Tuesday, January 13, 2009

We're the Only Ones "Behold, We Stand at the Door and Knock" Enough

“We’re going to start knocking on doors at the end of January,” said state police Detective Sgt. Eric Barlow. [More]
"Dave's not here."

Yeah, right. The "Only Ones" will knock if they suspect armed criminals are on the other side of the door.

Good one.

Hey--so much for no door-to-door confiscation, now that they've got their foot in the door...

[Via Brian F]

6 comments:

Kent McManigal said...

It's getting close to the time that the only reasonable reaction to seeing a cop is to.... well, draw your own conclusions.

Smokey Behr said...

There's a scary quote in the story:

"The U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives keeps a database of the make, model and buyer of weapons sold across the nation. The information is used to monitor gun trends and prosecute large traffickers."

I thought that keeping a firearms registry was illegal, and that the NICS data was purged after 48 hours.

Anonymous said...

here's my email to Heather Haddon. Will post a response if I get one.

Title: More criminals than you knew?

Ok, Heather, just read your article regarding the partnership whereby Jersey authorities receive information on gun sales and ownership from the BATFE. Now it is time for you to do an article about all the felonies the law enforcers have just committed.

That's right. Calling a registry a database does not make it any less illegal. It is a violation of law to maintain a registry of gunowners or gun purchasers. The BATFE has testified under oath before Congress on numerous occassion and in court that no such registry exists. Yet they brazenly admit to using it in this new program. Let's add perjury to the list of crimes that N.J. and federal law enforcement have committed.

Now is your chance to be a journalist and pursue this story to its end. If you have the nerve and the integrity.

(signed)

Anonymous said...

"Andreychak said governors and senators from across the country have asked him about the NJ Trace program. He’s agreed to provide the software for free, he said." Don't you love these State tools doling out tax funded programs for free!!!

Anonymous said...

Investigating someone just for purchasing a gun? Keeping the records? I hope this is just shoddy reporting. I'm concerned and upset that somehow one is under suspicion for the simple act of purchasing a firearm legally. After all, they wouldn't investigate someone who isn't under suspicion, would they?

Anonymous said...

I didn't know that PA following the U.S. Constitution and not stepping on it would be called a state that has weak gun laws.
Frankly, I would think that NJ is a state that the parasites of the criminal justice system have endangered its citizens by turning that criminal system into a revolving door to feed themselves as parasites.
Follow this because here's the scoop on NJ's gun laws. The parasites in NJ's criminal justice system know they are releasing back on the streets proven violent criminals who are without question going to commit new violent crimes. Knowing this they are trying to disarm everyone to protect themselves by hoping these proven violent criminals don't have firearms. The NJ parasites know then will be arresting these violent criminals again to feed the system to keep that scam working.
Yes, it would be nice if we could only get this truth into the media. 3 percent of the criminals in America do 90 percent of the violent crimes. Many no mistakes about it, the parasite is the public's number one enemy.