Why Does Congress Tolerate Ignorant Reporters?

Well, one dumb question deserves another. The rest of the article is behind a subscription wall, but here’s the public part:

The guns used by the three Rockaway men who shot two police officers nearly two weeks ago came from Virginia, as the majority of guns used on local streets do. You would think that it would be relatively easy for local police agencies such as the NYPD to track weapons used to commit a crime, but it is not.

Wouldn’t the fact that they know the guns are from Virginia indicate that the NYPD was able to trace them easily? I don’t know what the rest of the article is, but if this is any indication, it’s no doubt filled with misleading statements about the nature of the Tiahrt amendment, which is supported by both BATFE and the Fraternal Order of Police.

NRA Arming Children

The horror! The NRA is encouraging children to use guns. Not only that, they are training them to be highly effective snipers. Clearly the gun pushing lobby has gone too far this time:

Soon-to-be Marysville High School senior Katie Bush is making the most of her time off from school this summer.

Bush is in Port Clinton, Ohio, competing in the 100th anniversary competition of the National Rifle and Pistol Championships.

The championships began July 18 and will run through the weekend. Up to 6,000 competitors were expected.”This is a big competition,” Bush said. “I’m usually in the middle of the pack, but it’s pretty tough competition here.”

Bush is competing in the Camp Perry Smallbore 3-Position competition.

This is the second year Bush has made the trip to the national championships.

I’ll bet she’s even learned safe gun handling practice too! The treachery of the NRA knows no bounds! The students at Marysville High School had better watch out, because clearly she will snap any minute and shoot you, very precisely.

In all seriousness, we wish Miss Bush the best of luck.  Maybe we can convince her to take part in one of Mr. Completely’s e-postal matches.   Of course, then we’d all get beat by a sixteen year old girl :)

Strawman Purchase: The Gory Details

Reading some of the comments over at SayUncle’s, I thought it would be useful to talk about the actual statute that is currently responsible for Steve Bailey troubles with the feds:

(a) It shall be unlawful —

(6) for any person in connection with the acquisition or attempted acquisition of any firearm or ammunition from a licensed importer, licensed manufacturer, licensed dealer, or licensed collector, knowingly to make any false or fictitious oral or written statement or to furnish or exhibit any false, fictitious, or misrepresented identification, intended or likely to deceive such importer, manufacturer, dealer, or collector with respect to any fact material to the lawfulness of the sale or other disposition of such firearm or ammunition under the provisions of this chapter

So straw purchasing basically rests on the fact that it’s considered to be a conspiracy to provide false identification and to deceive the dealer as to the lawfulness of a firearm purchase.

Is Steve Bailey guilty of facilitating a straw purchase? If the security guard remained in possession of the revolver after it was purchased, and it was purchased, with the understanding among the party, that he was the actual buyer, and he would keep the firearm, then it would be difficult for the feds to argue that the buyer made a false statement, and that a straw purchase took place.  He was the actual buyer.

If Bailey at any point took constructive possession of the firearm, then he would indeed be guilty of facilitating a straw purchase. But constructive possession is different than actual possession. He may have held the gun at some point, but this is not unlawful; you can go shooting with someone out of state and use their firearms, even though you might have actual possession, but it’s your friend’s property.   There is one thing about this that’s interesting:

Constructive possession is the power and intent of an individual to control a particular item, even though it is not physically in that person’s control. For example, an individual who has the key to a bank safe-deposit box, which contains a piece of jewelry that she owns, is said to be in constructive possession of the jewelry.

So, even if Bailey didn’t keep the firearm, if it was understood among the party that it was “his”, and he retained access to it, he’s admitted to paying for it, that could be construed as a straw purchase of a firearm, even if it never made it’s way back to Massachusetts with Bailey. The New Hampshire security guard was not the actual buyer, and Bailey, as a resident of Massachusetts, is prohibited by federal law from purchasing a firearm in New Hampshire.

Consider what the 9th Circuit had to say about straw purchasing in US v. Moore:

The straw man doctrine, which is nothing more than a long-standing construction of the relevant statutes, holds that a person violates section 922(a)(6) by acting as an intermediary or agent of someone who is ineligible to obtain a firearm from a licensed dealer and making a false statement that enables the ineligible principal to obtain a firearm. As we said in Perri v. Department of the Treasury, 637 F.2d 1332, 1336 (9th Cir. 1981), “sham or `strawman’ ” purchases occur “when a lawful purchaser buys for an unlawful one.” See United States v. Lawrence, 680 F.2d 1126, 1127-28 (6th Cir. 1982) (defendants who purchase firearms for ineligible foreign citizens violate section 922(a)(6)); United States v. Ortiz-Loya, 777 F.2d 973, 978 (5th Cir. 1985) (same). In Lawrence, for example, the Sixth Circuit found determinative of straw man status that, like Wiley, the transferee (1) acted under the direction and control of the ineligible buyer, (2) purchased weapons selected by the ineligible buyer with the buyer’s money, (3) took a commission that showed agency, and (4) had no intention of keeping the gun for himself.

