10:30 a.m. by a noise at her front door. She said she grabbed her gun as the men tried to kick in her door. "I just saw on TV where that 81-year-old got killed and I was like, 'No. I can't go out like this. I have a 13-year-old to live for,'" she said. Stephanie said she shot through the wall at the men. "I told her if an intruder ever comes, never open the door. Shoot through the door. We can always get another door," said Stephanie's husband, who asked WAPT News not to report his name. Stephanie said the men ran after she fired the shot… The Castle Doctrine gives Mississippians the right to protect their home and themselves when they're in danger… (All's well that ends well but see the reminder on Rule Four, below.)

http://www.wapt.com/news/25182490/detail.html
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Oops, Wrong Junkyard: A junkyard owner in Fayette County [PA] was able to fight off two thieves who beat him during a burglary at his business, according to police. Investigators said when the two men saw Toby's Recycling owner Stanley Tabaj, they attacked him with baseball bats and shocked him with a stun gun. "They come in with two ball bats and a Taser and started beating on me," said Tabaj. "They hit me once there, hit me once there, broke this hand here, hit me on the elbow here with aluminum bats." Police said Sean Garland, 20, and Nathan Smith, 18, were waiting for Tabaj when he arrived to at the business in Bitner early Monday morning. After the attack, Tabaj said he was able to grab his shotgun and fired birdshot, hitting one of the suspects in the back. "I grabbed the shotgun. It was sitting there and when he went around the corner of the building, I shot him," Tabaj said. "I might be an old man, but you don't play with this old man. Believe me." … (As the castle-doctrine languishes in the legislature, I'm not sure how the shot in the back will play out legally. Tabaj would seem to have been better served had he been carrying a handgun on his person.)

http://www.wpxi.com/news/25178355/detail.html
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Oops, Wrong Pizza Parlor: Inside a cooler at an east Charlotte Pizza Hut, two would-be robbers were hitting and pistol-whipping a delivery driver. All the while, the driver said, he kept his right elbow pinned tightly against his body - holding a Glock 22 under his shirt and out of view. He didn't want to use the gun unless he was forced to, he recalled Tuesday. But as he felt one of the men lifting his shirt, nearly exposing the gun, the deliveryman opened fire. The two men killed - Gregory James Hardy and Dauntrae Wallace - were both 21-year-old convicted felons, one on probation and one awaiting trial on unrelated charges. Police were searching Tuesday night for a third suspect who fled the attempted robbery and may have been wounded. No charges have been filed against the deliveryman… Pizza Hut employees have been fired for using guns in self-defense. Chris Fuller, a spokesman for Pizza Hut's national corporate office, said that "in the interest of our employees' safety, we don't discuss our safety policies publicly." However, there have been several reports in recent years in which Pizza Hut officials said corporate policy forbids employees to have weapons while on the job. A Pizza Hut employee in Columbia resigned last year after police said he shot and killed a robbery suspect. The employee resigned, according to Pizza Hut's Fuller, because of the company's policy forbidding employees to carry firearms. In one well-publicized May 2004 case, a Pizza Hut employee in Carmel, Ind., was fired after he shot and killed a would-be robber. And in 2008, a Pizza Hut worker in Des Moines, Iowa, lost his job after he shot and wounded a robbery suspect. Both of those Pizza Hut employees were delivery drivers… (The article contains many more details.)

http://www.charlotteobserver.com/2010/09/29/1725241/pizza-driver-hit-by-bandits-i.html
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Rule One, Rule Two Reminder: A 29-year-old Weber County man has been sentenced to prison for up to five years for critically injuring a 9-year-old boy while "dry firing" a loaded shotgun last year at a Roy trailer park. David Larry Dunlap had been using alcohol and marijuana before firing the shotgun through the window of a trailer as the boy walked by eight feet away. Dunlap told police he cleaned the shotgun, reassembled it and believed it was unloaded when he pulled the trigger on Nov. 7. The victim, Braden Schroeder, was struck by seven pellets of double-aught buckshot from his neck to his thigh, according to police. Prosecutors have said the boy was recovering, although surgeons left some of the buckshot inside his body. Schroeder, of North Ogden, was at the trailer park visiting his grandfather. Dunlap, of Riverdale, was house sitting for his grandmother. Dunlap was charged in 2nd District Court with second-degree felony discharge of a firearm and third-degree felony possession of a firearm by an unlawful user of a controlled substance. He pleaded guilty to lesser charges of third-degree felony aggravated assault with a deadly weapon and class A misdemeanor attempted possession of a firearm by an unlawful user of a controlled substance… (Rule One: All firearms are always loaded. Rule Two: Don't let the muzzle cross anything you're not prepared to shoot.)

http://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/home/50373930-76/dunlap-shotgun-firing-degree.html.csp
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Rule Four Reminder: … According to the Peninsula Daily News and Associated Press, an unidentified man was sitting in his back yard the other day when he was struck in the nose by a falling bullet. From all indications, this projectile was fired by some people who were about a half-mile away, on the far side of some woods, apparently shooting at clay pigeons with a .22-caliber rifle. Responsible gun owners could easily explain just why, if the story is accurate, that this is monumentally stupid. Indeed, shooting at flying clay targets with a .22-caliber rifle – unless you are a bona fide trick shooter – is so far off the stupid scale it's probably impossible to measure. But this is the kind of dumb stunt with the associated consequences that gives recreational shooters a bad image. Years ago, when asked by a now-retired firearms instructor for the King County Sheriff's Department, to help cook up a training scenario, I reminded him to include in the lecture portion that "A bullet that misses the target is going to hit something else." This is something that far too many casual recreational shooters don't seem to consider when they tramp off to the open spaces and start pressing triggers… To stop this, shooters need to police themselves, or guys like the ranger are going to do it for us. Which do you prefer? If you shoot on public land, clean up your mess, and clean up any messes someone else leaves, too. If you encounter gun slobs leaving their garbage in the woods, don't feel a bit guilty about reporting them. They have it coming…  (Rule Four: Always be sure of your target and what's beyond it.)

http://www.examiner.com/gun-rights-in-seattle/idiots-slobs-and-champions
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An Interesting Discussion:
Not because of my role but because of the responses eventually elicited, there is some interesting material about the increased risks of frame cracks, where the barrel is mounted, on small-frame revolvers made with aluminum alloys (e.g., Airweight and Airlite guns from S&W). I introduced the topic about one-third of the way down the first page and it took me a few tries to focus the replies from those who have more knowledge of the manufacturing process than I had. I have long preferred steel-frame revolvers, not only because of lower recoil but also because of more mass to stabilize the gun against a hurried trigger stroke. More recently, I have become aware of occasional but major cracks in the frames of the guns cited. Regardless of the +P rating now stamped by the factory on J-frame Airweight guns, I will continue to recommend the use of the standard-pressure 125 gr. Nyclad hollowpoint by those who insist on saving a few ounces in weight – a choice that may be justified if a heavier gun causes visible sagging of clothing with pocket carry. As a side note, I put my carry guns on a scale yesterday and found that, loaded with CorBon's 110 gr. +P .38 Special DPX load, the S&W 640-1's I carry on the waist, with 2 1/8" underlug barrels, each weigh 25 oz. while the out-of-production 640 I carry in the pocket, with the older 1 7/8" barrel, weighs 22 oz.

http://www.makereadyforum.com/viewtopic.php?f=75&t=61999

09-28-10

by permission from Stephen P. Wenger
comments in () by the same
http://www.spw-duf.info


NRA Still Waffling on Nevada Senate Race: …Because Harry Reid is the Majority Leader, this is arguably the most important Senate race in the 2010 election, featuring two candidates who are both appealing to gun owners for support.  Plus it's close – a  real nail-biter. And the 800-Lb. gorilla is sitting this one out. That NRA will not consider issues outside of the Second Amendment is something those of us who disagree with their refusal to make an endorsement understand.  We also understand that NRA should never allow itself to be considered a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Republican Party.
So shall we examine Mr. Cox's sole focus? …The last grade we have from NRA for the candidates is from six years ago. Angle got an "A" and Reid got a "B." Will NRA tell us how they have currently been graded, so we can take that information and "put it in the forefront of [our] decision-making"? How else would we be able to? And if they do, will they also explain how they derived the grades if asked for details? How will not doing either "encourage" us? How will taking no position "position [them] to help [our] rights"? …

