When Alexander's gun fired into a ceiling -- injuring some Seaside High students with falling ceiling debris -- he did not commit a crime, prosecutors concluded. He also didn't violate any laws when he allowed students to handle his police service weapon and take selfies with it. [More]Now you go do the exact same things and see if they can't find something to pin you with.
[Via Chris Knox]
1 comment:
David, you or I would be guilty of a violation if we possessed a gun in a school zone. Only-ones get a pass on this (and I suppose it is right since they might actually have to do so in the line of duty) under Kali law. So far Kali hasn't criminalized plain flat-out bone-headedness. What I do not understand is how one of those supposedly "highly trained" only-ones could get the order of the steps to unloading a handgun backwards. For that matter, why the hell didn't he use a training prop to demonstrate the retention holster? One would expect either the Police Dept training dept. or a local gun range which hold classes to have one.
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