Monday, September 30, 2024

Puerto Rico: May Issue to Shall Issue. What Happened?


On January 1, 2020, Puerto Rico underwent a sea change in their firearms law. The Commonwealth of Puerto Rico had one of the most restrictive firearms law of any American jurisdiction. In 2016, they only had 225,000 legal owned firearms in the Commonwealth. The legislature noticed  the Supreme Court decisions in Heller, MacDonald, and Caetano, and the many cases pending before the courts. The legislature noticed Puerto Rico's homicide rate was higher than any state in the United States.

The legislature decided to bring Puerto Rico law into compliance with the Second Amendment. In 2019, they debated the subject and passed Act No. 168. Governor Wanda Vázquez Garced signed it into law on December 11, 2019. The act took effect on January 1, 2020.

The act transformed Puerto Rico from a highly restrictive may issue jurisdiction into a moderate, shall issue jurisdiction. There were reciprocity arrangements in the law, to recognize permits from the 50 states.  It appears those arrangements have been thwarted by administrative inaction.

Opponents of reforming may issue law to shall issue routinely predict the change will degrade public safety. They tend to use the "blood in the streets" emotional argument. There have only been four years and a few months since the law in Puerto Rico went into effect We have the homicide rate figures for the four years before the law went into effect and the four years after. We have an approximation of what happened to legal gun ownership in Puerto Rico during from 2020 to 2023.

In the four years before 2020, the homicide rate averaged 19.95 homicides per 100,000 population in Puerto Rico. In the four years since the law went into effect, the homicide rate averaged 17.60 per 100,000 population. It is not an extreme drop, but it is a drop. The homicide rate did not increase. The sample is quite small, only eight years. In the 30 years from 1990 to 2019, the Puerto Rico homicide rate dipped below 18 four times (1990, 1998, 1999, and 2015) out of 30 years. Since 2019, it has dropped below 18 three of four years (2020, 2022, and 2023).



The total numbers of firearms registered in Puerto Rico are not easily available. 225 thousand were reported as registered in 2016. Since then we have National Instant background Check System numbers for Puerto Rico.  If we add those to 225 thousand from 2026, we have 302 thousand at the end of 2019. From 2020 through 2023, another  249 thousand have been done. It appears the number of legal firearms in Puerto Rico has increased by roughly 83%. This is significant, as the permits to purchase from 2020 on are also concealed carry permits.

The number of guns which could be legally carried in public increased by over 80%. The rate of homicides decreased by over 13%. It is difficult to square those numbers with the assumption that more guns equal more homicide. The raw homicide numbers do not differentiate between murders and justified homicide. Even a few justified homicides increase the benefit of the new law beyond what is observed.

Analysis: What has happened in Puerto Rico has happened many times in the United States.  It is similar to what has happened in the dozens of "no issue" and "may issue" jurisdictions which have enacted reforms to become "shall issue" and Constitutional Carry or permitless carry. There has been no change or a slight drop in homicides. The theory of "guns are bad" does not hold when considered against objective reality.

 

©2024 by Dean Weingarten: Permission to share is granted when this notice and link are included.

Gun Watch





 




FL: Armed Driver stops Potential Car-Jack after Crash

In the midst of that happening, police said gunfire erupted from the crash site when subjects, who stayed behind in the crashed vehicle, approached the civilian driver with a gun. The civilian driver also took out their gun and fired at the subjects, injuring one of his arms.

The subjects ran away from the crash scene.

The injured subject was transported to Aventura Hospital in stable condition after being found by police a few blocks away.

Police haven’t said how many other people were left behind after the driver crashed into the innocent person’s car.

More Here

SC: Richland Counting Altercation Becomes Physical, then a Gunfight

Deputies determined that the two individuals are acquaintances who became involved in an altercation with one another that turned physical, according to RCSD.

When the altercation became physical, the first man retrieved a firearm and began firing at the second man.

Then the second man also retrieved a firearm and began firing at the first man. Both men received gunshot wounds as a result.

More Here

Sunday, September 29, 2024

OK: Oklahoma City Dispute Leads to Defensive Shooting

Investigators discovered that Martinez had driven to the home to settle a dispute between him and the occupant. A disagreement began between the two, leading Martinez to pull out a gun and point it at the occupant’s head.

A third person in the home saw the situation unfolding, grabbed a gun and shot Martinez.

The shooter has been interviewed by investigators and was released pending further investigation.

 

More Here

NV: Las Vegas Homeowner Shoots, Kills, Irrational Intruder

On Thursday, Sept. 26 at around 7:40 a.m. a person called 911 to report that their home in the 6400 block of Placer Drive, near West Harmon Avenue and South Torrey Pines Drive, was being broken into.

As officers were dispatched, the 911 dispatcher heard a shot over the phone, LVMPD Homicide Lt. Jason Johansson said during a news conference Thursday. The person reporting told the dispatcher they shot the man, who appeared to be in his 30s or 40s, Johansson said.

The homeowner, who is in their 20s, told police that the man was acting “extremely irrational” and would not listen to the homeowner when they asked him to leave the home, Johansson said.

Johansson said the man then “moved toward the doorway” where the homeowner was, leading to the homeowner to shoot him.

More Here

Thursday, September 26, 2024

Rifle Found at Location of Second Trump Assassination Attempt, ranges to Potential Targets



On September 15, 2024, a second assassination attempt was foiled by Secret Service agents when at least one fired at a person who was poking a rifle muzzle through the perimeter fence at Trump's West Palm Beach Florida golf club.The attempt was stopped about 2 p.m. From the nypost.com:

It is the second time a madman armed with an assault rifle has tried to kill the 45th president in two months.

Palm Beach County Sheriff Ric Bradshaw said the suspect took cover near a chain-link fence between 300 and 500 yards from Trump as he teed off at the fifth hole around 2 p.m. — noting that “with a rifle and scope, like, that is not a long distance.”

An investigative picture has been released showing the rifle and what appear to be armor plate carriers on the chain-link fence, along with what is said to be a go-pro camera. The rifle is said to have had its serial number obliterated.  The area is claimed to have been used by photographers to obtain pictures of former President Trump. This may be one way the would be assassin determined a security breech existed. If a picture can be obtained, the subject is in range of a rifle with a telescopic sight. Various sources have claimed former president Trump was between 300 and 500 yards away. The New York Post has published a diagram which shows the Fifth hole, where Candidate Trump has been said to be. The would be assassin is said to have occupied his position for 12 hours. It is not know if this is the first time or the 20th time he was there.

The rifle appears to be an SKS with a telescopic sight attached.  It is either a variant which took AK47 magazines or has one of the aftermarket 30 round semi-fixed magazines attached.

The SKS is a good service rifle, but was not designed as a sniper rifle. A retired firearm instructor who has an SKS with an attached scope says it is a reliable 3 minute of angle rifle. This means, in ideal conditions, a skilled rifleman can keep shots inside a three inch diameter circle at 100 yards.  Modern, easily available rifles can keep their shots withing a .75 inch circle at 100 yards. With a little care, off the shelf rifles, scopes and ammunition can be found which will keep their shots inside .5 inches at 100 yards. Such a set up can be found for about $600-$1,000 and up.

Using Google maps and the measuring utility, Trump on the Fifth hole green would have been about 285 yards from the approximate sniper position. On the sixth hole tee, he would have been about 333 yards from the sniper position. On the sixth hole green, he would have been about 50 yards from the sniper position. If the sniper had been undetected, and Trump had played through to the seventh hole green, he would have been about 162 yards from the sniper position. As you can see from Google maps, Trump may not have been visible to a would be sniper when Trump was at the fifth hole green. Such visibility would have to be determined from the exact location of the sniper, and would depend on the local obstacles such as trees. The distances could vary by 10-15 yards depending on the exact location of the sniper position, and potentially, Trump, both of which are approximate, but probably within 10 yards.


 USGS satellite database. Text added by Dean Weingarten

The would be assassin might have hoped to make his shot from 50 yards. Perhaps a lack of field craft led him to hang the rectangular armor carriers/packs on the fence. They would attract attention. If an obvious rifle muzzle is sticking through the fence below them, it would attract fire. Much could be learned from detailed and high resolution photographs of the scene.