http://www.examiner.com/gun-rights-in-national/will-nra-release-grades-reid-angle-race
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More on GRPC: …This event has been hosted each year for 25 years by the Second Amendment Foundation and the Citizens Committee for the Right to Keep and Bear Arms… This event was packed with informative panels and presentations. A copy of the agenda is at: http://saf.org/2010.GRPC.Agenda.pdf. You will see that the agenda reads like a roster of Who's Who of the RKBA movement in the U.S. (except for the obvious absence of the NRA. The NRA, we are told, is keeping a very low profile because of serious backlash by NRA members and others over some recent political compromises made by the NRA leadership.) I chaired a panel on Saturday on the Montana Firearms Freedom Act, the FFA movement, and our lawsuit to validate the MFFA, MSSA v. Holder. This effort is seen as really big deal in RKBA circles across the U.S. I had LOTS of people approach and congratulate me on MSSA's efforts in re the MFFA…

http://www.ammoland.com/2010/09/27/gun-rights-policy-conference-roundup/
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Arizona Attorney Disputes MAIG "Study": A new report says almost half of the guns that crossed state lines, and were used in crimes in 2009, were sold in 10 states. Arizona is one of those states. Using stats from the Bureau of Alcohol Tobacco Firearms and Explosives, a federal agency, the report found 49 percent of weapons traced to crimes in 2009 were sold in states with relaxed gun laws. The report, 42 pages long says 10 states, Arizona included, sell half of imported crime guns. Sounds alarming. What exactly is a crime gun? David Hardy, attorney and gun advocate says, "If it's your gun and it gets stolen, and police recover it, under the Mayor's study it would be labeled a crime gun even though neither you or a thief ever used it in a crime." Hardy disputes the report. He's quick to point out page 32 which reads, "traced firearms in the report do not represent all crime guns." Even so, the group who produced the report Mayors Against Illegal Guns stand by their numbers, saying "there is no evidence that this systematically distorts the findings." So where do their findings come from? The report sites the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives. But AFT spokesperson Special Agent Tom Mangum, in Arizona tells News 4, "We did not participate in the report. Right now it's under review to measure the methodology and validate their findings." Hardy hopes they do. He says Mayors Against Illegal Guns is an advocacy group pushing for stricter gun laws…

http://www.kvoa.com/news/gun-trafficing-and-crime-report-stirs-critics/
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Legal Guns in NYC: J.Lo and her 2-year-old twins can rest easy at night: Daddy is packing heat. Singer Marc Anthony is one of dozens of celebs, millionaires and high-profile athletes authorized to carry a concealed weapon in the city, records show. And the number of A-listers who have guns is growing. "We have seen an increase in celebs seeking their own permits," said John Skylar Chambers, a lawyer who has helped New Yorkers get gun permits for more than 20 years. "They can get their own security, but with the Internet, it is much easier to find people. They don't want to find someone on their lawn at 5 in the morning." Other big names licensed to carry a gun include actor Robert De Niro, shock jock Howard Stern and supermarket mogul John Catsimatidis. Billionaire Donald Trump and his son, Donald Jr.; celebrity lawyer David Breitbart, and artificial-heart inventor Robert Jarvik can also carry steel, police records reveal… (I wonder how many of these celebs actually invest in meaningful training with the guns they carry.)

http://www.nydailynews.com/ny_local/2010/09/27/2010-09-27_celebrities_seeking_pistol_permits_on_the_rise_in_the_city_lifestyles_of_rich_n_.html
http://www.people.com/people/article/0,,20429404,00.html
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Implications for Campus Carry in Texas?: The University of Texas has issued an all clear hours after a gunman opened fire with an assault rifle at a campus library then fatally shot himself… Officials say a man fired A weapon on the sixth floor of the library early Tuesday before killing himself. Police Chief Art Acevedo told NBC News that that the dead man suffered what appeared to be a self-inflicted gunshot wound. No shots were fired by law enforcement, Acevedo said. NBC News reported that officers had recovered an AK-47 from the scene. University spokeswoman Rhonda Weldon said that no one else was hurt in Tuesday morning's shooting at the library… Tuesday's shooting is not the first at the school. On Aug. 1, 1966, Charles Whitman went to the 28th floor observation deck at the UT clock tower in the middle of campus and began shooting at people below. He killed 16 people and wounded nearly three dozen before police killed him about 90 minutes after the siege began… (Rarely mentioned is that a private citizen, armed with an M1 Carbine, accompanied the two officers up the tower, then split in the opposite direction on the landing and fired a shot that distracted Whitman, allowing the two officers to close in for the kill. Whitman had also been taking suppressive fire from several students who had hunting rifles in their fraternity houses. On autopsy, Whitman, a USMC-trained rifleman, was found to have a small brain tumor, which may have accounted for his actions.)

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/39398736/ns/us_news-crime_and_courts/
http://www.newsmax.com/US/USUTGunman/2010/09/28/id/371836
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One More Push for Pennsylvania Self-Defense Law: For nearly 6 years we have 'all' been working to improve the use of force laws (known as Castle Doctrine)  here in Pennsylvania so that gun owners would feel that they would be treated fairly 'if' they have to use force to defend their families with lethal force. Unfortunately we have been frustrated by the idiosyncrasies of Pennsylvania politics. Again, we want 'nothing more' than what other states have: reasonable legislation that will provide important protections for 'law-abiding' citizens who must use protective force when confronting criminals. Thousands of volunteer organizations' dollars and thousands of man-hours have been dedicated to this effort. Grassroots leaders of Pennsylvania gun rights organizations have bent over backwards trying to be fair in a good faith effort to accommodate critics of this important legislation. Sadly, this legislation has been held hostage by a shrill minority in the legislature consisting of the Philadelphia Legislative caucus and certain agencies… Please contact your legislator and members of the House of Representatives leadership and let them know that you not only support this legislation but that you want them to 'swiftly' move it through the House to the Senate and to the Governor…

http://www.ammoland.com/2010/09/27/pennsylvania-self-defense-rights-are-on-the-line/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+ammoland+%28AmmoLand.com%29
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Meanwhile, in Missouri…: The Ripley County Prosecutor's Office told Region 8 News Monday that changes in the state's deadly force law have provided more protections for homeowners and residents who fall victim to burglary and other criminal action. According to Prosecutor Christopher Miller, homeowners or residents who use deadly force to protect their family or property from a person who unlawfully enters their home cannot face civil lawsuits from the criminal nor their family. "If they're going to come in and do anything, steal your crockery, you can use deadly force and that was a significant change. Prior to that time, the use of deadly force just to protect property was not authorized," said Miller. Miller said the state of Missouri adopted new legislation in 2007, strengthening the protection for residents. According to Miller, the legislature recently passed an amendment to include vehicles as part of a person's "castle." …

http://www.kait8.com/Global/story.asp?S=13226170
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Wisconsin Open-Carry Event: Nearly everybody was packing heat during Saturday's open carry picnic at Haskins Park in West Baraboo. However, other than some passionate political speech, the firearms advocates had a cool celebration of their cause. The gathering by supporters of the right to openly carry firearms for self defense is one example of a movement that has held similar picnics around Wisconsin. It was sparked last year when state Attorney General J.B. Van Hollen published an opinion that the state constitution allows people to carry unconcealed firearms as long as the armed person does not violate other laws… Later the picnic took on a more political cast as Wisconsin Carry, Inc. Vice President Hubert Hoffman spoke about securing citizens' rights to be armed. He argued a recent Supreme Court ruling involving the Second Amendment of United States Constitution gives people an "absolute right to carry a firearm." … (I'm not sure which decision Hoffman has been reading but I don't recall such verbiage.)

http://www.wiscnews.com/baraboonewsrepublic/news/local/article_80beb664-c9e6-11df-8b13-001cc4c002e0.html
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California Open-Carry Incident: Just before 3 p.m. Saturday, a white Chevy Blazer pulled up to the arrival curb outside Terminal A at Mineta San Jose International Airport. Two men dressed in black parked the SUV, switched on its hazard lights and approached the information desk to inquire about American Airlines Flight 1205 from Dallas. Both carried assault rifles strapped across their chests, with handguns in their holsters. A volunteer at the desk politely told them the plane was due at 3:02 p.m. And another volunteer asked one of the armed men, "Are you one of the people who ride on the plane" looking for terrorists? "No," he replied. Then the pair casually waited near the escalator that ferries travelers to the luggage carousels… It appears that airport travelers that day either figured the pair's mission was benign, or perhaps thought they were part of a ninja movie. San Jose police said they received no calls inquiring about the men with rifles… It turns out the men with the assault rifles were from Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and were meeting another security staffer returning from assignment, lab spokesman Don Johnston said. San Jose police and airport officials, who were unaware of the armed greeting until questioned by the Mercury News on Sunday, said protocol is for a law enforcement agency to give notice when sending armed personnel into another agency's jurisdiction, according to police Lt. Mike Sullivan. An airport videotape showed the men in the baggage area for seven or eight minutes, airport spokesman David Vossbrink said… (I'm sure they'd get a bigger response if they tried that at a beach or pier in southern California.)

