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March 17, 2013, 02:12 PM | #26 | ||
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Join Date: November 23, 2005
Location: California - San Francisco
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Quote:
This thread will not deteriorate into some pointless speculation about Ms.Phillips' situation. And when you start framing hypotheticals (in this case really "assuming facts not in evidence"), you may construct your hypothetical to support any conclusion you're trying to reach. Quote:
How this would apply to Ms. Phillips we can't really know because we don't have all the facts. And if we start assuming facts, we can assume facts that make her a prohibited person as easily as we can assume facts that make her not one.
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"It is long been a principle of ours that one is no more armed because he has possession of a firearm than he is a musician because he owns a piano. There is no point in having a gun if you are not capable of using it skillfully." -- Jeff Cooper |
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March 17, 2013, 02:22 PM | #27 |
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Join Date: January 7, 2013
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Even if the lady was prohibited rightly at the worst it would require taking the guns but legally the option of securing them should have been open to them as written in the CA publication I noted.
All things we don't know. Was the issue with the guns communicated to the patient as is required in that same article? Was that securing the guns option communicated to the patient so they could secure the guns before the lady was released? Was she and her husband told nothing and until the raid happened knew nothing? If that last question is what happened I'd say a lot of failures took place by the facility and the state and these people had the hell violated out of their rights. Somehow I don't think the facility or the state will be very forthcoming with answers to questions like that..........It will be like pulling teeth. Or like getting info about fast and furious..... |
March 17, 2013, 02:24 PM | #28 |
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I'll avoid trying to discuss anything with you from now on, Frank. I can't seem to ever say anything right.
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March 17, 2013, 02:29 PM | #29 | ||
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Join Date: November 23, 2005
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Quote:
Quote:
__________________
"It is long been a principle of ours that one is no more armed because he has possession of a firearm than he is a musician because he owns a piano. There is no point in having a gun if you are not capable of using it skillfully." -- Jeff Cooper |
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March 17, 2013, 02:58 PM | #30 |
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Join Date: January 7, 2013
Posts: 74
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I know she can apply to have the prohibition reversed.
Lawsuit? Maybe if she gets backing. What a mess. The problem is that she could have signed stuff while in the facility about the guns without reading it. I can see where a person could do that. A person likely wouldn't be thinking about stuff like that at all in that situation. All they are thinking about is getting home. I didn't see anything in that publication about the guns having to be destroyed if taken, just that they can be turned over to local law enforcement authorities if other arrangements to secure them cannot be made. Pretty benign statement. Doesn't describe what happened. Page 4 is pretty explicit about what family members should be told to avoid what happened in this case. BUT that the facility is ONLY required to give it to the patient in writing at discharge even though the facility SHOULD review the information with the patient AND family. Since THAT was NOT required how much confidence do we have that it was done? ummmmm ZERO here. Since it is that important why not go ahead and require it? Isn't patient, family, and public safety worth it being required? Can't we see this poor lady with a handful of papers just wanting to get home and her and her family not being made fully aware of the gun issue since it isn't REQUIRED. And that is what the state will say, "It wasn't required." Well it should be required for so many reasons. For one like before another raid happens and someone gets shot! Why do I think that very important information was not communicated to this family? I know it's speculating but dang. If I lived in that house and knew all that I'd do whatever I could to keep from being raided and having my guns taken. CA get off your bureaucratic butts and take care of your citizens by requiring facilities to inform both patients AND families all the information they need to know to make intelligent decisions concerning these issues. Here is the link again. http://www.mabpro.com/resource/docs/...bitionForm.pdf |
March 17, 2013, 03:23 PM | #31 |
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Join Date: November 23, 2005
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Confiscation in California
I'm working on my phone now so I'll be brief. "Don't know" means "don't know."
Maybe everything that needed to be done was done exactly right, and she didn't understand or fully realize the consequences. Or maybe there were one or more bureaucratic mistakes. We really have no bases upon which to assume one way or the other. |
March 17, 2013, 08:01 PM | #32 | |
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Join Date: January 24, 2011
Posts: 1,427
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Quote:
Any LEO comes to those homes, they are not going to get "permission to come in and look around". So that leaves us with doing the leg work. The studios have plenty of council of their own; anyone denied an entertainer permit will get at the very least the 411 from the studios. That will usually get them to talk to their own people. So to obtain parity look to SB420 and the MMIC issued by CDPH. Cross reference that with the California Registered Weapons Database. Anyone who has their MMIC and a weapon registered to them and is in possession of a weapon is guilty of a FEDERAL CRIME. Then let us see if that information turned over to the USAG office results in anything. Absent that I hold little hope. I have seen too much deference given to celebrity around here for the last 40+ years by the courts. Celebrity gets all the justice that money can afford.....(ref. Lindsey Lohan, Za Za, et. al.) |
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March 17, 2013, 08:29 PM | #33 |
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Join Date: January 7, 2013
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correction
I didn't say they would get nailed for it. I know what you mean.
I'd just like the word to get out to the general public and how better than a celebrity. Really the one big flaw I see in the current game is a facility is not required to do more than give a patient a written form on discharge stating the law. All they are required to do is give them a written form telling them the law and likely that patient has a lot more on their mind than looking at forms when they are being discharged from a mental health facility. The family should be called in BEFORE discharge and told verbally and in writing what will happen if they take their family member home and there are guns in the home that are not secured. It should be required everyone concerned know what can happen. If they know all that and fail and they get the guns taken they are responsible for not following the law. The state publication informs us of the importance that the family know yet also says all that is required is a document to the patient upon discharge? That is NOT good enough. It seems they already know they should require more but don't. That is not good enough to avoid issues like this or the possible issue of a person being discharged and actually using an unsecured firearm to harm someone. It protects all parties. Not just the patient's and families rights. Last edited by Jayster; March 17, 2013 at 08:35 PM. |
March 17, 2013, 09:25 PM | #34 |
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Absent a case and ruling such as United States vs. Emerson in the 9th Circuit do I see this coming to fruition.
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