Analysis: The would be assassin was not skilled or well trained. With a little more luck, he could have been effective.

©2024 by Dean Weingarten: Permission to share is granted when this notice and link are included.

Gun Watch

 



 



 

OH: Harrison County Homeowner Shoots at Burglary Suspects, Wounds One

Deputies responded to the 5500 block of Brantford Road on a report of a burglary and theft of firearms at a residence. Upon arrival, the homeowner stated that multiple firearms had been stolen from the property.

On Tuesday, Sept. 24 deputies were called back to the same location after receiving reports of a shooting. The homeowner told authorities he had confronted two men who had entered his home.

During the confrontation, shots were fired, and the suspects ran.

Deputies later located the two men, one of whom was suffering from a gunshot wound. The injured man was transported to a local hospital with non life-threatening injuries. The suspect was later released from the hospital and transported to the Montgomery County Jail.

 

More Here

TX: Harris County Intruder Shot, Killed by Homeowner

HARRIS COUNTY, Texas (KTRK) -- A homeowner shot and killed a man allegedly trying to break into houses late Tuesday night in northwest Harris County, the sheriff's office said.

According to authorities, the 27-year-old alleged intruder grabbed a shovel to break a window at a home on Woodoak Drive near Gulf Bank Road a little before midnight, when the homeowner grabbed a gun and shot the man multiple times.

The suspect was treated by first responders and taken to the hospital, where he died.

The sheriff's office tells ABC13 it believes the man was in the backyard of at least two to three homes.

More Here

Wednesday, September 25, 2024

Post Columbus OH Gun Turn in "buyback" Report

 


At the Columbus, Ohio, gun turn-in "buyback" event on Saturday, September 14, 2024, there were at least two private buyers looking for deals. In the coverage of the event, this correspondent did not find any mention of the private buyers. The cameraman could not resist their compelling image. The image of private buyers destroys the "guns are bad, turn them in" message. In an event where city officials are deliberately paying "more than market value" in gift cards, it is difficult to find bargains. Once the gift cards run out, the dynamic reverses. Cash in hand is better than no gift cards. From cwcolumbus.com:

The Columbus Office of Violence Prevention says they ran out of gift cards early, and they are thanking everyone for coming out and participating.

Most such programs have highlighted the guns collected with pictures of them on tables. This correspondent was unable to find images showing the guns in the coverage of the 2024 event. Numbers have been released. From myfox28columbus.com:

Authorities said 234 firearms were collected in total at the event on Saturday, including:

  • 96 AR weapons
  • 44 pistols
  • 38 rifles
  • 33 shotguns
  • 23 revolvers

This comes to $453 per firearm, on average, which is more than the 2023 average, which was $397 per firearm.  If all the "AR" firearms received $750, the rest would average $246 per firearm.

In 2023, the numbers were: 201 pistols, 75 shotguns, 68 rifles. In 2023, they collected 344 firearms. Of the 344, myfox28columbus.com reported 25 were "assault weapons", which included 9 sawed-off shotguns. At least a couple of people took advantage of the "above market" prices. From columbusfreepress.com in 2023:

“It took me about three hours to get to where the police were,” said a source who did want to offer his name for publication. He lives outside Columbus and walked away $2,000 richer. “I went right to the gun store and bought some more guns.”

In 2021, there was a "buyback", but the money being paid was much less. From 2021 10tv.com: October 23, 2021. It is not clear how much was paid. Only 102 guns were turned in. There does not appear to have been a "buyback" in 2022.

COLUMBUS, Ohio — A total of 102 guns were taken off the streets of Columbus on Saturday during the gun buyback event held by Columbus Police.

The Public Safety office told us they received 74 handguns, 15 shotguns, and 13 rifles.

Whoever brought in a gun walked away with a gift card of varying value and their identity was kept anonymous.

In 2024, a private purchaser can purchase a good looking AR15 style rifle by purchasing a lower receiver ( through a dealer) for less than $100, and and upper receiver for less than $200. This results in an "assault weapon" $300. If they put the two together, which might take a minute, they could them turn them in at Columbus for $750, thereby more than doubling their money. If they wish to buy a complete new AR15 style rifle, the rifles have been on sale for $350. Turning the rifle in at Columbus would probably have doubled their money.

No interviews with private buyers have been found. Such entrepreneurs may eventually come forward.

If you reduce one source of supply, demand shifts to other sources. If you reduce the supply of old guns, you increase the demand for new guns. The people who benefit the most are gun manufacturers.

©2024 by Dean Weingarten: Permission to share is granted when this notice and link are included.

Gun Watch

 

 

 

 

 

PA: Son Shoots Intruder who Attacked his Mother

According to police, at around 1 a.m. Monday, authorities responded to the home on the 1800 block of Horace Avenue in Abington for a report of a man shot following a home invasion.

Once they arrived at the home, investigators met with a woman who told them she had just gotten home from the casino when an unknown man forced his way into her residence and pointed a gun at her. The man, identified by police as Shephard, allegedly pushed the woman on the ground and grabbed her purse from the dining room table.

Police said the woman yelled for help, waking up her son who was in the back bedroom. According to police, the woman's son grabbed his legally owned gun and ran out to see what the commotion was. After the son saw Shepard had a firearm on him, police said, he fired two shots at him in defense of his mother's safety.

More Here

Tuesday, September 24, 2024

MA: Supreme Court Case on Cross Border Carry Moves Ahead


On September 9, 2024, the Massachusetts Supreme Court held oral arguments in the cases of Commonwealth v Donnell. Another, similar case where a New Hampshire citizen worked in Massachusetts, Marquis, has been consolidated with the Donnell case. Both cases involve New Hampshire citizens who had firearms in their automobile in Massachusetts

The case is about whether Massachusetts can impose undue burdens on people from out of state who can legally carry weapons in their home state. It appears the court has received all the arguments in this case and will now consider them and file an opinion and order. It is not known the process will take . In the case of Commonwealth v Canjura, the Massachusetts Supreme Court heard oral arguments on December 4, 2023, and issued their decision on August 27, 2024, a period of nine months. If the same time is used for the Donnell case, we may see an opinion issued in June of 2025. The decision would straddle the presidential election.

Commonwealth v Canjura was decided by a unanimous Massachusetts Supreme Court, which did a good job of following the guidance issued by the US Supreme Court in the Heller, McDonald, Caetano, and Bruen decisions.  All Five of the Massachusetts Supreme Court Justices who sat on the Canjura case are sitting on the Donnell case. One more Supreme Court Justice has been added to the Donnell case, Justice Gabriella Wolohojian, appointed by Governor Healy in April of 2024.

A number of high powered amicus briefs have been filed in this case, as considered in a previous AmmoLand article.  Additional amicus briefs were filed from August 19 to September 9 by the Massachusetts Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, the CATO institute, the Attorney General of the State of New Hampshire, and the New Hampshire Firearms Coallition.

The oral arguments last an hour and six minutes. They were originally scheduled for 15 minutes for each side. In this correspondent's opinion, all the attorneys did well with what they had. The questions asked by the Supreme Court justices were skilled and of high caliber. Here are a few of the issues considered:

Does state power to make criminal laws override the fundamental right to keep and bear arms?

Can a state require time to vet people to see if they are dangerous, thus temporarily disarming them?

Can a state treat non-residents substantially different from residents when it comes to fundamental constitutional rights?

Will upholding the lower court decision to invalidate the non-resident part of Massachusetts law inevitably lead to nationwide reciprocity of carry permits, at the minimum, and perhaps, Constitutional Carry for all states?

Can states ban "assault weapons" or are they protected under the Second Amendment?

Forecasting what a court will do, based on oral arguments is risky business. It appeared to this correspondent the Justices were a bit tougher on the attorney representing the state, than on those representing Donnell and Marquis. This may be because the State arguments were significantly weaker.

Justice Wolohojian, appointed by Governor Healy, gave a good account of herself with well thought out questions.

This correspondent expected to see more play on the Supreme Court's ban on "means-ends" arguments for the Second Amendment. The justices repeatedly mentioned the Second Amendment is a fundamental constitutionally protected right. The entire question of reciprocity appears to be a "means-ends" argument.