http://www.mercurynews.com/ci_16181812?source=most_viewed&nclick_check=1

Related Lawn Decorations:

http://cgi.ebay.com/Unpainted-Combat-Garden-Gnomes-with-assault-rifles-/180562105065?pt=Art_Sculpture&hash=item2a0a5712e9
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Oops, Wrong House: Authorities said a pistol-packing homeowner scared three men suspected of trying to break into her home Friday afternoon, causing them to drive off. They were arrested after a short chase. According to the Livingston Parish [LA] Sheriff's Office, Leon Guerin, Dominique Griffin and Scevera Alexander Jr. were taken into custody in connection with the burglary. The suspects are all 19 years old and from Baton Rouge. Investigators said a Satsuma woman heard a knock at her back door and then a very loud noise. She said she thought someone was "tearing down the wall." Detectives said she grabbed a .357 magnum pistol and surprised the men, one of which was already in her kitchen. Deputies reported the men ran to a red car and drove away… Investigators said the trio was wanted in connection with other burglaries in the area. They were each booked into the Livingston Parish Detention Center on two counts of burglary of an inhabited dwelling…

http://www.wafb.com/Global/story.asp?S=13223654
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Oops, Wrong Old Man: Charles Place is 83 and frail. He has back problems and a bad hip. And, if he has to, he said he will kick your — well, you get the picture. Clearwater [FL] police say Bryan Treloar learned that lesson Thursday morning when he tried to rob Place in the parking lot outside Costello's restaurant. Instead of handing over his belongings to a man 40 years his junior, Place struggled with him and pulled out a .25-caliber semiautomatic handgun. "He was probably one surprised son of a gun," Place said… This Clearwater senior citizen totes a gun and knows how to use it. He has carried it around for 10 or 15 years, he said… (Actually, from the photograph, Mr. Place needs to learn to keep his finger out of the trigger guard, until his sights are on the target and he's prepared to fire.)

http://www.tampabay.com/news/publicsafety/crime/83-year-old-clearwater-man-pulls-gun-on-would-be-robber/1123803
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Oops, Wrong Restaurant: Police say a Connecticut restaurant worker shot and killed one of two suspects who tried to rob the Bridgeport establishment. Police tell WTNH-TV that the suspects attempted to rob the Peking Restaurant on Wade Street Sunday night, but a worker with a gun shot one of them. The station reports that the worker has a gun permit. Authorities say both robbers fled in a getaway car, but it crashed nearby. Police say they found one suspect dead inside the car. Police haven't named the worker or the dead suspect. It's not clear if police caught the other man. (Recall that a reporter in Wisconsin recently opined that the risk of a serious crime at a restaurant was very low.)

http://news.bostonherald.com/news/national/northeast/view/20100927police_conn_restaurant_worker_kills_robber/srvc=home&position=recent
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Rule Five Reminder: A 2-year-old boy shot himself Monday with a pistol he found under a bed in an apartment in western Maryland, authorities said. The boy, who was not named, was hit in the chest and critically wounded, said Hagerstown police chief Arthur Smith. Smith said the boy was taken to Children's Hospital in the District after the incident, which occurred about 1:15 a.m. Smith said the incident taught a "hard lesson" about the need to store firearms securely. (Rule Five: Maintain control of your firearm.)

http://voices.washingtonpost.com/local-breaking-news/maryland/boy-2-shoots-self-with-found-p.html?hpid=sec-metro
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When Guns Are Outlawed…: Gunmen stormed a police headquarters in the northern Mexico and escaped with around 70 firearms, officials said. The criminals took assault rifles, pistols and tactical equipment from the state police headquarters in Chihuahua early Monday, an official spokesman said. No one was hurt in the robbery and the gunmen only threatened the officer in-charge of the storage area, Chihuahua Public Safety Secretariat spokesman Fidel Banuelos said. The incident is 'unprecedented' because this is the first time that a state police facility has been stormed, Banuelos said…

http://sify.com/news/gunmen-rob-police-in-mexico-news-international-kj2mucecjic.html
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Tangentially Related: People who've been alerted by electric alarm systems on their homes about a home invasion or other emergency are legion, have to number in the tens anyway. Fact check: do you set your alarms when you are home? (You do? Congratulations!) The number of people alerted to emerging disasters by dogs? I imagine there are lots of people, whole tribes if we stretch back to antiquity. Why would prehistoric peoples work with the strains of wolf to make them a whole line of domesticated stock - but to help with chores and to be another set of ears and eyes alert to danger. If you're not a dog person, do us a favor - don't get a dog just to be "tactical." It doesn't work that way. Dog owners just have an early warning edge in that department. They should. There's a huge investment in time, effort and the practice of patience in having a dog. What kind of dog is best? The kind you like. Having read articles about the "small yappers are as good as the big dogs" and "big dogs are better," I'm convinced it doesn't matter. It's having the dog and letting the dog know at what it's appropriate to sound the alarm - and when it's important to be quiet…

http://www.thetacticalwire.com/archived/2010-09-28_tactical.html
--  

09-27-10

by permission from Stephen P. Wenger
comments in () by the same
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GRPC Reports: The Second Amendment Foundation and the Citizens Committee for the Right to Keep and Bear Arms held the 25th Annual Gun Rights conference at the Hyatt Regency Hotel near San Francisco airport starting on Friday evening, going through today Sunday 26th of September. The event was sponsored by CalGun Foundation, and the California Rifle and Pistol Association. Saturday saw about 400 attendees from various clubs and organizations in California and other grass roots activists turn up to listen to the speakers… Stronger alliances with local and national gun rights organizations have developed, as well as many new alliances with traditionally very liberal and even anti gun people such as Gay and Lesbian groups…

http://www.examiner.com/hunting-in-san-francisco/25th-annual-gun-rights-policy-conference-held-san-francisco

It was off to a roaring start, and it ended with more bang for the buck than one might imagine; the 25th annual Gun Rights Policy Conference generated excitement, lots of networking, and a reminder and warning that the Second Amendment is not just about guns. Sunday's program opened with a presentation by the folks at Knife Rights, a fledgling group that is now doing battle with a prosecutor in New York over the Draconian knife rules he has imposed. The organization got full support from those attending GRPC, when its founder, Doug Ritter, told the audience, "It is our Second Amendment, too." Whatever else a knife is, he noted, it is an "arm" in the most basic sense, even though most people who regularly carry knives think of them as utilitarian tools. He's got a point, no pun intended. Crack open any gun magazine, from the National Rifle Association's American Hunter or American Rifleman to other publications including Combat Handguns, American Handgunner, Gun World (where my byline appears occasionally), Shooting Times and Guns & Ammo, and you will find advertisements for "tactical" knives, and sexy-looking folders that open with one hand…

http://www.examiner.com/gun-rights-in-seattle/arms-are-not-just-firearms-knives-and-the-2a-wrap-up-grpc

…Today, we had the opportunity to listen to, meet, and photograph 2nd Amendment/civil rights litigation attorney Alan Gura, who, with his District of Columbia (D.C.) v. Heller and McDonal v. Chicago wins, has been instrumental in reaffirming the 2nd Amendment as an individual right, not a collective right. In DefenseReview's opinion, based on just those two U.S. Supreme Court decisions alone, Mr. Gura deserves to go down in history as one of the most important civil rights lawyers in the history of the United States. And, he's not even close to done, yet. He's still out there working and fighting to restore our Second Amendment rights around the country and federally. Lately, he's been working with California lawyer Donald Kilmer on some important California Second Amendment cases… It was a pretty inspiring day. The National Rifle Association (NRA) may have the numbers and the name, but the SAF/CCRKBA (led by the formidable Alan Gottlieb) and Alan Gura appear to be initiating and engaging in the most important Second Amendment/civil rights litigation in the country.

http://www.defensereview.com/defensereview-dr-attends-the-2010-gun-rights-policy-conference-grpc-in-san-francisco-san-francisco-values-get-a-serious-upgrade/
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He's Baack: Nearly 600 mayors nationwide, led by Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg  of New York and other city leaders, are mounting a new campaign to identify states with lax gun laws and push for tighter restrictions to prevent the trafficking of guns used in crimes. A study due to be released this week by a coalition called Mayors Against Illegal Guns uses previously unavailable federal gun data to identify what it says are the states that most often export guns used in crimes across state lines. It concludes that the 10 worst offenders per capita, led by Mississippi, West Virginia and Kentucky, supplied nearly half the 43,000 guns traced to crime scenes in other states last year. The study also seeks to draw a link between gun trafficking and gun control laws by analyzing gun restrictions in all 50 states in areas like background checks for gun purchases, policies on concealed weapons permits and state inspections of gun dealers. It finds that, across the board, those states with less restrictive gun laws exported guns used in crimes at significantly higher rates than states with more stringent laws. An advance copy of the study was provided to The New York Times