I would imagine the ATF is eager to find out two things.  1) Whether the New Hampshire security guard is in possession of the firearm, indicating that he was the actual buyer, and 2) whether there was any understanding among the parties to the purchase that it was going to be Bailey’s gun.

If the feds decided to prosecute based on the latter, I think it would be unique in the federal court system, since I’ve not found any case similar to it, but it seems like a plausible premise.  Think about a girlfriend who buys a firearm for her drug dealing felon boyfriend, but retains actual possession of it.  He can still come over and use it any time he wanted to, because he gave her the money, and it’s understood to be his firearm.  Would this not be a straw purchase?  I would imagine the feds would want to argue that it is.

Given the scrutiny he’s receiving from the feds, I sincerely hope that Steve Bailey will think twice about supporting this minefield of federal and state regulations that ordinary, law abiding gun owners are forced to navigate in order to exercise their constitutional right.  Many of these laws can easily, easily trap people with no criminal intent.   Maybe these folks want it to be risky and legally hazardous to purchase and own guns, but if that’s the case, they should plainly say so.  They should stop trying to sell the public on the idea that they want to control crime, and admit to desiring to make criminals out of otherwise law abiding people who participate in activities they find socially distasteful.

Brady Quote

Via Joe:

We must prepare for a long hard battle. So much of what we have worked for in the past and everything we’re currently working on could be destroyed by the heinous decision of right-wing activist judges who chose to ignore more than 60 years of precedent in order to help the gun lobby accomplish in the courts what it has been unable to accomplish in Congress.

Sarah Brady
Email, July 20, 2007
Chair
Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence

Right wing activist judges?  It’s activism for judges to say the Bill of Rights is, actually, you know, the law of the land, and to treat it that way?  No, Sarah.  No.  If judges can find penumbras formed by emanations in the Bill of Rights, they can damned well pay attention to and enforce what’s actually written there in plain English.  The judges aren’t ignoring “60 years of precedent”, they are enforcing what the Bill of Rights has plainly meant for the last 218 years.

Victory for 2nd Amendment Rights in IL?

It seems to me that this is more of a case of a victory for following the friggin law.  It’s perfectly legal to carry an unloaded firearm in Illinois on your person, except in Chicago, where handguns are illegal.  Unloaded, under Illinois law, meaning no round in the chamber, or no loaded magazine in the gun.  I’ll call it a victory for the second amendment in Illinois if Chicago gets its oh so effective gun ban thrown out.

Ruger Needs to Make Guns for Shooters

I think I can declare myself pretty intimately familiar now with my new Mk.III Hunter 22/45. The Mk.III isn’t the only Ruger pistol I own. I also have a Mk.II 50th Anniversary Edition. The Mk.II was my first pistol purchase, and my first experience with “Hey, what’s this extra form?”

The Ruger Mk.II has the safety features I would expect, which means it has a hammer locking manual safety. Great! When it comes to a target shooter, that’s all I want. But the Mk.III has every safety under the sun. Mag release safety, chamber loaded idiotcator, manual safety, child safety lock, and airbags. Seriously, I don’t want any of these things on the gun. Here are my problems with the Mk.III:

  • Magazine doesn’t drop free. They switched to a manual thumb release, but you have to physically remove it. As long as I have to do that, I think the original magazine system was fine. If a gun has a thumb release, I expect the magazine to drop free.
  • Chamber loaded idiotcater. These don’t belong on any firearms. It implies a firearm without the indicator showing is “safe”. All firearms are always treated as loaded. It also make the Mk.IIIs a nightmare to clean. The indicator can get gritty and stick. Early versions rested directly on the rim, meaning a hard blow (like form a drop) would fire a round. Ruger fixed this problem, when what they should have done is remove the feature, and tell people in the manual how to properly handle a firearm.
  • Magazine drop safety. In a target gun, I don’t mind this so much, in a carry gun it’s totally unacceptable. But it is another safety feature that caters to fools, and needlessly complicates the mechanism on a gun that is already notoriously difficult to reassemble.
  • Front sight issues. The front sight on the Mk.III likes to come loose after shooting it for a while. They should ship with lock-tite applied so this doesn’t happen.
  • I prefer the grip angle of the 22/45, but the polymer frame doesn’t balance of the rest of the gun’s weight very well. On the 22/45, you can’t swap grip panels. It’s integrated into the frame. I use a Houge grip sleeve, which helps a lot.