It is unlikely a decision will be published on this case until long after the November presidential election.

 


©2024 by Dean Weingarten: Permission to share is granted when this notice and link are included.

Gun Watch

NC: Taylorsville Homeowner Wounded in Gunfight with Intruder

The investigation indicates that Cline returned home to find an intruder inside his residence. During the confrontation, both Mr. Cline and the intruder exchanged gunfire, resulting in Mr. Cline sustaining a minor head injury. He has since been released from the hospital.

Following the incident, law enforcement conducted an extensive manhunt, utilizing K-9 units and drones to locate the suspect. The search concluded around 10 p.m. on September 22.

More Here

Monday, September 23, 2024

Federal District Court for the Central District of Ilinois Refuses to Dismiss Civil Rights Lawsuit for Loss of 2A Rights

 


 

Federal District Judge Joe Billy McDade has refused to dismiss a lawsuit against  individual police officers for willful actions to deprive an Illinois man of his Second Amendment rights, under 42 U.S.C. § 1983.  This civil rights case was filed in federal court on February 6, 2024. The plaintiff in the case is ROBERT K. KUHLMAN, the Attorney representing Mr. Kuhlman is David Sigale. David Sigale has had considerable success in representing clients in Second Amendment cases.

The allegations by the plaintiff, Robert K. Kuhlman are clear and significant. According to court documents, on July 17, 2023, Mr. Kuhlman's mother called both him and the police about an alleged tresspasser who would not leave her home. The trespasser was acting strangely. Kuhlman arrived at the home. He asked the intruder to leave. The intruder started to reach into a bag. Mr. Kuhlman drew his pistol and held the intruder for police.  The incident occurred in Normal, Illinois.

The Normal, Illinois police showed up, searched the intruder, asked for and received Mr. Kuhlman's handgun, then returned it to him. They transported the intruder to a facility for mental evaluation. They did not arrest or charge Mr. Kuhlman.

Later, one of the police officers, Officer Nicholas Hines, and his supervisor, Officer Serena Cunningham, filed a report to the Illinois State Police, contending Mr. Kuhlman was a "clear and present danger" to himself and others. Mr. Kuhlman had his Firearms Owner Identification Card and his Concealed Carry License revoked. Mr. Kuhlman claims the report included significant and deliberate factual errors which resulted in the loss of his Second Amendment rights.

AmmoLand contributor Mark Smith discusses the case on video at the four boxes diner.



The State of Illinois attempted to grant immunity to people they require to report on gun owners. The immunity for make false claims under their Firearms Owners Identification Act applies to several different occupations, as listed below. From the order and opinion:

Illinois’s FOID Act establishes that “[t]he physician, clinical psychiatrist, qualified examiner, law enforcement officer, or school administrator making the [clear and present danger] determination or his or her employer shall not be held criminally, civilly, or professionally liable for making or not making the notification required under this subsection, except for willful or wanton misconduct.” 430 ILCS 65/8.1(d).

Judge  Joe Billy McDade quotes a decision, Martinez v. State of Cal., 444 U.S. 277, 284 n.8 (1980), where states do not have the power to immunize state officials for violation of federal law. There is also the exception, for "willful or wanton misconduct", which is more difficult to prove. From the order and opinion, p. 11:

[c]onduct by persons acting under color of state law which is wrongful under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 or § 1985 cannot be immunized by state law. A construction of the federal statute which permitted a state immunity defense to have controlling effect would transmute a basic guarantee into an illusory promise, and the supremacy clause of the Constitution insures that the proper construction may be enforced. See McLaughlin v. Tilendis, 398 F.2d 287, 290 (7th Cir. 1968). The immunity claim raises a question of federal law.

Because Judge Joe Billy McDade has refused to dismiss the case, it may now go forward with discovery. As nearly all the facts claimed by the plaintiffs should be a matter of public record, Mr. Kuhlman has a good chance of prevailing. It helps to have a skilled attorney, such as David Sigale, who has considerable experience and success in Second Amendment lawsuits.

Analysis: The Second Amendment is now well established as protecting fundamental civil rights in the United States. Expect more lawsuits to be brought to bear alleging violation of civil rights under color of law.

©2024 by Dean Weingarten: Permission to share is granted when this notice and link are included.

Gun Watch


 

NV: Armed Victim Shoots, Killes Armed Robber

On September 21st, 2024, at approximately 3:57 a.m., the Henderson Police and Fire Departments responded to the 1000 block of Wellness Place in reference to a reported shooting.

Multiple 9-1-1 calls were received advising gunshots were heard and a male subject was observed lying on the ground.

Preliminarily, detectives determined a 33-year-old male was approached by an unknown male with a firearm in his hand in a confrontational manner and demanded his cellphone and wallet. The 33-year-old male discharged multiple rounds from his firearm and struck the unknown male, due to him fearing for his life.

Officers and paramedics attempted lifesaving measures; however, the male succumbed to his injuries at the scene.


Source

Sunday, September 22, 2024

TX: Dallas, Victim Grabs Gun, Shoots Assailant

Investigators say the suspect was hitting the victim. The victim then grabbed a gun and shot the suspect.

The suspect was rushed to the hospital in critical condition. Charges in the case are pending.

Police say the victim and suspect knew each other, but did not go into further detail about their relationship.


More Here

OH: Knife and Gun Fight, One Stabbed, One Shot, Killed.

FOREST PARK, Ohio (WXIX) - Police have identified the men involved in an early Wednesday deadly shooting and stabbing.

Around 2:15 a.m., officers arrived at the 1800 block of Lincrest Drive to find 28-year-old Anthony Braxton suffering from multiple stab wounds outside the house, according to the Forest Park Police Department.

Inside the Lincrest Drive home is where officers found 66-year-old Timothy Woodson, police explained.

Woodson, who had multiple gunshot wounds, died at the scene, Forest Park police said.


More Here

Saturday, September 21, 2024

MO: Home Intruder Shot, Killed in Rural Missouri

The homeowner reported a partially clothed man had arrived at their home and began to pray to a horse before he attacked their dog. When he attempted to force his way into the home, the homeowner then shot him.

When law enforcement officials arrived, they said they found the suspicious man dead at the entrance of the home. He has been described as a white man in his 30s or 40s.

More Here

FL: Gunfight, two People Wounded, One Charged with Crimes

Charlotte County deputies are investigating a shooting that sent two people to the hospital near the county line of Charlotte and Sarasota Wednesday morning.

According to CCSO, the scene was near U.S.-41 and Cornelius Boulevard. The nearby roads were shut down for hours, but have since reopened.

Advertisement

Deputies said they learned the disturbance involved two people and gunfire was exchanged.

More Here

Friday, September 20, 2024

IL: Chicago, Robbery Suspect Shot by Armed Victim

Walk in gunshot victim says he was robbing someone at the above location & they shot him

More Here

TX: San Antonio Man and Son Gunfight with Car Burglars, Both Suspects Wounded

According to a San Antonio police preliminary report, a family was leaving the Shops at Rivercenter around 5 p.m. when they encountered two people burglarizing their vehicle.

The suspects pointed guns at the family, and a man and his son opened fire on them, police said.

According to police at the scene, one of the suspects, a 35-year-old man, was shot in the face. The other suspect, a woman, was also hit. Both of the suspects were dropped off at a nearby hospital with apparent non-life-threatening injuries.

More Here

Thursday, September 19, 2024

Update: Murder Trial of Former Houston Police Officer Gerald Goines Started September 9, 2024

 


On September 9, 2024, the murder trial of Gerald Goines was started in Houston, Texas, more than five years after the killings. The former Houston Police officer, under cover officer and narcotics squad leader was charged with the murders of Dennis Tuttle and Rhogena Nickolas.

On January 28, 2019, undercover Houston drug police raided the residence of Dennis Tuttle and Rhogena Nicholas, both 58 years old. Both of them and their dog were killed. The raid was caused because a neighbor lied about the Tuttles and Officer Gerald Goines lied on an affidavit to obtain a no-knock warrant.  From Houstonpublicmedia.org:

During the hearing on Monday, Goines’ defense team acknowledged that the former officer had fabricated a story about a confidential informant purchasing heroin from the couple's home, but claimed that the murder charges were excessive — “a case of overcharging,” according to attorney Nicole Deborde Hochglaube, who’s representing Goines.