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/27/us/politics/27guns.html?hpw
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DC RKBA Update: D.C. police have started a campaign asking residents to tell them about any illegal firearms that might be in their neighborhoods. Fliers that say, "Got Guns?" are being distributed thought the city. Anyone with information about an illegal firearm can call 888-919-CRIME. Residents who give a gun tip can get up to $1,000, police said. (What if DC Metro PD were to put this much effort into facilitating the lawful ownership of firearms in the District?)

http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/local/crime/Police-start-_Got-Guns__-campaign-985804-103737284.html
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Deadly-Force Law in West Virginia:
When faced with an intruder this week, a Lavalette man used immediate and deadly force to defend himself, his girlfriend, a 2-year-old child and their house… Wayne County Sheriff Greg Farley called it a "good Second Amendment case," and Bartram's actions seem to line up with state's Castle Doctrine passed in February 2008. That legislation, Senate Bill 145, sets forth conditions and legal protections for which a person can use "reasonable and proportionate force, including deadly force" to protect one's self, one's residence or others in danger. It states such force can be used when one believes the intruder or attacker intends to commit a felony offense inside the resident's home or that assailant may inflict serious bodily harm to the resident or others. Such action also can be used outside of the home, provided that the person protecting one's self or others has a legal right to be at the location. Legislation states that person also must believe self or others to be in imminent danger of death or serious injury and that "he or she or another can only be saved by the use of deadly force against the intruder or attacker." In neither instance does the endangered party have a duty to retreat, according to the legislation…

http://www.herald-dispatch.com/news/x857725668/The-use-of-deadly-force-OK-in-W-Va
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Open-Carry Showdown Nears in California City: …And so, next Saturday at 1:00PM, Open Carry advocates will gather in Manhattan Beach and attend the Hometown Fair. One of them will be a lobbyist from Sacramento who was instrumental in defeating the Democrat's attempt to ban Open Carry, AB1934, which died in the Assembly at literally the Midnight Hour on August 31st. It was killed by a vote of 54 to 11. A 180 degree reversal of its support the first time it passed the Assembly. The latest tactic by the city has been to redefine what constitutes a school ground under California's Gun Free School Zone law of 1995. California Penal Code 626.9 prohibits the possession of firearms on public property within 1,000 feet of a school ground. There is a Catholic school, well over 1,000 feet from where the Fair will be held. As a religious school, the students attend mass in church and occasionally receive instruction at locations off of the school grounds. The City is taking the position that these buildings, which lie within 1,000 feet of the Fair are part of the school grounds under PC 626.9. It doesn't seem to matter to the Police that the buildings are not zoned for schools, they have not conducted fire drills for schools in conjunction with the Fire Department which is required under the law and they do not have a license to operate a school at these locations. The California Department of Education has no record of a school operating at any of these locations, nor do these locations appear on the affidavit filed by the school…

http://www.examiner.com/la-in-los-angeles/open-carry-showdown-manhattan-beach-california
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New York – Fudds versus EBR's: The controversy started this summer with the posting of new rules at the Elbridge Rod and Gun Club. The rules addressed club members' concerns about disturbingly loud and in some cases unsafe shooting by members owning semi-automatic, military-type rifles – such as AK-47s or AR-15s. "We had members who were mag dumping – shooting 30-round magazine clips with their AKs. You can't shoot like that here," said Ron Rosen, president of the 800-member Elbridge club located off Laird Road. "They shoot their guns, we shoot ours. But we tried to put practices and policies into place. They resisted and we asked them to leave," he said… Both sides have their versions of the events that led to the final vote. The incident has reverberated across the local rod and gun club scene, in addition to creating traffic on websites and chat rooms catering to the owners of these firearms, particularly ar15.com… ("Fudd" is a derogatory term – from the shotgun-toting cartoon character Elmer Fudd – for gun owners who believe that the RKBA is safe so long as one does not push it beyond traditional hunting and target shooting. "EBR" is an Evil Black Rifle.)

http://blog.syracuse.com/outdoors/2010/09/debate_heats_up_over_elbridge.html
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South Carolina – the Beat Winds Down: Vendors at the land of the sky gun and knife show have mixed opinions about this weekend's gun sale. However, they all agree that they don't come close to profits they were making two years ago. "We're starting to see a slowing of that now and I think you're seeing much larger inventories that the guys are having," Mike Kent said, promoter for the Land of the Sky Gun and Knife Show in Florence. Gun shop owners across the country reported record sales when President Obama was elected to the White House. Gun owners feared he would pass legislation that would limit gun rights. Now that the controversy has cooled down, vendors say sales are dropping back to what they were before. "The numbers are beginning to drop off so obviously our profits drop off as well." Kent says the weakened economy has significantly impacted the sale of firearms and ammunition as well. While people have more limited funds with which to purchase guns, he suggests an increasing interest in personal safety maintains a steady number of guns purchased… (While I still expect Big Brother to use an executive order to ban the import of firearms and ammunition from Russia, before he leaves office, I would hope that most gun owners understand that it is Congress, not the president, that passes legislation.)

http://www.wmbfnews.com/story/13220126/local-vendors-say-gun-sales-not-what-they-used-to-be
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He Said, She Said, in Las Vegas: The fourth day of testimony in the coroner's inquest into the police shooting death of Erik Scott was filled with Costco customers who saw the shooting, but not all of their testimonies matched. Police responded to the store after a Costco employee called 911 to report a man acting erratically, possibly on drugs, damaging merchandise and carrying a pistol in his waistband. Some witness accounts of what transpired outside the store have conflicted with Metro's version of events and with the versions explained by other witnesses… Rodriguez was with his wife, Jo Ann, and his mother-in-law at Costco. Both husband and wife described Scott as a "man who was frozen in time," like a deer in the headlights. Rodriquez said he didn't understand the shooting because Scott didn't appear to be threatening. "I saw a man that was not crazy, who was not insane," he said. And Rodriquez said he didn't see Scott with a gun… Dain Szafranski, another customer who saw the shooting, had a different view of the event. Szafranski was at Costco with his mother and 2-year-old son when they saw officers outside the store with their guns drawn. He heard one officer command Scott to "get on the ground" three times; the instructions were loud and clear, he said. Szafranski said Scott was standing with his arms to his side, raised between his waist and his shoulders, and was talking, but Szafranski couldn't hear what he was saying. Scott looked combative, like he was mad and was arguing with the officers, he said. Scott suddenly "snapped," Szafranski said. He demonstrated how Scott quickly moved his leg back to take a shooting stance while moving his right arm to his waist as if to draw a gun… Pahrump resident Eileen Nelson was just about to check out at Costco when she was told to evacuate… While Nelson was waiting outside, she saw officers with their guns drawn, ordering someone to get down on the ground. She saw Scott raise his right hand toward the officer with something in it, she said. An officer then shot Scott, and the item dropped out of his hand. It was then that she saw it was a gun holster, she said…

http://www.lasvegassun.com/news/2010/sep/25/witnesses-give-conflicting-accounts-costco-police-/
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Tangentially Related: It is a situation we have all witnessed or experienced firsthand. The make-or-break moment arrives. The decisive at-bat, the well-rehearsed concert performance, the public speech. Then suddenly - aaarggh. It all goes wrong. The ball whistles past, the fingers slide all over the keyboard, the voice becomes an inarticulate mumble. You are now a choker. You have failed in the clutch… Both Mr. Sullivan and Ms. Beilock insist on the importance of facing the truth about one's abilities and yet not paralyzing oneself through analysis. In some cases, choking is just a question of not being good enough. Here what is needed is more practice and discipline. But one has to forgo one's pride to admit as much. In other cases, individuals can start to worry too much about the effects of an important moment rather than focusing on what needs to be done in the present. Alex Rodriguez's troubles, Mr. Sullivan writes, came down largely to his excessive fear of criticism and his constant mental comparisons of himself with the greatest legends of baseball. It was only in 2009, after his marriage had dissolved and he had spent months recovering from an ailing hip, that he discovered the humility needed to be a clutch player. As Mr. Rodriguez put it: "For me, with no expectations and trusting my teammates and taking the walks and doing the little things, you end up doing big things." … (As my former teaching partner used to put it, at the moment you take the shot in a fight, you have to shift from the goal orientation of the entire fight to the task orientation of making that shot.)

