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Old July 19th, 2008
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Default Gun ruling prompts convicts to challenge gun laws.

WASHINGTON - Twice convicted of felonies, James Francis Barton Jr. faces charges of violating a federal law barring felons from owning guns after police found seven pistols, three shotguns and five rifles at his home south of Pittsburgh.

As a defense, Barton and several other defendants in federal gun cases argue that last month's Supreme Court ruling allows them to keep loaded handguns at home for self-defense.

"Felons, such as Barton, have the need and the right to protect themselves and their families by keeping firearms in their home," says David Chontos, Barton's court-appointed lawyer.

Chontos and other criminal defense lawyers say the high court's decision means federal laws designed to keep guns out of the hands of people convicted of felonies and crimes of domestic violence are unconstitutional as long as the weapons are needed for self-defense.

So far, federal judges uniformly have agreed these restrictions are unchanged by the Supreme Court's landmark interpretation of the Second Amendment.

"The line I'm proposing, at the home, is entirely consistent" with the Supreme Court ruling, said Chontos, a lawyer in Turtle Creek, Pa. A court hearing on the issue is scheduled for late July.

The legal attacks by Chontos and other criminal defense lawyers are separate from civil lawsuits by the National Rifle Association and others challenging handgun bans in Chicago and its suburbs as well as a total ban on guns in public housing units in San Francisco.

People on both sides of the gun control issue say they expect numerous attacks against local, state and federal laws based on the high court's 5-4 ruling that struck down the District of Columbia's ban on handguns. The opinion by Justice Antonin Scalia also suggested, however, that many gun control measures could remain in place.

Denis Henigan, vice president for law and policy at the Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence, said Scalia essentially was reassuring people that the laws keeping guns from felons and people with mental illness and out of government buildings and schools would withstand challenges. But Henigan said he is not surprised by felons pressing for gun-ownership rights.

"The court has cast us into uncharted waters here. There is no question about that," Henigan said.

"There is now uncertainty where there was none before," he said. "Gun laws were routinely upheld and they were considered policy issues to be decided by legislatures."

At the Justice Department, spokesman Erik Ablin said the agency's lawyers "will continue to defend vigorously the constitutionality, under the Second Amendment, of all federal firearms laws and will respond to particular challenges in court."

Cities' outright bans on handguns probably are the most vulnerable laws following the Supreme Court ruling. Many lawyers and Second Amendment experts believe that restrictions on gun ownership in public housing also will be difficult to defend.

The question for courts will be whether the government has more power when it acts as a landlord, as it does in public housing, than in general.

"I think there's a very substantial chance that these kinds of ordinances will be struck down because they are aimed at people who have shown no reason to be viewed as untrustworthy," said Eugene Volokh, a law professor at the University of California, Los Angeles, who has written about gun rights.

San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom has said the city will defend the policy as good for public safety. "Is there anyone out there who really believes that we need more guns in public housing?" Newsom said when the suit was filed a day after the Supreme Court ruled on Washington's handgun ban.

In the District of Columbia, the city housing authority is considering whether its prohibition on firearms in public housing can survive the court ruling, spokeswoman Dena Michaelson said.

But Volokh and some gun rights proponents said people convicted of crimes are less likely to succeed in their challenges.

"Many felons may need self defense more than you and I, but the government has extra justification for limiting that right because they have proven themselves to be untrustworthy," Volokh said.

Judges may find it harder to resolve cases in which nonviolent criminals, particularly those whose only offense happened long ago, are charged with gun possession.

"Do you think Scooter Libby should have a gun?" asked Douglas Berman, a law professor at Ohio State University who says the ruling will complicate the work of the courts, prosecutors and police. He was referring to former White House aide I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby, who was convicted of perjury, obstruction and lying to the FBI in the CIA leak investigation.

A more plausible case for being allowed a gun might be made by someone now in his 50s or 60s who was convicted as a teenager of taking a car for a joyride, said Stephen P. Halbrook, a gun rights supporter and lawyer. "You might have a court look at that differently," Halbrook said.