After opening statements, prosecutors questioned Sarah Sanchez, who had lived on Harding Street during the incident and was close with both Tuttle and Nicholas.

Prosecutors questioned Sanchez about Patricia Garcia, a neighbor who made three 911 phone calls on the evening of Jan. 8, 2019, in which she told police that her daughter was doing heroin inside the couple’s home and that the couple were drug dealers and had guns inside their home.

Investigators eventually found that Garcia had no daughter and that her other claims were also false. She was the first person to be sentenced in connection with the deadly raid in June 2021.

"She was always fighting with Rhogena, always jealous of Rhogena," Sanchez said during Monday’s hearing. "She was very hateful.”

One of the reasons the cover-up of the lies which led up to the raid fell apart, may be because officer Goines was wounded in the neck, and could not talk in the hospital.  Members of the Narcotics squad which Goines led, were forbidden form communicating with each other while the raid was being investigated. Some of the members of the squad had been in the Narcotics division for 20 years or more.

The murder charges against Goines are based on Texas statute Sec. 19.02. (b) (3):

 (3) commits or attempts to commit a felony, other than manslaughter, and in the course of and in furtherance of the commission or attempt, or in immediate flight from the commission or attempt, the person commits or attempts to commit an act clearly dangerous to human life that causes the death of an individual;

The prosecution theory is: lying to procure a no-knock warrant, then participating in the no-knock raid is sufficient to meet the standards of the statute.

According to the defense, as recounted in a Reason.com article, Dennis Tuttle and Rhogena Nicholas, were responsible for their own deaths by resisting the no-knock raid, after their door was broken down and their dog was shot and killed.

The raid and investigation were covered extensively on AmmoLand.  Video coverage from a body camera, a neighbor's surveillance camera, and cell phone video were important in the investigation.

In addition to the Texas state charges, Goines faces federal charges. Civil lawsuits are ongoing.

Analysis: The digital age is making it much harder to cover up corruption, at least for individual officers and small units.

©2024 by Dean Weingarten: Permission to share is granted when this notice and link are included.

Gun Watch


 

 

 

MO: St Louis Husband Shoots Half Naked Man who Refused to Leave

"Mr. Marshall then stood over the husband and wife while he was half naked and that awoke the homeowners," Martin said.

Court documents further reveal the furious husband "ordered him to leave."

However, according to the documents, Marshall then "lunged at the homeowner and stated you'll have to shoot me."

Police say when the two men struggled, the homeowner shot Marshall once in his chest before the 225-pound, partially nude suspect collapsed in the family's backyard.

Neither the couple nor their 5- and 10-year-old children were hurt.

More Here

OK: Stephes County: Man Forces Entry to Home, is Shot, Killed

According to Sheriff Rick Lang, his office received a 911 call on Sept. 17 about a male attempting to force entry into an occupied home on north 2800 Road, west of Comanche. Lang said while deputies were enroute to the location, dispatch received a second 911 call stating a “male had forced entry into a second and separate home and shots had been fired.”

Lang said when deputies arrived, they found a male “suffering from multiple gunshot wounds.”

“Emergency medical personnel attempted to revive the individual but were unsuccessful,” Lang said. “The subject was declared dead at the scene.”

 

 

More Here

Wednesday, September 18, 2024

Gun Turn-in "buyback" High Prices for Guns, September 14, 2024, Columbus Ohio

Update: The event has been held. We should see some results soon. There were at least two private purchasers at the event.

Gun turn-in events are labeled with the Orwellian term "buyback". They are not "buybacks". You cannot "buyback" items you never owned. Columbus Ohio is planning to purchase guns with $100,000 on September 14, 2024. They will be paying more than market value for the guns. From dispatch.com:

The Columbus Office of Violence Prevention and Columbus police will be holding a gun buyback Downtown next weekend, with the city prepared to give out $100,000 in cash gift cards for guns.

The city's second anonymous gun buyback event will be held Saturday, Sept. 14 at Franklin University in Phillips Hall parking lot D, (303 S. Grant Ave.), from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., according to a release. Residents aren't required to present an ID to exchange a firearm for a cash gift card.

In 2023,  344 guns were collected.  In 2023, gift cards of "up to" $750 would be handed out. Exactly how much per firearm was unclear. From columbus.gov, about the 2023 event:

Gift cards of up to $750.00 will be given in exchange for handguns, assault rifles, non-assault rifles and shotguns based on the type and condition of each firearm. All other firearms, including replica, antique, and non-working guns, will also be accepted and eligible for ONE $25 gift card regardless of the number or condition of the firearms turned in.

$136,600 in gift cards were distributed during the 2023 event. The preliminary totals were: Handguns 201, shotguns 75, rifles 68.  That averages a little less than $400 per firearm!  When you consider you can buy a new AR15 type rifle for about $400, this could be a money making opportunity.  If the same prices are for the 2024 event, the opportunity for "cheap guns" is small. The amount of money allocated for the 2024 event is $100,000.  In 2023, it was reported $106,225 was "left over" because they ran out of time. They turned people away, not because they ran out of money, but because they ran out of time. The philosophy for the event is the same as for most gun control polices: Guns are bad.  From myfox28.com, in 2023:

Mayor Andrew Ginther responded to those who expressed doubt about the
impact of these gun buyback events. Ginther says fewer guns make
everyone safer and that he is looking forward to more buyback events.

The Columbus gun turn in event stands out, because the city is deliberately offering more than market value, to provide an incentive for people to turn in guns. From 10tv.com, in 2024:

The amount offered also plays a factor. Shak said they opted to pay above market value for firearms turned in to incentivize people to participate.

The Columbus gun turn in event is meant to be an annual event. Those who received hundreds or thousands of dollars last year are very likely to be back this year. The line to turn in guns for more than market value will probably form early and be long.

The opportunity to purchase guns is best after the event is done, when either time or gift cards run out.  This makes the event more effective, as more guns are taken "off the street" for less money. As most of the guns are being turned in by people who are not interested in guns, some bargains might be found.

It is unlikely bargains will be found while the city is paying more than market value for the guns turned in. Homemade guns, such as 3D printed guns, were accepted in 2023. Replicas will be accepted, but only a $25 gift card will be paid out. At $25, it might be possible to print a replica of a small derringer, and make money.

The common, cheap and easy to make slam fire shotgun may be worth hundreds of dollars. It is not certain. In 2021, activists turned in homemade slamfire shotguns in Columbus, for $50 each.  The philosophy of paying more than market value was implemented in 2023, and considered a success.  It is a basic of economics, if you pay more for something, you get more of it.


©2023 by Dean Weingarten: Permission to share is granted when this notice and link are included.

Gun Watch

 


 


 

Il: Chicago, Man with Concealed Carry License was Fired upon. He Returned Fire, Suspect Wounded

At about 1045 a.m. at 850 W 63rd st, two suspects opened fire in the direction of a Concealed Carry License holder. He returned fire and wounded one of the suspects with a graze wound of the abdomen.

More Here

IL: Chicago Mother and Son Wounded, Armed Samaritan Returns Fire

Two were shot at 6339 S Carpenter. One was shot in the thight/groin, the other was wounded in the foot. An armed Concealed Carry License holder returned fire.


Link

Tuesday, September 17, 2024

Australia Lithgow Museum Break-in $200K of Collectible, Antique Pistols Stolen

 On Sunday, August 25, 2024, thieves broke into the Lithgow Small Arms Factory Museum, in Lithgown, Australia. They broke into display cases and stole 27 antique and collectable firearms.  The police have recovered 13 of the 27 firearms which were stolen. Youtube video of Lithgow Museum breakin in Australia.

From Police.nsw.gov.au/news:

Drug and Firearms Squad detectives with assistance from Chifley and
South Coast Police Districts have charged three men for their roles in
the alleged theft of 27 guns during a break and enter of a Lithgow
Museum last week.