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703499604575512392562368732.html?mod=djemEditorialPage_h
--  Stephen P. Wenger, KE7QBY  Firearm safety - It's a matter  for education, not legislation.  The tactics and skills to use a firearm in self-defense don't come naturally with the right to keep and bear arms.  http://www.spw-duf.info 



--
Jason Baird
214-495-9858
jasongbaird@gmail.com

09-26-10


by permission from Stephen P. Wenger
comments in () by the same
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From GOA: The U.S. Senate today [Thursday] defeated the so-called DISCLOSE Act when it failed to garner the 60 votes necessary to overcome Republican objections to the bill. The final vote was 59-39. Even though the exact same bill, sponsored by Chuck Schumer (D-NY), had been defeated just two months ago and was unlikely to pass, anti-gun Majority Leader Harry Reid (NV) brought it up for another vote to "stir up" his left-wing base. Instead of protecting the most important type of speech protected by the First Amendment – political speech – with this bill Congress attempted to force groups like GOA to "disclose" the names of donors in certain political advertisements. Since Gun Owners of America will never disclose its membership lists to the federal government, it could be prohibited from running radio or TV ads exposing a federal candidate's voting record in the weeks leading up to an election… With a lame-duck session of Congress looming after the election, anything is possible – including another attempt to push through DISCLOSE. So please stay tuned.

http://gunowners.org/a092310.htm
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I Wouldn't Hold My Breath: A South Jersey senator has proposed a new law considerably liberalizing New Jersey's concealed-weapons-carrying laws, but the whopping fee and required proficiency demonstration will not make this new law attractive to libertarians. Matt Friedman of The Star-Ledger (Newark) Statehouse Bureau reported yesterday on the bill, S2264, which Senator Jeff Van Drew (D-Cape May) actually introduced last Monday. It amends the current concealed-carry law (NJS 2C:58-4) to allow a person to carry a gun for reasons going far beyond the current standard. According to current law, an applicant may receive a concealed-carry permit only if he satisfies his local police chief, and then a judge, that he has a "justifiable need" to carry a handgun. Van Drew's new law, among other things, strikes that… Van Drew's new law would require a background check, courses in gun safety and when the use of force is lawful, demonstrate proficiency in using the particular gun he proposes to carry, and pay an annual fee of $500. That fee alone is a show-stopper to many, especially because this is an annual fee, not the biennial $20 fee charged at present. Van Drew admits that the chief reason for the fee is to provide yet another source of revenue. The new law provides that of that $500 fee, $50 is to go to the issuing law-enforcement authority, another $50 to the relevant County Clerk's office, and the rest to the state General Fund…

http://www.examiner.com/essex-county-conservative-in-newark/state-senator-proposes-liberalizing-nj-gun-carry-law
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Speaking of Crime at Restaurants: Gilbert [AZ] police say they have arrested a 52-year-old man accused of fatally shooting another man at a steakhouse. A police statement says Eligio Millanes-Esquer opened fire at about 8 a.m. Saturday at a Texas Roadhouse Restaurant on Power Road and killed 26-year-old Daniel Gerardo Zamora-Robles. Police say Millanes-Esquer sped away from the scene in a white pickup, and he was taken into custody at 6:40 p.m in the West Valley. Police say Millanes-Esquer and the victim had a domestic relationship, but the details of the relationship were unclear. (Yesterday I linked the comments of Wisconsin journalist: "But chances are remote that A) a crime will occur at a restaurant where a legal gun carrier just happens to be eating, and B) the crime will be of sufficient seriousness to risk actually firing a gun amid the diners" Fortunately, this shooter only choose to target one other diner.)

http://azstarnet.com/news/state-and-regional/article_e887e9b2-3516-59dd-8057-173715c8f16f.html

And Speaking of Open Carry in Wisconsin…: A list member has pointed out that the US Supreme Court overturned a California law that criminalized refusing to produce identification on the demand of a police officer.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kolender_v._Lawson
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In Canada, Close but No Cigar: It certainly looked promising six weeks ago when the Conservative-backed parliamentary measure to do away with the boondoggle-ridden registry of rifles and shotguns seemed to have the necessary votes. This past Wednesday's bid to scrap the registry, though, was thwarted by a razor-thin 153-151 vote in favor of a Liberal motion to kill the private member's bill introduced by a Tory backbencher which would have fulfilled a 2006 Conservative campaign promise. The disappointing loss left Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper vowing to continue the battle to abolish the registry, which fight he is expected to use it as a prominent issue in the next federal election. Despite the September 22nd outcome, the matter is still being debated today. A little late to enlightenment, Robert Barron writing in The Nanaimo Daily News (British Columbia) admits that a dispassionate look at the contentious subject changed his thinking…

http://www.thegunzone.com/TGZBlog/2010/09/24/sooooooo-close-but-canadas-long-gun-registry-endures/
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Revolver Malfunctions: Grant Cunningham is a gunsmith who specializes in tuning "the classic double-action revolver." This article is worth reading but I give the highest points to the comments about dispensing with diagnosis and transitioning to a backup gun in a fight. Cunningham's tips are particularly useful if you experience a malfunction on the range. Note that traditional S&W revolvers have the cylinder release – the thumb piece, in S&W nomenclature – mounted on a "bolt," which keeps the action from cycling if the cylinder is not locked in place, unless the thumb piece is held to the rear. This is not true of Colt and Ruger double-action revolvers. I have never checked this in my limited experience with Taurus and Rossi DA revolvers but I suspect that they follow S&W in this regard. In a training environment, users of double-action revolvers should keep a used toothbrush or similar cleaning brush in a pocket and periodically brush the underside of the extractor star and its mating surface on the cylinder, to remove any accumulation of unburned powder granules.

http://www.personaldefensenetwork.com/articles/handguns/the-revolver-malfunction-drill/
http://www.grantcunningham.com/
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Specificity in Training: While the gunfight isn't a recognized "sport" as some fighting formats are, one has to wonder how much sports training translates to gunfight training. There is commonality. Martial arts were geared to teach fighting not to earn degrees and belts but to provide a means of effective defense. The "stylized dance" or ritual of some martial arts has lessened the art's relevance as we see in mixed martial arts/ultimate fighter venues. Specificity in sports training is a simple concept - you train doing what you need to do with everything as close to the competitive event as possible in the training practice… It was inappropriate, under the principle of specificity, to teach gunfighters to shoot on bull's eye targets. Using the B-27 and the stylized dance of PPC was better, we were told. Okay… Specificity, appearing simple as a principle, has depth. It's something to consider. Just remember, precision is as necessary as speed. (Bill Jordan liked to repeat the saying that speed is fine but accuracy is final. In this context, I believe that precision and accuracy are virtually synonymous and they are relative to distance. With the caveat that peripheral hits will not incapacitate anyone who is determined not to be incapacitated, generally, the closer you are the more important speed becomes and the farther you are, the more important precision becomes. Remember Ray Chapman's dictum that speed is five-sixths smoothness. Smoothness is the elimination of unnecessary motion. I shot a handful of "combat pistol" matches when I lived in Douglas and was always impressed by how slow most of the competitors were coming out of the holster. Some were very precise and even fast shooters but I saw lots of unnecessary motion in their little-practiced draw strokes.)

http://www.thetacticalwire.com/archived/2010-09-23_tactical.html
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09-25-10


by permission from Stephen P. Wenger
comments in () by the same
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GRPC Offends Local Reporter: Do you like guns? I mean really like guns? Then throw your newspaper or computer to the floor, return your .357-caliber Sig Sauer pistol to its velvet-lined box -- or if you've got a concealed carry permit, bring it with you -- and rush over to the Hyatt Regency San Francisco Airport in Burlingame, which this weekend is hosting "Saving Freedom," the 2010 Gun Rights Policy Conference. Have they left? OK, good. Now that the wackiest gun nuts are out of the room, let's peruse the agenda for the conference, sponsored by the Citizens Committee for the Right to Keep and Bear Arms and the Second Amendment Foundation. The 2010 conference is going to cover all the bases. Are you worried about gender imbalance in the world of firearms? Introduce yourself to Julianne Versnel, publisher of Women & Guns magazine, or check out "Diversity Among 'Pro-gunners,'" a panel discussion featuring Paxton Quigley, author of "Armed and Female." …

http://www.mercurynews.com/san-mateo-county/ci_16167386?nclick_check=1
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Funds Sought for Wisconsin Open-Carry Lawsuit: Please donate to Wisconsin Carry, Inc's efforts in bringing suits against the City of Madison, Madison Police, Police Chief, and anyone else culpable (ICarry is making assumptions as to whom the defendants may be). This is for the 5 men arrested for open carrying, minding their own business. They were NOT staging anything or trying to get arrested. Some of these men are known to us personally, and we know their intentions were nothing more than to meet with one another, share a meal and conversation, and be able to exercise their fundamental right to bear arms. These open carry meet-ups are happening everywhere, and this one was no different… Wisconsin Carry, Inc. has tried to solve this diplomatically, but Madison Police Chief Noble Wray has simply declared all-out war by charging all 5 men with disorderly conduct, despite the Wisconsin Attorney General stating that open carry is not disorderly conduct and should not be prosecuted! …

http://www.ammoland.com/2010/09/24/gun-rights-lawsuit-to-madison-police-chief/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+ammoland+%28AmmoLand.com%29

