Nevada faces an initiative that would virtually ban all private sales of firearms and would require federal record-keeping of all sales and transfers. The initiative is being promoted by a Michael Bloomberg funded group. The group was required to turn in 101,667 valid signature by November 12 of this year, distributed among various counties. The group claimed that they turned in 247,000. The signatures have not yet been validated.
An organization of second amendment supporters is claiming that initiative proponents missed the deadline to turn in signatures to Storey County, and that they missed a requirement that all signatures be turned in on the same day. From an AP story in kansas.com:
Petitions were turned in Nov. 13 to the Storey County clerk, said Don Turner, head of the gun rights group. That means proponents not only missed the Nov. 12 deadline there, they also missed a requirement to submit documents to each of Nevada's 17 county clerks on the same day, he said.Turner said that they have not finished checking 10 counties in Northern Nevada, and they may find more irregularities.
Proponents claim to be confident that the initiative will be certified. The next deadline of the certification process is on Thursday, 4 December, when the county clerks are required to have completed a sampling of signatures and report any problems.
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Link to Gun Watch
3 comments:
Massachusetts: Homeless woman's stun gun spurs 2nd Amendment case
Posted on December 2, 2014
http://www.nraila.org/news-issues/in-the-news/2014/12/massachusetts-homeless-womans-stun-gun-spurs-2nd-amendment-case.aspx
Dean. If any irregularities are found on some of the petitions, does that toss the whole thing? I don't think so as long as they have more than the required number. If the county clerks don't certify by midnight tomorrow night, is it then tossed out? I got a response from one of our pro 2nd senators and he basically said there's nothing the legislature can do and it's in the voters hands. THAT is worrisome.
The way that I read the law, there are time limits for the petitions to be turned in. They have to be turned in to multiple locations. If they miss one deadline, it might invalidate the entire process.
The initiative process has been before the federal courts at least twice so far, so this might make another time.
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