Police were called to the Lithgow Small Arms Factory Museum on
Methven Street, Lithgow, about 3.30am on Sunday 25 August 2024,
following reports of a break and enter.

Officers attached to Chifley Police District arrived and were told
three people broke into the museum and stole a number of high-value
firearms before leaving in a silver Toyota Landcruiser.

(snip)

Detectives were told the handguns – which are worth more than $200,000 – could be made operational.

The Lithgow museum is the premier firearms museum in Australia. This correspondent spent a day and a half their five years ago. The staff was wonderful. The museum extremely well done, one of the best of its kind in the world. Here is a video tour of Lithgow Museum in Australia. Unfortunately, it shows only a few highlights. The Ron Hays room is show starting at 38:00 minutes.

I took a couple hundred pictures while I was at the museum. From my photos, it appears the theft took place in the Ron Hayes Room.


If you watch carefully, the semi-circular display of Lee-Enfield rifles is briefly seen in the surveillance video, in the upper right hand corner of the image.


This correspondent took pictures which show the two display cases which were broken into.


Left of the entryway, the vertical case closest to the wall was broken into. There are several single shot pistol shown in it, including the 1875 J. Stevens break-open target pistol. It is on the far left, second glass shelf from the floor. The Remington XP-100 is on the left , top shelf.

 

To the right of the entryway, the vertical case closest to the entryway was broken into. There are several revolvers and semi-auto pistols shown in it. A Colt Python appears to be on the far left, second glass shelf from the bottom.

An Australian dollar is currently worth about 2/3 of a U.S. dollar. The 27 firearms were valued at about 134,000 U.S. dollars. Most of them are antiques, or rare, such as a Remington XP-100 in (as I recall) an unusual caliber, or a J. Stevens single shot break-open target pistol in .22 rimfire, made in 1875. These guns are worth a lot to collectors, but have little value as a fenced stolen gun. They generally have parts removed to render them non-functional. While parts can be made and replaced, the time and effort might be considerable.  Functional factory pistols, I was told, fetch about $3,000 to $5,000 on the Australian black market. My source claimed to have participated. He was very convincing.

This was a nasty smash and grab job. The thieves used a stolen car, which they then burned. They moved quickly, because of alarms at the museum. While there are many millions of dollars of rare and collectable firearms at the museum, they only took 27 more or less mid range handguns.

Some of the guns at the museum, in the Ron Hayes room, are likely worth close to a million Australian dollars. Truly rare and collectable guns would be very difficult to fence, much like trying to fence a Rembrandt painting.

The thieves wore masks and gloves. They used a stolen vehicle which they then burned. In my experience, the thieves were probably burned (ratted out, informed on) by associates or "friends" because they talked too much, and the goods they had stolen were too famous.

It is unfortunate, but plausible, the anti-freedom forces in Australia will use this break-in to tighten the already extreme regulation of Australian arms museums.

If you visit Australia, this correspondent highly recommends you visit the Lithgow Small Arms Factory Museum if you can. The staff is marvelous, the exhibits wonderful, the history, fascinating. It is treasure of Western civilization.

 

©2024 by Dean Weingarten: Permission to share is granted when this notice and link are included.

Gun Watch


KY: Owensboro Party Breaks into Fight, Guard Kills Armed Man

As we reported Sunday, deputies responded to the scene of a shooting at the Knights of Columbus Hall on Owensboro's east side.

One person was shot and killed, and authorities have now identified him as 21-year-old Nelson Castillo of Utica.

According to the sheriff's office, it's believed that Castillo was attending a party at the Knights of Columbus and that a fight broke out involving multiple party guests.

While trying to break the fight up, the sheriff's office says the guards encountered a man who was armed with a handgun, now identified as Castillo. They say one of the guards fired their weapon after a brief confrontation, hitting Castillo.

More Here

WA: Bonny Lake Stolen Trailer, Gunfight - Two Dead

At 06:52 am, on Sunday September 15th, our deputies responded to a call of shots being fired and a collision at Rhodes lake Rd E and Falling Water Blvd E.

Deputies arrive on scene along with Sumner, Orting and Bonney Lake Police. Two people reportedly ran from the vehicles and there was gunfire between them. At the scene there was a severely injured man in the back seat of a white pickup and a deceased male on the ground next to the white pickup.

Orting and Sumner police were able to track down and locate our possible suspect on 193rd Ave E.

Shortly after getting to the hospital the severely injured man was pronounced deceased.

A second woman who ran from the vehicles had been called in by neighbors walking through several yards. The woman was located by Bonney Lake and Sumner Police on a trail behind Victor Falls Elementary School.

At this time deputies are still looking for one more possible man who ran from the scene.

What detectives have been able to gather is the white truck stole a trailer from Prairie Ridge and this gold truck chased them down. We believe they exchanged gunfire possibly during the chase and at the final collision scene.


More Here

Monday, September 16, 2024

Kamala Harris Proposed Gun and Supreme Court Policies as of September 10, 2024


On September 9, 2024, the Kamala Harris campaign released a sparse set of policies less than two days before the presidential debate.The debate was held on September 10, with former President and leading presidential candidate Donald Trump. The posting of policy positions came after criticism about lack of policy specifics, according to the British left wing paper, The Guardian. During the debate, Candidate Kamala Harris claimed she was a gun owner, and she would never take anyone's guns.  However, in her campaign policy statement, Candidate Harris says she will ban "assault weapons". While "assault weapons" is a muddled political, almolst Orwellian term, it essentially includes some of the most popular semi-automatic rifles.

Here are the specific policies which impact rights protected by the Second Amendment and attempts of the Democratic party to exert control over the Supreme Court. The policy positions are sparse. Here are the official quotes. From kamalaharris.com:

President Biden and Vice President Harris encouraged bipartisan cooperation to pass the first major gun safety law in nearly 30 years, which included record funding to hire and train over 14,000 mental health professionals for our schools. As head of the first-ever White House Office of Gun Violence Prevention, she spearheaded policies to expand background checks and close the gun show loophole.

Both "gun violence" and "gun show loophole" are Orwellian terms meant to deceive and promote a desired outcome. They have little to do with reality. "Gun violence" is defined to include suicides, homicides, and accidents, all of which have different causes and strategies of prevention. The term "gun violence" ties these different situations, some of which are committed with guns, into a whole to shape the narrative that guns are a cause, not a means. Fatal accidents with guns have been reduced 94% as the number of guns in the USA per capita has risen by 4,300 percent.  As the number of guns per person in the USA increased by 4.3, the rate of fatal accidents with guns has declined from 1.84 per 100K population to .15 per 100K population.

Most people who are killed with guns deliberately kill themselves. They commit suicide. Guns are a means, not a cause of suicide. Place draconian restrictions on gun ownership, the suicide rate does not change. People who want to kill themselves shift to other methods.

Homicides are another means v. cause situation. The rate of homicide in the USA is not linked to the rate of gun ownership. Gun ownership has steadily increased in the USA while homicide rates have risen and fallen. The Harris campaign has claimed the homicide rate is historically low. They fail to mention the rate of gun ownership is historically high. Gun ownership does not cause homicides. To think it does requires ignoring the data collected over the last 60 years.

There is no "gun show loophole". Guns sold at gun shows are subject to the same restrictions as guns sold at other places. The desire is to create a database of guns and gun owners in the United States. Otherwise there would not be a requirement to record owner information, descriptions and serial numbers of guns when they are sold. Elimination of the "gun show loophole" is code for gun registration to facilitate gun confiscation, gradually, or all at once, sometime in the future.

The Kamala campaign promises to directly violate the Second Amendment. From the campaign.

 She’ll ban assault weapons and high-capacity magazines, require universal background checks, and support red flag laws that keep guns out of the hands of dangerous people.

Banning "assault weapons" means banning semi-automatic rifles. These are some of the most commonly owned guns in the USA, associated with the lowest numbers of homicides. Banning "high-capacity" magazines means banning some of the most common parts of guns in the USA, numbering in the hundreds of millions. This is directly opposite of what the Supreme Court has ruled about the Second Amendment.