…Based on information gathered over the past several days here are the facts of the case: Our members had finished dinner and were outside preparing to leave when 8 Madison Police officers arrived and began to demand ID. Officers told the members that if they did not produce ID they would be arrested. 2 of the 5 declined to provide ID. Wisconsin law does NOT allow officers to demand ID from individuals who have done nothing wrong. Wisconsin law also specifically does not allow officers to arrest an individual who has done nothing wrong for merely refusing to show ID. 2 of our members were subsequently arrested and charged with obstructing. It was later learned that a 62 year old woman in the restaurant had called 911 and inquired as to whether it was legal for people to openly carry firearms. The caller indicated there was no disturbance but she was "worried". Madison Police responded, not by informing the caller that open-carry is legal, but rather sending 8 officers to respond to a peaceful situation… Madison Police DID recognize their error and rescinded the tickets for obstruction that were issued to 2 of our members. Madison Police admit in a press release those tickets were given in error. Madison Police then issued Disorderly Conduct citations to ALL 5 of our members. According to Madison Police, if ONE person is 'worried', even though there is no disturbance, your constitutional rights mean nothing. Wisconsin's Attorney General CLEARLY stated in a memo in April of 2009 that open-carry IS NOT disorderly conduct…

http://www.ammoland.com/2010/09/23/wisconsin-carry-fast-tracking-lawsuit-against-madison-police-department/

…I'm not disputing the men's right to openly carry firearms. I'm sure there's a fair argument to be made that the Second Amendment protects such behavior. And in any case, the state's top lawyer, attorney general J.B. Van Hollen, has already issued an advisory memo saying the state constitution sanctions it under many circumstances. Rather, Culver's seems like an odd choice for the armed diners. Any place advertising crinkle-cut fries and a frozen custard of the day does not seem amenable to the wearing of glocks, revolvers and Saturday night specials… So these gun lovers apparently like custard, and yes, crime can occur anywhere. But chances are remote that A) a crime will occur at a restaurant where a legal gun carrier just happens to be eating, and B) the crime will be of sufficient seriousness to risk actually firing a gun amid the diners… (I'm sure that those dining many years ago at the McDonald's in San Ysidro CA or the Luby's Cafeteria in Killeen TX also felt that the chances were remote that a crime would occur there. As John Farnam likes to quote from that old TV theme song, "when you least expect it, you're elected…")

http://host.madison.com/wsj/news/local/chris_rickert/article_9db9e5d6-c838-11df-be29-001cc4c03286.html

Madison Richards and Samantha Noll, both 14 and high school freshmen, don't shy away from controversial subjects. They hit them head-on with a video camera in hand. This year they are turning their cameras toward the issue of the Second Amendment and the state's open carry law. "Everybody has a viewpoint," said Richards, a freshman at Horlick High School. "It's a relative issue to Racine and Wisconsin and the United States in general." It's an issue that has been in the spotlight recently, especially in Wisconsin after two men in Madison were arrested Saturday who were openly carrying firearms and then refused to provide identification when police questioned them. Members of gun rights organizations say police had no reason to suspect the men were felons and question them. This is all part of the issue the two local teens are targeting…

http://www.journaltimes.com/news/local/article_37c6406a-c7cc-11df-b92e-001cc4c002e0.html
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F Troop Targets Dealers: U.S. law enforcement officials have devised an aggressive and potentially controversial new strategy to crack down on the illegal gun trade to Mexico by targeting cartel networks inside this country and "corrupt" U.S. firearms dealers, according to internal Justice Department documents obtained by NBC News… The new strategy was prepared in recent weeks by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms (ATF)'s Office of Field Operations, in the wake of stinging criticism of current ATF efforts to stem the flow of weapons to the cartels by the Justice Department's inspector general… The principal thrust of the revised strategy directs that ATF agents focus on taking down the operations of high-level gun traffickers working for specific Mexican cartels rather than simply trying to arrest low-level "straw buyers," as they have often done in the past. It also calls on agents to use more sophisticated investigative methods, such as analyzing financial and telephone records, routinely used in terrorism and organized crime cases, and to work more closely with other federal agencies such as the Drug Enforcement Administration… (And what is the Mexican government doing to secure its own armories and southern and coastal borders?)

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/39345370/ns/us_news-crime_and_courts/

Click here  to download the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives' (and big fires, don't forget big fires) new and improved Project Gunrunner strategy, designed to stem the flow of illegal guns from the U.S. to Mexico. The document affirms one of our main themes on this story: the ATF's efforts are part of an enormous cluster-you-know-what: a farrago of federal, state, local and Mexican law enforcement agencies working disharmoniously to force cash-rich cartels to source their weapons away from the U.S. – Mexican border. Like THAT'S going to be a problem. Deep breath. Here we go . . .

http://thetruthaboutguns.com/2010/09/robert-farago/atfs-war-on-guns-revealed/
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Audio Recording Released in Controversial Washington Shooting: The Spokane County Sheriff's Office released recordings of radio traffic between Deputy Brian Hirzel and dispatchers the night of the fatal shooting at The Plant Farm in Spokane Valley… It appears deputies don't even know who the shooting victim is until Imogene Creach, Scott's wife, called 911 about her husband.
Dispatcher: 911 what are you reporting?
Imogene Creach: Yes, I'm at the Plant Farm in the parking lot. My husband is not in bed I think he's out there but there were shots fired.
Dispatcher: OK and where is this at?
Imogene Creach: 14208 East 4th Avenue
Dispatcher: 14208 East 4th?
Imogene: Yes..
(Granted that people may experience cognitive dissonance under stress, Mrs. Creach's 911 call seems to contradict here later statements about a pre-arranged routine that had her observing her husband's venture outside the home.)

http://www.kxly.com/news/25092245/detail.html
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Meanwhile, in Las Vegas…: William Mosher was one of the first Metro Police officers who responded to the Summerlin Costco on July 10 after an employee called 911 to report that a man with a concealed weapon was destroying merchandise in the store and acting erratically… Mosher, describing what happened next, said he waved several citizens out of the way. Holding his gun to his chest, he told Scott to turn around; as he did so, Mosher saw the gun in Scott's waistband. Mosher said he yelled several commands. He saw that Scott's eyes looked bloodshot. He noticed that Scott appeared to be "out of it." He heard Scott say, "I have a gun." When he saw that gun "come up," the five-year Metro veteran fired two rounds. Two other officers also fired, ultimately hitting Scott with seven bullets. Five went into his back. Mosher's testimony came as part of the second day of a coroner's inquest into the death of Scott, a West Point and Duke University graduate who was working as a medical salesman… He explained how after homicide detectives responded to the scene and began investigating the officer-involved shooting, a number of items were recovered outside the store: Several shell casings, a cell phone, and a 9mm Kimber semiautomatic handgun. The handgun was still in its holster. Mosher testified that he didn't know that the gun was in its holster at the time he fired. He said he owns the same type of holster, and the gun could be "easily fired" while in its holster. He also testified that he didn't recall ordering Scott to "drop his gun." But those commands are distinctly heard on the 911 tape that was played for the jury… (This is definitely a "he said, she said" cluster. If nothing else is to be learned, I would still counsel not to move a hand in the direction of a holstered firearm, regardless of an officer's command to do so – keep your hands as high in the air as they will go and let the officer remove the gun himself, even if he wants you prone to do so.)

http://www.lasvegassun.com/news/2010/sep/23/officer-deadly-shooting-says-man-pointed-gun-didnt/
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Rule One, Rule Two Reminder: A Walton County [FL] sheriff's deputy is recovering Wednesday after he accidentally shot himself in the knee Tuesday night. Sgt. Donald Lee Savage, who has been a deputy since 2005, was cleaning his department-issued Glock .40-caliber pistol in his Niceville home when the gun fired and a bullet hit his knee, according to an Okaloosa County Sheriff's Office report… The Walton County Sheriff's Office has opened up an internal investigation into the shooting. Fountain said officials will check to make sure no policies were violated by Savage. "Right now, it appears that it was an accidental discharge of a weapon and that's all," Fountain said… (Rule One: All firearms are always loaded. Rule Two: Don't let the muzzle cross anything you're not prepared to shoot. It would appear that the basic safety rules are not considered to be incorporated into department policy in Walton County. This is an all too common occurrence with Glocks and other pistols that require that the trigger be pressed in order to remove the slide from the frame. The sergeant is lucky not to have perforated his femoral artery, as others have done – a wound that is almost always fatal. I have to wonder is the pistol was being cleaned with some distraction, such as watching TV.)