I understand why Ruger is loading up their guns with safety features; they are popular among entry level shooters, because they work well and don’t cost a lot of money. Ruger doesn’t want to be sued because they could have made a gun with more safety features, which is a product liability tort in most states.

A firearm is an inherently dangerous object, and cannot be made safe in the hands of an ignorant user who hasn’t bothered to educate himself, or get training on safe gun handling. These new features, which are superfluous for experienced shooters, are going to drive experienced shooters away from the Ruger badge, and still will not protect an ignorant user from the device’s inherent hazards. Ruger needs to worry more about catering to new and experience shooters alike, rather than worrying about lawsuits.

Feeling the Heat?

Yesterday I posted that I agreed with David Codrea that calling for the ATF to investigate Steve Bailey was taking things a bit too far. I will stand by the assertion that he should not actually be brought up on federal charges, but I will most definitely relish in the sweet, sweet, poetic justice.

Hey, Mr. Bailey, the ATF doesn’t care that you’re not a criminal. They have no problem wasting our tax dollars and their time harassing ordinary law abiding people and businessmen. Don’t get me wrong, I don’t think you should go to jail, because I don’t think what you did ought to be against the law. But instead of insulting us, maybe you can wake up and smell the coffee, and admit that perhaps we have a point in our opposition to these laws?

UPDATE: I’m retracting my retractions about whether he took the gun with him or not. This guy is a liar, one way or another, so I feel no need to worry about whether I’m getting my story right. He didn’t, why should I bother?

LTC Holder Busted

The woman in this story is a dummy, but check out how the Inky opened this article:

It is no secret that Philadelphia’s out-of-control murder rate makes folks feel that a gun can go off any time, any place. But on Tuesday, even the courthouse wasn’t off limits to a dangerous weapon.

Do journalist even try to write intelligently anymore?   I have some news for Simone Weichselbaum: guns do not just “go off, at any time, any place”.  Someone has to pull the trigger.

“She put her bag in the X-ray machine and began to enter security,” said Central Detective’s Capt. Sharon Seaborough.

Banks also had an “attitude,” cops said. She gave the impression she didn’t think there was anything wrong with carrying the gun, and a knife, in her purse, police said. She was charged with weapons offenses.

Dummy.  She had an LTC, but as anyone who has an LTC knows, you can’t carry into a court of law.  She might have some room to mount a defense here, because of the definition of “court facility” in PA law:

The courtroom of a court of record; a courtroom of a community court; the courtroom of a district justice; a courtroom of the Philadelphia Municipal Court; a courtroom of the Pittsburgh Magistrates Court; a courtroom of the Traffic Court of Philadelphia; judge’s chambers; witness rooms; jury deliberation rooms; attorney conference rooms; prisoner holding cells; offices of court clerks, the district attorney, the sheriff and probation and parole officers; and any adjoining corridors.

There has been at least one court ruling in Pennsylvania that this cannot be applied to the entire building.  But this was Commonwealth Court for Jefferson County.  Some courts don’t set up the location of their metal detectors with this in mind.  If I were her attorney, I would make the argument that the law doesn’t say court facilities, but that the prohibition is limited.   Philadelphia courts are unlikely to rule that way, but it might be worth getting this cleared up in superior court, or the supreme court, so the entire commonwealth can have a single standard.

The state legislature is quite capable of making a law that would have prohibited an entire court house, but they didn’t choose to do that, they chose the prohibition to be limited, and I think there’s a good chance this woman can get off on the weapons charges.

Of course, you won’t read any of that in the Inquirer, since I doubt the reporter knows much about the law in any detail, and couldn’t be bothered to check.

They’re Getting Better at Least

Uncle updates on the NBC video:

And let’s get this out of they way: they’re not known in the trade as black rifles. They’re known as AR-15s. On some gun boards, they started referring to AR-15s as Evil Black Rifles to poke fun of the assault weapons ban, which seemed to target rifles that were black.

Man, if you had told me back in the early 90s that we’d be upset with the press because they are calling them “black rifles” rather than “killing machines” or “assault weapons”, I would have said you were nuts. Back then they said the only reason for a civilian to own one would be to mow down a kindergarten, which you could do, pretty easily, since 2 minutes with a nail file would convert it into a fully automatic machine gun, according to the news media.

I’m not sure I’d object to the term “military style” from anything other than a public relations point of view. The rifles are made from a military pattern. This you can’t really argue with. While they are not true military assault rifles, they are patterned after them. So I’m not sure “military style” isn’t fitting from a technical point of view.

To me the important message that seems to be getting out there is that these firearms do have a sporting use, and people do use them for legitimate other purposes, like home defense. This has always been the case, but I’m glad to see the media is moving beyond regurgitating whatever the Brady Campaign or Violence Policy Center tells them.