Using means-ends argument is not allowed in cases involving fundamental rights. If they were, the First, Fourth, and Fifth amendment would have no meaning.  "Universal background checks" has been covered. It is code for universal gun registration. "Red flag laws" are a way to confiscate guns without due process. Every state has a process to lock up dangerous people. The process has been in place for 50 years, and it has many due process protections for the person who is being accused of being a danger to themselves and others. Red flag laws, instead, focus on disarming people without due process, not on whether a person is dangerous or not.

Candidate Kamala Harris can only accomplish the above policies if she eviscerates the Supreme Court. She has plans to do so. From the Harris campaign:

She will also support common-sense Supreme Court reforms—like requiring Justices to comply with ethics rules that other federal judges are bound by and imposing term limits—to address the crisis of confidence facing the Supreme Court.

Term limits on Supreme Court justices are directly forbidden by the Constitution. "Ethics rules" imposed by the legislature and the executive branch directly violate the Constitutional structure of the Supreme Court as independent of the Congress and the Presidency.  Neither the Congress nor the executive branch are allowed such power in the Constitution. Congress has power over the inferior courts by the Constitution, but not over the Supreme Court.

The Harris campaign gun and Supreme Court policies are a direct assault on the Constitution and the rule of law.  This has been the policy of the far left for decades. The "Progressives" in power loved the Supreme Court when it acted as a super legislature to implement their policies. When it acts as an independent judiciary, uphold the limits on governmental power put in place by the Constitution, they hate it and work to destroy its independence.

 

©2024 by Dean Weingarten: Permission to share is granted when this notice and link are included.

Gun Watch



NM: Hobbs Homeowners fire shot through Bedroom Door, Kill Intruder

Upon arrival, it was discovered that 38-year-old Curtis Thames, of Hobbs, had allegedly broken into a nearby residence. The owners of the residence barricaded themselves with a firearm in a bedroom inside the home.

Sometime during the incident, the homeowners fired a shot through the bedroom door, hitting Thames. Thames was transported to a local hospital, where he later died from his injuries.

 

More Here

Sunday, September 15, 2024

TX: San Antonio Homeowner Shoots, wounds Intruder

When officers arrived, they found a homeowner who told them that he had shot at a suspected home burglar, a preliminary police report said.

Officers searched the area for the man but couldn’t find him.

Police later eceived a call from a man nearby in a detached garage in the 1400 block of Vanderbilt Street. He told officers that he was shot on Hicks Avenue.

The suspect would be taken into custody and transported to a hospital for his apparent gunshot wounds.

More here

MA: Anti-Israeli Protestor who Attacked Pro-Israel Protestor Shot during Altercation

A pro-Israel demonstrator accused of shooting and wounding a man who tackled him in a Boston-area city was arraigned in court Friday, and the injured man could also be charged, authorities said.

Scott Hayes, 47, from Framingham, was arrested and accused of shooting the man who allegedly tackled him. He was arraigned Friday on a count of assault and battery with a dangerous weapon, Newton police and the district attorney's office said.

The person who allegedly tackled him, identified as a 31-year-old Newton man, is now expected to survive his injuries and police have applied for a criminal complaint against him for assault and battery, they said.

More Here

TN: Road Rage Becomes Gunfight

MNPD detectives learned that two men, one in the car and another in a truck, had become entangled in a road rage situation earlier. The man driving the car fired a shot at the truck, which went through the door and grazed the man across his stomach, according to MNPD. The injured man then returned fire and drove down Central Pike after him, resulting in the crash.

MNPD said the driver of the car jumped out and ran after the crash and remains on the run. No charges are expected against the driver of the truck.


More Here

Saturday, September 14, 2024

NICS Numbers and Firearm Sales up August, 2024

 

After the unsuccessful assassination attempt on former President and current presidential front runner, Donald Trump, in July of 2024, both firearm sales and National Instant background Check System (NICS) checks have increased for August. The absolute NICS check numbers increased by 5 percent. The estimated increase in firearm sales was 9 percent. Both numbers are the fifth highest year for August as shown in the NICS records. July  2024 saw an increase in gun sales  of 5% over 2023. August has nearly doubled that increase.

Gun sales are estimated because the NICS numbers contain back ground checks for other things than gun sales, particularly for firearms permits and permit renewals. More than one firearm can be purchased with one NICS check. In 25 states, some firearms permits allow for multiple firearms purchases using the permit instead of separate NICS checks. Private sales, conducted between private parties without government interference, are not included in the statistics.

In August of 2024, handguns sales were up about 6%, Long gun sales were up by 14%, other guns (mostly finished receivers) were up by 2% and multiple gun sales were up by 9%.

 


 

As seen in the chart showing the sales of various types of firearms, August 2024 stands out as being significantly higher than August of 2023. With one third of the year to go, including November and December, which are months with traditionally high gun sales, 2024 may well exceed the number of firearms sold in the NICS system in 2023. Domestic turmoil is high. The dividing line appears to be between those who believe what the old media and the current administration tell them, and those who do not. There appears to be the greatest differentiation between the political parties since the presidential election of Republican  Nixon and Democratic  George McGovern in 1972.

The world is experiencing a significant upsurge in chaos, as those who dislike the United States as a world power push to overthrow pax americana.  With an increase in chaos, trade and travel become less safe and more expensive.

International chaos incentivizes people to become more self reliant in the United States, as the bias toward normality "It could never happen here" becomes more and more problematic.

A contributor to maintaining or increasing high firearm sales, is the historically low prices for very capable firearms. Plum Crazy AR15 style rifles are advertised at $350.  Bear Creek Arsenal AR15 style rifles are available at $429.  On sale, a Plumb Crazy complete lower and a Bear Creek complete upper can be had, including tax and shipping, for under $300! These prices do not include sights. Very good utility rimfire and centerfire handguns are available for under $300, even under $200 at the best sales.

Court decisions may play a role. North Carolina gun law reform has resulted in a surge in handgun sales in that state. The requirement for shall issue carry permit laws, in those states still defying the Supreme Court, is likely increasing handgun sales.

Together, all of the effects have resulted in over five years, now 61 months, where more than a million firearms have been sold each month. The total for those 61 months is over 87 million firearms, or 17% of firearms sold in the United States since 1900.

More people, less expensive guns, restoration of Second Amendment rights, political and international insecurity,  all combine to create high firearm sales and a well armed American citizenry.

©2024 by Dean Weingarten: Permission to share is granted when this notice and link are included.

Gun Watch



WV: Son Shoots, Kills Intruder who was found in the Garage of Mother's Vacant Home

The deputies performed life saving measures before EMS arrived but shortly after their arrival Boone was pronounced dead. Investigators, Funk, Jenkins, and Giangola IV from the Berkeley County Sheriff’s Department Criminal Investigators were called to the scene and the investigation is currently still ongoing.

Marshall told investigators that he had previously reported a break in on Aug. 27, and shortly after that report he installed motion sensors. And this morning he was alerted to motion coming from the residence. When Marshall arrived, he found Boone in the garage. Marshall stated that Boone turned toward him with something in his hand, and that is when Marshall fired his handgun hitting Boone.

More Here

Friday, September 13, 2024

Federal Court Strikes Down Illinois Ban on Right to Carry Weapons on Public Transport


Chicago Public Transport Bus, public domain

On August 30, 2024, Judge Iain D. Johnston of the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois issued an order and opinion showing the ban on carrying concealed weapons on public transportation is unconstitutional. The ban is "as applied". It is only applicable to the individuals before the court in this case. The Chicago Transit Authority is commonly referred to as the CTA.  From the opinion and order:

After an exhaustive review of the parties’ filings and the historical record,as required by Supreme Court precedent, the Court finds that Defendants failed to meet their burden to show an American tradition of firearm regulation at the time of the Founding that would allow Illinois to prohibit Plaintiffs—who hold concealed-carry permits—from carrying concealed handguns for self-defense onto the CTA and Metra.4 For the following reasons, Ms. Foxx’s motion is denied, State Defendants’ motion is denied, and Plaintiffs’ motion is granted in part.

The Illinois  shall issue law prohibits people with legal permits from carrying concealed handguns on all public transportation. From the act a:(8):

 (8) Any bus, train, or form of transportation paid for in whole or in part with public funds, and any building, real property, and parking area under the control of a public transportation facility paid for in whole or in part with public funds.