http://www.thedestinlog.com/news/shooting-33132-nwfdn-deputy-knee.html

Lewiston [ID] police say no charges will be filed against a Bonner County sheriff's deputy who accidentally fired his weapon in a hotel room. The Lewiston Tribune reports the deputy was practicing techniques he'd learned in a firearms instruction class when the gun went off Monday evening at the Inn America. Police say the deputy, who has not been named, was aiming what he thought was an unloaded gun at a mirror in his room and practicing dry-firing. A round discharged, went through the mirror and into the next room, where the occupant was in the shower. Nobody was injured. The deputy told officers he neglected to check to make sure the gun wasn't loaded… (I wonder if the same courtesy would have been shown to a private citizen.)

http://www.spokesman.com/stories/2010/sep/22/no-charges-deputy-who-fired-gun-hotel/

And Rule Three, to Boot?: A police sergeant who observed his 25th-year anniversary on the police force Monday was shot in the arm by a fellow command officer during the afternoon shift change inside the Scott Park district station, authorities said. Sgt. Jeffrey Bechtel was shot in the upper right arm near the shoulder and was taken to Toledo [OH] Hospital for treatment of the nonlife-threatening injury, police Chief Mike Navarre said… The officer who fired the weapon is a female, 27-year veteran of the force. Chief Navarre declined to release her name during the investigation. "Only one shot was fired," Chief Navarre said… Chief Navarre declined to call the incident an accident pending the outcome of the investigation. "I'm not saying it was an accidental shooting," Chief Navarre said. The two police officers worked together, but the chief declined to provide details of events that preceded the shooting… (Rule Three: Keep your finger out of the trigger guard, up on the frame, until your sights are on the target and you're prepared to fire. Or is the chief suggesting that the shot may have been fired intentionally?)

http://toledoblade.com/article/20100921/NEWS16/9200432/0/OPINION02

A 14-year-old boy suffered serious injuries in an accidental shooting at a neighbor's apartment Friday afternoon, police said. The teen was sitting with a 21-year-old man in the 1200 West block of Pacific Avenue (440 South), said Salt Lake City police Sgt. Robin Snyder. The man had a handgun that accidentally went off about 1 p.m. and a shot hit the boy in the upper leg. It wasn't immediately clear who was holding the handgun when it fired, or what caused it to fire. "Something happened and it discharged, we just don't know what," Snyder said. The teen was taken to a hospital in serious condition. Police were investigating whether the 21-year-old had the gun legally, and if any charges will be filed in the case.

http://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/home/50349788-76/teen-accidental-police-shooting.html.csp
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NRA-ILA Alerts: List members are encouraged to read the alerts for the week, posted on the NRA-ILA website.

http://www.nraila.org/GrassrootsAlerts/read.aspx
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Tangentially Related: When Miriam Leverington, a cardiac nurse in Colorado Springs, was stopped for speeding, she grumbled to the police officer. "I hope you are not ever my patient," she reportedly told him. What happened next has become a topic of widespread debate in Colorado and on the blogosphere. The police officer, Duaine Peters, complained to the hospital where Ms. Leverington worked that her comment amounted to a threat, suggesting she might give him poor care should he ever become her patient. The hospital fired the nurse, and now the nurse has countered with a lawsuit. She says she was merely exercising her right to free speech – and expressing her hope that she never see the policeman again. The case is now being decided by a federal appeals court, but raises the question of whether nurses and health care workers should be held to a higher standard than other workers… (As a retired medical professional, it strikes me that the issue is one of making a threat of death or serious bodily injury by means of withholding or giving inappropriate medical care. That is not the same thing as calling the officer a bad name of flipping him off, actions that have been upheld in some courts.)

http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/09/21/the-policeman-vs-the-nurse/

09-17-10


by permission from Stephen P. Wenger
comments in () by the same
http://www.spw-duf.info


From CCRKBA: The appointment of anti-gun rights former Seattle Mayor Greg Nickels as an alternate representative to the United Nations has removed any doubt about the Obama administration's intentions regarding global gun control initiatives, the Citizens Committee for the Right to Keep and Bear Arms said today. Nickels, a founding member of Mayors Against Illegal Guns and the author of Seattle's failed attempt to override Washington's state firearms preemption statute, was sworn in Wednesday to "help represent the United States in the UN assembly," according to the Seattle Times. "Putting an extremist gun banner in any position to represent this country at the United Nations amounts to renting a billboard for advertising against the Second Amendment," said CCRKBA Chairman Alan Gottlieb. "While he was Seattle's mayor, Greg Nickels supported every anti-gun scheme put forth by Washington CeaseFire, the Northwest's most active gun prohibition lobby…"

http://www.ccrkba.org/?p=2488
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NRA – Caught in the Crossfire: In a ritual as predictable as hunting season, it's another election year and people are once again gunning for the National Rifle Association. Only this time the powerful gun-rights group and bête noire of the left is taking friendly fire -- from activists on the right who are growing increasingly impatient with the NRA for taking stands at odds with the rest of the conservative movement. I'm beside myself," veteran conservative leader Richard Viguerie told TAS. "It's really sad. The NRA's leadership has become part of the problem in Washington." While Viguerie's tone is more in sorrow than in anger, Erick Erickson of the popular conservative blog RedState has emerged as scathing critic of the NRA, calling it "a weak little girl of an organization." …What irks these conservatives is the sense that the mighty NRA – a 4 million-member, $307 million organization – has become too pragmatic in the use of its power: too willing to compromise with Democrats, too cautious in its approach to Second Amendment litigation, too slow to oppose liberal judicial nominees, and too willing to settle for a place at the table in liberal-occupied Washington…

http://spectator.org/archives/2010/09/17/caught-in-the-crossfire
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Congressmen Seek Protection of Veterans' RKBA: Congressman John Boozman is taking action after he says the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs mistreated a local veteran. The VA declared Purple Heart recipient Wayne Irelan of Lavaca incompetent and took away his license to carry a weapon. The VA declared him incompetent because Irelan's wife handles the family finances Thursday Congressman Boozman filed legislation that would force a judge to declare someone incompetent, not the VA. "The VA arbitrarily turns these folks over to the FBI, and then they yank their ability to have their Second Amendment rights," Boozman said. "So these individuals are not; just because you're having trouble with your finances doesn't mean you're incapable of owning a fire arm and going hunting and things like that, which are very, very important to many of these individuals." Congressman Boozman says he hope the legislation is passed by the end of the month. (While the VA may have placed Irelan in a database that resulted in the revocation of his carry permit, that revocation was actually done by the Arkansas State Police.)

http://www.kfsm.com/news/elections/kfsm-news-boozman-veteran-bill,0,335121.story

The House Veterans Affairs Committee Wednesday approves H.R. 2547, authored by Moran in May 2009, to protect the Second Amendment rights of veterans. The bill would change the Veteran Affair's current practice of revoking the gun rights of veterans and their families if they receive assistance in managing their finances… The VA's current practice labels veterans who have a fiduciary appointed to act on their behalf financially are labeled "mentally defective" and are reported to the FBI's National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS). Being listed on the NICS prevents veterans from owning or purchasing a firearm. According to Moran's office, since 1998, more than 117,000 veterans and members of veterans' families have been reported to the NICS because they have a fiduciary appointed on their behalf. The legislation was approved as an amendment to a veteran benefits measure. The bill is supported by the National Rifle Association and Gun Owners of America. (Jerry Moran currently represents Kansas in the House of Representatives but is running for the Seante.)

http://www.morningsun.net/news/kansas/x1470551059/Morans-legislation-approved-by-committee
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Campus Carry for Texas?: Gun shots. Screaming. Chaos. Things no student, staff or faculty member ever wants to encounter within the classroom at any university. Yet, are institutions of higher education across the country really doing their students and faculty any favors by banning licensed students and staff from carrying on campus? … Texas is still behind the curve in allowing its students who are licensed to carry on campus, but came closer in February 2009, when a bill was introduced during the 81st legislative session, calling for campuses to allow concealed handgun carry. SCCC said that Senator Jeff Wentworth (R-San Antonio) introduced bill 1164 on Feb. 26, 2009. The bill left the State Affairs Committee and passed the Senate by a vote of 20-11. The bill was then sent back to the House Calendars Committee but ultimately died due to the lengthy Democratic filibuster in the Texas House over the Voter ID bill. Despite this setback, debates are still going on today at many campuses, even progressing to "empty holster protests," originally coined by the SCCC, in which students wear empty gun holsters in protest of the concealed handgun ban. Currently, Utah is the only state allowing licensed handgun owners to carry on campus at its nine public universities. With any luck, Texas will eventually follow suit – allowing students and faculty to equally defend themselves in a crisis situation and put their lives back in their own hands.

