Thursday, May 26, 2011

A Difference of Opinion

Per Rand Paul:
Amendment 363 clarifies that the authority to obtain info under the USA PATRIOT Act does not include authority to obtain certain firearm records.
Per Chris Cox via NRA-ILA email:
Thank you for asking about the National Rifle Association's position on a motion to table amendment # 363 to the PATRIOT Act.

The NRA takes a back seat to no one when it comes to protecting gun owners' rights against government abuse. Over the past three decades, we've fought successfully to block unnecessary and intrusive compilation of firearms-related records by several federal agencies, and will continue to protect the privacy of our members and all American gun owners.

While well-intentioned, the language of this amendment as currently drafted raises potential problems for gun owners, in that it encourages the government to use provisions in current law that allow access to firearms records without reasonable cause, warrant, or judicial oversight of any kind.

Based on these concerns and the fact that the NRA does not ordinarily take positions on procedural votes, we have no position on a motion to table amendment # 363.

UPDATE:

Just received this further explanation from NRA-ILA:
As often happens with complex issues, NRA's position on Sen. Rand Paul's defeated PATRIOT Act amendment is being mis-reported by those who either don't understand the facts, or prefer their own version of "facts."


This amendment was rejected by 85 Senators, which included many of the strongest Second Amendment supporters in the U.S. Senate. Unfortunately, Senator Paul chose not to approach us on this issue before moving ahead. His amendment, which only received 10 votes, was poorly drafted and could have resulted in more problems for gun owners than it attempted to fix. For this reason, the NRA did not take a position on the amendment.


To be more specific about the amendment and its problems, the amendment would have prohibited use of PATRIOT Act legal authority for any "investigation or procurement of firearms records which is not authorized under [the Gun Control Act]." There have been no reports of the current PATRIOT Act being abused with respect to firearms records, however supporters suggested a far-fetched scenario in which every firearms sales record in the country--tens or hundreds of millions of documents dating back to 1968--could be sought. Again, we nor anyone else is aware of any case in which this authority has been used to abuse gun owners. (In fact, published reports indicate that few of these orders are ever sought for any reason.)


In particular, the amendment appeared to be aimed at so-called "section 215 letters"--orders from the FBI requiring the disclosure of "tangible things" such as records and documents.


Under the current PATRIOT Act, an application for this type of order with respect to firearms sales records has to be approved no lower than the director or deputy director of the FBI, or the Executive Assistant Director for National Security. The application is made to a federal judge based on "a statement of facts showing that there are reasonable grounds to believe that the tangible things sought are relevant to an authorized investigation ... to obtain foreign intelligence information not concerning a United States person or to protect against international terrorism or clandestine intelligence activities." The judge has the power to modify the order and must direct the use of "minimization procedures" to protect the privacy of Americans.


If the Paul amendment were adopted, the FBI would have used other ways to access whatever firearms records it might need for intelligence or anti-terrorism investigations. This is especially troublesome for gun owners.


This would result in United States Attorneys simply demanding the same records through grand jury subpoenas, which require no judicial approval before issuance. Fighting a subpoena after the fact can be very costly and carries legal risks of its own, including possible charges for obstruction of justice.


Even worse, the government would have used the Gun Control Act's provision that allows the Attorney General to "inspect or examine the inventory and records of [a licensee] without ... reasonable cause or warrant" during a criminal investigation. That means by simply characterizing its activities as a "criminal investigation," it would enter a licensee's premises and demand these records without "reasonable cause or warrant"--in other words, without judicial oversight of any kind, and without any of the procedural limits imposed by the PATRIOT Act.


Therefore, given all of these potential problems for gun owners, the NRA could not support this poorly drafted amendment.

A Publicity Stunt

Cleveland Law Director Robert Triozzi said the case was 'more of a publicity stunt than a legal maneuver' and concluded that none of the city's ordinances conflicted with state law. [More]
Yo, Triozzi,

That's some "publicity stunt," isn't it, genius?

Remind me if I ever need a lawyer to retain someone who's, you know...competent.

And not an oath-breaking, Constitution-hating left-wing parasite.

You and Jackson. No wonder Cleve-burg's such a pathetic urban joke, and the kindest thing anyone can say about it is "At least we're not Detroit."

You know what you guys need to do to fix things?

Ban transfats and smoking and drive even more business out!

Uh...I Mean...

Frank...thought Moses would be "great" for the "entry-level position." [More]
Yes, it actually says that.

For Law Enforcement/Military Use Only

For a freakin' backpack?

A correspondent contacted me the other day about this:
 The lady on the other end told him it was an ATF requirement!

That didn't sound right, so I chased it down with U.S. Cavalry's PR guy, who told me she was mistaken, it was a requirement imposed by CamelBak, whose PR guy elected not to reply.

Funny thing: I noted Botach Tactical had no such requirement yesterday, but someone scrambled and added the caveat.

So I guess the bottom line is, CamelBak doesn't trust you with a backpack. Me, I'd remember that when they offer to trade what they do trust us with for dollars.

Stupid name for one anyway: "Urban Assault Concealment Pack."

Unless they're going to deploy it like Ruth Buzzi.

It's the "Patriotic" Thing to Do!

And if we tell you, we've got to kill you.  Or at least detain you indefinitely without trial or telling you what the charges are. [Read]


[Via Ron W]

We're the Only Ones Running Enough

Four federal agencies are probing an alleged gun-running scheme involving Lake County Sheriff's Department personnel. [More]
I guess they don't want any competition...?

[Via HZ]

State-Sponsored Terrorism

School administration came up with a mock scenario of an armed intruder entering the building, and contacted the Stephenson County Sheriff’s Office, which actively participated in the drill. [More]
The terrorists responsible for this should be waterboarded to find out who their leaders are--and then a Predator with Hellfires ought to be deployed to take out their command center.

Or at the very least, put them on that "no guns terror watchlist."

[Via Zachary G]

We're the Only One...More for the Road Enough!

An internal affairs investigation after Hamilton's crash "revealed a culture within the SWAT unit, if not the department, that seemingly condones the consumption of alcohol while on-call and/or driving a city of Austin issued vehicle," Frasier wrote. [More]
Probably just a few fermented apples.

Hey, they just want to be able to stagger home at the end of their shift...

[Via Lane]

No Longer Applicable

[T]he Constitution is archaic and boring and lots of it no longer applies anymore. [More]
Then it's the law of the jungle?

Let us know if it's the position of the political left that there are no longer any constraints.

OK?

[Via Michael G from NewsBusters]

Civil rights group opposes Brady Center on concealed carry

CORE's interest in this case stems from the fact that the Second Amendment right to keep and bear arms for self defense is an important civil right that was denied to African Americans under the antebellum Slave Codes, the Black Codes passed just after the Civil War, and under the Jim Crow regimes that persisted into the twentieth century. [More]
Today's Gun Rights Examiner column wonders what size sheets we should buy for Brady Center Klan enablers.  Do you think we also need to get them waterproof mattress pads..?