The Supreme Court has a case on its calendar for the fall that could indicate whether the justices are inclined to expand their ruling.

In United States v. Hayes, the government is asking the court to reinstate a conviction for possession of a gun for someone previously convicted of a domestic violence crime. In 1994, Randy Hayes received a year of probation after pleading guilty to beating his wife.

The 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals overturned the conviction because the West Virginia law Hayes violated does not specifically deal with domestic violence crimes. The question for the high court, then, is a technical one: whether the law has to include domestic violence to be used in the future to prevent someone from owning guns?

Advocates on both sides of the gun control debate will be watching closely to see whether the court's D.C. decision is relevant to the Hayes case and, if so, how.
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Old July 19th, 2008
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Default Re: Gun ruling prompts convicts to challenge gun laws.

As seen elsewhere...

http://www.pafoa.org/forum/news-123/...c-gun-ban.html (Pennsylvania lawsuit tests high court's ruling that lifts D.C. gun ban)

Good for them. The government has three choices: liberty, incarceration, or death.
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Old July 19th, 2008
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Default Re: Gun ruling prompts convicts to challenge gun laws.

The one example they gave is exactly the point I've been trying to make several times. if someone does something stupid when they are 18. They then can't defend their family when they are a 50 year old law-abiding citizen. They are most likely a completely different person from when young, but their rights are still gone for life.

Just hope it's not someone you love.
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Old July 19th, 2008
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Default Re: Gun ruling prompts convicts to challenge gun laws.

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...but their rights are still gone for life.
And if these rights come from "God," how can Government take them away? Is there a constitutional basis for this?
I think anyone who believes "God" gives Rights (or that Rights are "Natural Rights" and they are not granted by Government), must believe only "God" can take them away. Therefore, in order to be truly objective, he must also believe that felons who served their time (especially the ones that did not employ a firearm in the commission of a crime) still retain the right to bear arms.
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Old July 19th, 2008
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Default Re: Gun ruling prompts convicts to challenge gun laws.

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And if these rights come from "God," how can Government take them away? Is there a constitutional basis for this?
I think anyone who believes "God" gives Rights (or that Rights are "Natural Rights" and they are not granted by Government), must believe only "God" can take them away. Therefore, in order to be truly objective, he must also believe that felons who served their time (especially the ones that did not employ a firearm in the commission of a crime) still retain the right to bear arms.
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Old July 19th, 2008
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Default Re: Gun ruling prompts convicts to challenge gun laws.

Theoretically, and this is how it used to be, once the sentence was served, that was the end of it. No ex poste facto laws or bills of attainder.

If you remember the western movies, when the "bad guy" was released from the territorial prison he was given his six-shooters back. Whether he subsequently did good or bad with them was a separate issue - he had served his time.
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Old July 20th, 2008
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Default Re: Gun ruling prompts convicts to challenge gun laws.

So basically what they're saying is that the second you get released from prison for armed assault, you can get a gun back?

No thanks.
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Old July 20th, 2008
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Default Re: Gun ruling prompts convicts to challenge gun laws.

If they can't be trusted with a weapon they can't be trusted without one so why are we releasing them?

If they can be trusted to be a general member of the public then all their rights come back to them to make reintegration with society easier otherwise we mandate that they exist as second class citizens which gives them cause to continue to strike back at society.
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Old July 20th, 2008
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Default Re: Gun ruling prompts convicts to challenge gun laws.

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Originally Posted by Elmar View Post
If they can't be trusted with a weapon they can't be trusted without one so why are we releasing them?

If they can be trusted to be a general member of the public then all their rights come back to them to make reintegration with society easier otherwise we mandate that they exist as second class citizens which gives them cause to continue to strike back at society.
They are second class citizens if they can't function within the confines of the law to begin with.
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Old July 20th, 2008
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Default Re: Gun ruling prompts convicts to challenge gun laws.

And they remain Second Class citizens without an opportunity to re-become First Class citizens.
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