http://www.therambler.org/opinions/concealed-carry-makes-safety-personal-1.2332092
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Local Gun Ban Violates Alabama Law: …Last Tuesday at the Auburn City Council meeting, Auburn resident Donald Sirois complained that there is a discrepancy between state and city laws concerning carrying concealed weapons onto city property. Currently, according to section 13-12 of Auburn's city code, weapons of any kind, whether permitted or not, are banned from city property. Sirois, a member of the NRA, said the ordinance violates the state's pre-emption law, which states, "The entire subject matter of handguns is reserved to the State Legislature." This means a city government cannot make a law concerning handguns that is more specific than state law, Sirois said. Sirois said there are signs in front of certain municipal buildings, such as recreation centers and the City Council chamber. The state code does not specify whether handguns are allowed in municipal facilities…

http://www.theplainsman.com/view/full_story/9537583/article-Concealed-carry-laws-create-controversy?instance=home_news_1st_right
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Pro-RKBA California Legislator Indicted: A Los Angeles County grand jury on Thursday unsealed an eight-count felony indictment against state Sen. Roderick Wright  (D- Inglewood), accusing him of filing a false declaration of candidacy, voter fraud and perjury beginning in 2007, when he changed his voter registration to run for the Legislature. Wright listed as his residence a home in the district he wanted to represent, but county authorities allege that he did not live there as required by state law. The indictment also alleges that Wright fraudulently voted in five elections in 2008 and 2009… Wright, who won the Senate post after a bitter primary battle with former Rep. Mervyn M. Dymally, has long been a fixture in area politics. He was a district administrator for Rep. Maxine Waters  (D-Los Angeles) before being elected to the state Assembly in 1996, serving six years before term limits forced him out in 2002… (When he was an assemblyman representing South L.A., Wright offered free firearm training to his gun-owning constituents. He sponsored a few bills supported by the California Rifle and Pistol Association, including one that would have compensated owners of unfairly confiscated SKS rifles with detachable magazines – a situation that arose due to an error by the state attorney general.)

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-rod-wright-20100917,0,941559.story
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Discrediting the Man Shot by LVMPD: …Much of the new information about Scott comes from police reports and divorce papers that recently have come to light. It's notable, however, that in none of the incidents was Scott ever convicted of any crime. The most recent incident was chronicled by Scott himself in a March 13 report to Las Vegas Animal Control. Scott said that he was bitten four days earlier by a "pit bull-type mix" near his Summerlin apartment and that he suffered two lacerations on his right leg. In his report, Scott wrote that he had a .45-caliber handgun, which he had a license to conceal and carry, and that he had pulled it out "for protection." He said he saw the dog's owner "hurrying to collar and leash" it. The owner later apologized, Scott wrote. On March 14, an animal-control officer contacted the dog owner's wife and later wrote that she "was upset because (Scott) had pulled a gun on her dog and her husband." The officer advised her to file a police report and then quarantined her chocolate lab when she could not provide proof of rabies vaccination or a license. The next day, the dog owner told police that Scott had pointed a gun at him and said, "Your (sic) lucky I didn't (expletive) kill your dog." A police officer wrote up a report, but no charges were ever filed against Scott. The dog owner could not be reached for comment for this article. Two short marriages produced two written allegations of domestic violence… Las Vegas police have not released toxicology reports that would confirm or disprove Gorzoch's allegation of Scott's drug use. Bill Scott said he knew nothing of steroid use but confirmed his son was being treated with legal human growth hormones at a Las Vegas-area clinic… (None of this is likely to have been known to the officers on the scene. Until I see further facts, the ultimate issue appears to have been that Scott moved a hand in the direction of a pistol in his waistband. Regardless of his alleged intent to disarm himself, in the heat of the moment that appears to have been seen as a threat.)

http://www.lvrj.com/news/darker-details-come-to-light-102608619.html?ref=619

A recent 8 News NOW-Las Vegas Review-Journal poll suggests the majority of southern Nevadans don't have much faith in the coroner's inquest process. As a result, local leaders are talking reform again. This is not the first time public opinion has prompted reform. In 2006, the controversial shooting death of 17-year-old murder suspect Suave Lopez lead to a formal review of the coroner's inquest process. Recommendations were made, public hearings were held, and changes were implemented. But in the words of one participant, if we're still taking about it the reform fell short… Four years and 44 police shootings separate Suave Lopez from Erik Scott – the latest catalyst for change. Metro officers killed Scott earlier this summer in a Summerlin Costco. While the status quo will govern his inquest, Young and Lichtenstein hope future proceedings may take a different shape…

http://www.8newsnow.com/Global/story.asp?S=13162097
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Rule One, Rule Two Reminder: Authorities in St. Joseph [MO] are investigating after a police officer was shot and killed by another officer in an accident during a training exercise on Wednesday afternoon. Officer Dan De Kraai, 35, and a five-year veteran of the St. Joseph Police Department, was accidentally shot in the back and killed by a fellow officer during the training exercise at an empty school building in the 1900 block of 12th Street in St. Joseph… Connally says that officers had just finished training inside the empty school when the shooting happened. "During training they do not carry live rounds," said Connally. "These particular officers had gone on a break and usually when they do go on break, they usually do go back to live rounds… It appears to be a demonstration done between the two officers," said Connally, who says that his department is investigating the shooting, which they have ruled to be accidental. But Connally admits that standard protocols were not followed by the officers. "Working in situations like this we usually have a motto, 'Check once, check twice, check a third time'," said Connally. "That protocol is in place to keep this from accidentally happening. Something like this, when it's not followed, you have a tragedy like we're dealing with today." (Rule One: All firearms are always loaded. Rule Two: Never let the muzzle cross anything you're not prepared to shoot. Force-on-force training should be conducted with dedicated guns that cannot handle live ammo and needs to have monitors to ensure that no live weapons enter the scenario.)

http://www.fox4kc.com/news/wdaf-story-st-joseph-police-shooting-accident-091510,0,7988720.story
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Rule Five Reminder: The 3-year-old son of a Clark County [WA] Sheriff's detective died early today after he accidentally shot himself in the head a few hours earlier, according to a news bulletin issued by the Battle Ground Police Department. Ryan Owens, son of Eddie and Kristie Owens, died at 2 a.m. His father was off-duty and home at the time. It is unclear how the child obtained the gun. Officials say the gun was not Owens' service weapon, which is required to be kept in a lock box when at home. The shooting was first reported at about 10 p.m. Tuesday at their home in the 800 block of Southeast 11th Street in Battle Ground. The boy was treated at Legacy Emanuel Hospital in Portland, but died about four hours after the accident… The case is similar to one several years ago involving the death of a sheriff's sergeant's child. After that, Clark County Sheriff Garry Lucas issued the policy requiring deputies to keep their guns in a lock box. (Rule Five: Maintain control of your firearm. News media often misinterpret crucial details – it is unclear if the sheriff's department policy allows a deputy to wear his gun in a holster inside his own home. If it does not, that may explain part of why a personally owned firearm was not secured but not why it was not kept on the deputy's person. At 10 p.m., it may have been placed on a night table as the family prepared for bed. The department policy is vaguely described in the sidebar.)

http://www.columbian.com/news/2010/sep/15/boy-3-shot-head-bg-son-sheriffs-deputy/

Eighteen months after a high school massacre, the 51-year-old father of the perpetrator has gone on trial in Stuttgart accused of breaching Germany's gun law safeguards. Prosecutors allege that businessman Joerg K. left his handgun unsecured in a bedside cupboard, instead of keeping it locked away inside his weapons cabinet. His son Tim K., then aged 17, took the large-caliber Beretta pistol from his parents' bedroom, together with 258 bullets, and then shot dead nine pupils and three teachers at his former school, Albertville College, at Winnenden in southwestern Germany on 11 March, 2009. He fled in a hijacked vehicle and shot dead three passers-by, and finally himself, when located by police at a car lot several hours later…

http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,,6010850,00.html
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Tangentially Related: Sept. 17, the day 39 delegates to the 1787 Philadelphia Convention signed and submitted to Congress (under the Articles of Confederation) a new constitution for consideration – used to be familiar to many Americans. But as the Constitution's authority has faded in our public life, its birthday has faded too… So what happened? The Constitution has suffered two blistering critiques, both of which undermine its integrity: First, the Constitution is outdated, no longer relevant for modern America. Second, it is racist and immoral because it offered protection for Negro slavery. Progressives leveled the first charge more than a century ago; the second became the battle cry of the modern civil-rights movement. Well-educated, well-intentioned, public-spirited men and women who wanted to advance justice, as they understood it, progressives and civil rights activists took aim at the Constitution. From their point of view, the greatest political good is "social justice," meaning an egalitarian redistribution of wealth coupled with an inegalitarian distribution of civil rights, all supervised by bureaucratic experts whose interest is, allegedly, the public good rather than their own. The Constitution, by this measure, is an impediment to justice and therefore bad…

http://www.investors.com/NewsAndAnalysis/Article/547553/201009161902/In-Remembrance-Of-Constitution-Day.htm
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