The government defendants put forward some worn and inappropriate arguments. They are trying to keep infringements on the people's right to be armed in case of confrontation, a right protected by the Second Amendment. The defendants tried to argue the government is the property owner, so they can exclude anyone they want to. The judge did not treat it as a serious argument. From page 15 of the order and opinion:

 Ms. Foxx’s position—that government’s powers over public property are equivalent to those of private owners of property—is untenable, and was rejected by the Supreme Court long ago.17 The cited cases don’t treat government ownership of prop-erty as a trump to the protection ordinarily due to an individual right. Although the government sometimes has greater power to regulate public property compared to elsewhere, otherwise protected conduct doesn’t become categorically unprotected.

The government defendants tried to claim the law was not unconstituional under an "intermediate-scrutiny test".  Bruen categorically banned intermediate scrutiny tests for rights protected by the Second Amendment.  From page 20 of the order and opinion:

But the intermediate scrutiny standard applied to content-neutral “time, place, or manner” restrictions is what Bruen unambiguously rejected See, 597 U.S. at 22-24 (“Not only did Heller decline to engage in means-end scrutiny generally, but it also specifically ruled out the intermediate-scrutiny test that respondents and the United States now urge us to adopt.”) Ms. Foxx’s attempt to apply intermediate scrutiny by treating the Firearm Concealed Carry Act’s ban as a “time, place, or manner” restriction cannot succeed.

Judge Johnston is not impressed with Ms. Foxx attempt to use a truncated dictionary definition. Foxx claimed "infringed" only means "to destroy".  From page 25 of the order and opinion:

State Defendants appear to concede this point, but Ms. Foxx disagrees. She first argues that the Firearm Concealed Carry Act’s ban doesn’t “infringe” on Plaintiffs’ right to keep and bear arms, and so their proposed conduct and its violation of the ban don’t fall under the Second Amendment’s protection. She compares the definitions of “infringe” and “abridge” (from the First Amendment), relying on dictionary definitions from 1755 and 1773 to argue that “infringe” must denote a total destruction of a right—more than a mere “abridgement.” But both of these words have multiple definitions, and Ms. Foxx cherry-picks the definitions to suit her argument. In particular, the second definition for “infringe” reads in full: “To destroy; to hinder.”Infringe, v.a. (1773), Samuel Johnson’s Dictionary Online, https://johnsonsdictionaryonline.com/views/search.php?term=infringe (last visited Aug. 30, 2024). But she omits “to hinder”—which wouldn’t require completely obstructing the right—without any explanation.

Judge Johnston made an obvious, but astute observation about the purpose of the Statute of Northampton, an English law from 1328, nearly seven centuries ago. From page 31 of the order and opinion bold added:

Plaintiffs wish to carry concealed arms in self-defense, so the Firearm Concealed Carry Act’s ban burdens Plaintiffs’ Second Amendment right for a wholly different reason than the Statute of Northampton and similar state statutes did. The why is different. A concealed arm doesn’t terrorize; it’s concealed.

This correspondent does not agree with all of Judge Johnston's reasoning. The following argument is inconsequential, because the plaintiffs do not bear the burden of proof.  If the modern law addresses a "risk" which was not addressed in the historical record, then no historical analogy exists.  Judge Johnston makes a differentiation, based on the government's motivation, which is mentioned in Bruen. From page 45 of the order and opinion:

The source of danger (i.e., the societal problem) that the modern law addresses is the risk posed by the person with the firearm. By contrast, the lack of firearm restrictions for stage-coaches and ferries (and, indeed, sometimes the explicit permission to carry firearms) was tied to a different societal problem: dangers from the outside, such as wildlife.

It is difficult to see how the risks of riding in public transport are not similar, instead of wildly different. Terrorists are the threat from people outside the polity today; there was potential threat from inside a vehicle then. The difference does not appear to be supported by legislative history.

Analysis: This order and opinion is likely to be cited in several other cases. There has been a challenge in the District of Columbia to its ban on carry in public transport. There is the ongoing attempt to reform the ban on carry on public transport in Missouri.

Judge Johnston's careful opinion and analysis gets almost everything right. While this is an "as applied" case, the arguements and evidence is valid to strike down nearly all of the statute.

 

©2024 by Dean Weingarten: Permission to share is granted when this notice and link are included.

Gun Watch

 



OR: Baker City Woman fires two Shots to Drive off Intruder

A Baker City woman fired two shots from a .22 caliber revolver early Wednesday, Sept. 11, after a man had entered her home around 4:30 a.m. and then walked away after she tried to detain him until police arrived.

A Baker City Police officer arrested Brandon Douglas Culbertson, 36, at the Maverik store at 1520 Campbell St. at about 7 a.m. Wednesday.

Culbertson was taken to the Baker County Jail, charged with first-degree criminal trespassing and failing to report as a sex offender. His bail was set at $5,000.

More Here

Thursday, September 12, 2024

SC: Family Fight leads to Death

According to a report from the scene, two family members, Salomon Aranda, 71, and Raven Todd, 23, got into an altercation. During the fight, deputies said Aranda struck Todd in the head with an object and continued to assault Todd, causing injuries. Todd fired an handgun to stop the assault, striking Aranda. Aranda died from the gunshot wound.

No charges have yet been filed. The Clarendon County Sheriff's Office continues to investigate the incident.

More Here

AZ: Phoenix Man Wounded in Gunfight during Robbery

The incident happened on Sept. 8 near 28th Drive and Cactus Road.

Phoenix Police say officers responded to the area following reports of a shooting.

When the officers got to the scene, they found a man who had been shot. The man was treated at the scene and taken to a hospital. His current condition is unknown.

"Officers learned that the victim was robbed and shot at as he returned fire," police said. "Two individuals were detained as detective [sic] continue to investigate this incident."


More Here

Wednesday, September 11, 2024

A tale of Two States: Opposite Court Opinions on Second Amendment and Knives

Flylock switchblade made 1918 to 1929.  3 3/8 inches long, closed. This knife is one of those banned by law in California.

 

The United States District Court for the Southern District of California (August 23, 2024) and the Supreme Judicial Court for the Commonwealth of Massachusetts (August 27, 2024) reached opposite opinions on whether bladed weapons qualify as arms mentioned in the text of the Second Amendment.

The Second Amendment reads: A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.

In 2008, the Supreme Court examined the the meaning of the words in the amendment. Heller found the meaning of "arms" to be the same at the time of the ratification of the Second Amendment as it is today. From Heller:

 Before addressing the verbs “keep” and “bear,” we interpret their object: “Arms.” The 18th-century meaning is no different from the meaning today. The 1773 edition of Samuel Johnson’s dictionary defined “arms” as “weapons of offence, or armour of defence.” 1 Dictionary of the English Language 107 (4th ed.) (hereinafter Johnson). Timothy Cunningham’s important 1771 legal dictionary defined “arms” as “any thing that a man wears for his defence, or takes into his hands, or useth in wrath to cast at or strike another.”

This is directly from the Heller decision. It is not dicta. It is Justice Anthony Scalia directly explaining what the words in the Second Amendment mean. The Massachusetts Supreme Court quotes Scalia, from the Heller decision, in its opinion about whether knives are "arms" referred to in the text of the Second Amendment. From the case of  Commonwealth v Canjura, published on August 27, 2024:

 The Heller Court provided two Eighteenth Century definitions of the term: "[w]eapons of offence, or armour of defence," as defined in the 1773 edition of Samuel Johnson's dictionary, and "any thing that a man wears for his defence, or takes into his hands, or useth in wrath to cast at or strike another," as defined in Timothy Cunningham's 1771 legal dictionary. Id. The parties do not dispute switchblades fit these dictionary definitions of "arms"; like handguns, a person can carry a switchblade for offensive or defensive purposes in case of confrontation. 

The Massachusetts Supreme court shows, at the time of the ratification of the Second Amendment, folding pocket knives were ubiquitous and commonly carried for a multitude of lawful purposes, including use as a weapon.

