"I always want to know my officers are representing this city in a very positive light," Foster said. [More]
Here's Foster having a word with his errant, truth-prone public servant:
Notes from the Resistance...
"I always want to know my officers are representing this city in a very positive light," Foster said. [More]
The civil lawsuit claims Smith & Wesson negligently designed and inadequately warned consumers about the dangers of a large-frame hunting revolver. [More]Huh--so you're not supposed to do this?
Todd held the pistol grip with his right hand and placed his left hand under the trigger guard of the revolver...You know, just the other day, while clamping a rifle butt with my feet and gnawing on the muzzle while yanking back on the trigger with my thumbs I was saying to myself "I wish I had someone to sue..."
Feinstein: Prevent Foreign Felons From Obtaining Firearms [More]Not "Prevent Foreign Felons From Obtaining Entry...?
"Weapons linked to a questionable government strategy are turning up in crimes in Valley neighborhoods," Lori Jane Gliha of ABC15 Phoenix reports. [More]Today's Gun Rights Examiner column notes the type of reporting we should encourage. The video is included in the sidebar media player.
July 1, 1779 - Captain Richard Skinner was killed by a sniper, one of a small group of British and locals who came over from Staten Island and surprised Skinner and others who were holding a 'Public Safety Committee' meeting at the Crossroads Tavern, also called the Six Roads Tavern, about one mile south of Rahway between Rahway and Woodbridge, on what was then called King's Highway (now St. Georges Avenue). The site now faces the Penn. railroad. The group of about four British soldiers and four "refugees' succeeded in killing Skinner, the commanding officer of a troop of light horse. One other person was killed and thirteen taken as prisoners. [More]