The court noted the carry of swords, hatchets and large knives were also common. Those bladed weapons are arms as defined in the text of the Second Amendment. It is absurd to believe handguns are protected by the Second Amendment, but bladed weapons are not.

The United States District Court for the Southern District of California tries to support such an absurdity in its opinion, published on August 23, four days before the Massachusetts opinion. The court ignores the definitions in Heller, ignores the unanimous opinion in Caetano, and ignores the guidance in the Bruen decision by the Supreme Court. The Court accepts a novel theory put forward by the State of California. The theory is composed of several assumptions, not supported by the facts.

  • The previous decisions by the Supreme Court only apply to firearms.
  • To be included in the text of the Second Amendment, it is the burden of those claiming the arms are inside the definition, to prove the arms are in common use for self defense.
  • To be included in the text of the Second Amendment, arms must be proved to *not* be dangerous and unusual.

The District court shifts the burden of proof from what has been decided by the Supreme Court, to a standard where every arm which is not a firearm, must be proven to be in common use for self defense (instead of simply commonly possessed for lawful purposes) and *not* dangerous and unusual.

Every weapon, by definition, can be dangerous, so "dangerous and unusual" becomes simply "unusual". The District Court ignored the unanimous Supreme Court ruling in Caetano, which states the text of the Second Amendment covers all bearable arms, no matter when they were first invented or used. From Caetano:

The Court has held that “the Second Amendment extends, prima facie, to all instruments that constitute bearable arms, even those that were not in existence at the time of the founding,” District of Columbia v. Heller, 554 U. S. 570, 582 (2008) , and that this “ Second Amendment right is fully applicable to the States,” McDonald v. Chicago, 561 U. S. 742, 750 (2010) .

By concluding the only arms within the text of the Second Amendment are those which are proved to be *not unusual*, the court provides a path for most weapons to be banned.  Arms can be divided into an infinite number of categories, with each category in numbers small enough to be argued as "unusual". An example would be a folding knife with a blade over two inches long which can be opened with one hand, where the blade locks in place when open. By including the caveat where an arm must be proved to be commonly used for self defense, the court creates the potential to require some number of actual police reports where a knife was used in self defense.  It could require such confrontations to be officially adjudicated to be defensive to be recognized by the court.  Under such "logic" most bans on arms could be found to be constitutional, an absurd conclusion, obviously desired by the Government of California.

To reach this absurd conclusion, the District Court refused to accept evidence the knives in question “are common numerically, jurisdictionally, and categorically.”  The District Court creates a new standard, where instead of depending on the text of the amendment as defined in Heller, Caetano, and Bruen, the plaintiff contending their conduct is covered by the Second Amendment must prove the arm in question is "in common use for self defense".

The new standard turns the Supreme Court decisions about the Second Amendment on their head.

Analysis:

The different approaches of the two courts show the stark difference between states which are following the Supreme Court guidance on the Second Amendment, and those which are doing everything in their power to defy the Supreme Court. Roughly ten states desperately want to return to those dark days when the Second Amendment was a dead letter in the law. If the Ninth Circuit upholds the theory used in the Southern District of California Court, there will be a jurisdictional split on whether common knives are considered arms within the text of the Second Amendment.

The Massachusetts Supreme Court followed Heller, McDonald, Caetano, and Bruen. The Supreme Court and the historical view of the right to keep and bear arms is prevailing, if slowly. The reluctance of the Ninth Circuit to recognize the Second Amendment as part of the Bill of Rights shows where the Supreme Court is likely to go if Kamala Harris becomes president and the Democratic party is allowed to gain control of the Supreme Court. Methods to do this, including court packing or by imposing unconstitutional restrictions on the court are being actively proposed by the Biden administration and prominent members of the Democratic Party.

 

©2024 by Dean Weingarten: Permission to share is granted when this notice and link are included.

Gun Watch

FL: Escambia County Armed Woman Shoots, Wounds Armed Robber

ESCAMBIA COUNTY, Fla. (WKRG) — One man was arrested and another man has an active warrant for his arrest after an attempted robbery and shooting, according to the Escambia County Sheriff’s Office.

An ECSO Facebook post said deputies were called to the 400 block of Forest Street on Sept. 8 for a report of a robbery and shots fired call.

Deputies found that the homeowner was cleaning a rental property and two men were helping her when one of the men pulled out a gun and attempted to steal her purse, according to officials. 

The woman was able to get her handgun and fired one shot and the men fled the scene, according to the post.

More Here

Tuesday, September 10, 2024

Update: Deputy who Shot Florida Airman on Trial for Manslaughter


On May 3, 2024, a Florida Okaloosa County Sheriff Deputy shot and killed Senior Airman Roger Fortson. The deputy, Eddie Duran, was responding to a false, anonymous tip about supposed domestic violence in an apartment complex.

Fortson was playing with his dog and on the phone with his girlfriend. When Roger Fortson realized someone was insistently knocking on the door and demanding entry, he accessed his legally owned pistol, and with the pistol held by his side, pointed at the floor, opened the door.

The deputy immediately shot Fortson several times, then demanded Fortson "drop the gun". Fortson's pistol was already on the floor. Fortson was on the floor, mortally wounded, dying.

After an investigation by the Sheriff's department internal affairs, Fortson (correction, should be Duran)  was fired. The Sheriff's Office did not file criminal charges, because the incident was being criminally investigated by an independent agency, the Florida Department of Law Enforcement. AmmoLand covered the tragic incident four months ago.

To bring the reporting up to date: Former deputy Eddie Duran has been charged with manslaughter. He has been arrested. He is currently out on a bond of $100,000.

This horrible tragedy underscores how critical it is to be aware and make the right decisions when a person is considering using deadly force. Duran made some very bad decisions. It cost Roger Fortson his life. His family and others near him will live with the pain of his loss for a very long time. His mother made this statement after former deputy Duran was charged. From wfla.com:

“I hope this brings about change and it teaches others that you can’t just kill people,” his mother Chantemekki Fortson said Friday after learning of the charges. “Because he should have waited for back up. And investigated a little more.”

Former deputy, Eddie Duran is also living a nightmare. The event was on video from beginning to the end. All the conversations he had and the information he had were recorded. There is little question about what physically happened in the tragic incident. The questions are all about what happened inside Duran's head. USAToday reports Eddie Duran faces up to 30 years in prison. When advocating for a lower bail amount, Duran's lawyer made this comment, as reported by usatoday.com:

"He has spent his entire life, his entire career, and his military career, trying to save people — help people," Smith said. "He's not a danger to the community."

Analysis:

It is always easy to determine what could have been done better, after the fact. We live in an imperfect world. The videos show Deputy Eddie Duran making serious, fatal mistakes. Manslaughter seems an appropriate charge for the jury to decide on.

As with many tragedies, this one had a cascade of errors leading to the final, fatal, encounter. Deputy Duran was lead to believe the there was a significant history of violence at Duran's apartment. There wasn't any. The initial caller, apparently listening at an air conditioning duct, misinterpreted the interactions of Duran and his dog, on a video call with his girlfriend, as serious domestic violence. There wasn't any. The apartment manager thought she had knowledge of problems at the apartment, although she admitted she was not certain if it was the apartment she sent Deputy Duran to.

These errors compounded and likely created a perception of serious danger to Deputy Duran, where none existed. A jury may hear all of this, the dispatcher tapes, and perhaps, testimony from the person who started it all, who has been identified. Duran has already paid a price, and he will be paying more. He is alive. Roger Fortson is not.

Police work is being inexorably altered as digital recording technology creeps into every aspect of our lives. It makes police more honest. It removes some doubts. But body cameras and security cameras are not the entire truth. They do not convey inner thoughts and emotions, motivations, impressions, and reactions. Some of that will fall to the Florida jury.

This correspondent has no doubt Eddie Duran regrets ever being on that call, every going to that apartment, and most certainly, ever drawing and pulling the trigger on a surprised and innocent Roger Fortson.  Perhaps some good will come of this tragedy. Perhaps some neighbors will not be so quick to suspect evil of their neighbors. Perhaps other police and deputies will be a bit more careful. It is what Roger Fortson's mother hopes for.

©2024 by Dean Weingarten: Permission to share is granted when this notice and link are included.

Gun Watch