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February 22, 2013, 11:09 AM | #401 |
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Weak legislation
HB997 could be much worse. But I'd rather see constitutional carry than HB997.
Nevermind. I thought the bill allowed police to detain an OCer without reasonable suspicion until I looked through the bill and found this: Section 70 - (e) If a law enforcement officer initiates an investigative stop, including but not limited to a traffic stop, of a licensee who is carrying a concealed firearm, the licensee shall disclose as soon as reasonably possible to the officer that he or she is in possession of a concealed firearm under this Act. Disclosure may be accomplished by oral notification or by providing or displaying the license to carry a concealed firearm to the officer. I doubt Chicago police will accept your oral notification, though. Last edited by Lt. Skrumpledonk Ret; February 22, 2013 at 01:46 PM. |
February 22, 2013, 11:23 AM | #402 |
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I don't see how things have changed substantially for you guys in Illinois from yesterday, but maybe there is some psychological boost from this, or its disheartening for the antis in Chicago - I don't know.
The opinion that Al expressed early on was that even if the court heard the case en banc they weren't going to overturn the panel's decision. So that leaves the last issue of appealing to the Supreme Court, but still, I don't see how anything has substantially changed. |
February 22, 2013, 11:30 AM | #403 |
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This thread could really go off track with why constitutional carry is better or worse, and I don't want to give CHicago dems any ideas, but they could pass their own Chicago ordinances that coud say for instance - no semi automatics (revolvers only) as Judge Davis suggested, if you remember.. or ordinances that prohibit a firearm within 50 feet of any place that sells alcohol (every gas station and convienience store), they could put into place an onerous permitting system ala NYC... Those laws could carry $10,000 fines and 6 mo jail time and / or both. They could pass a law that says you're allowed to carry in general (with a permit) but you cannot have a firearm on public transit...
And at least 4 other municipalities like Oak Park, Wilmette etc.. could follow suit. As cool as constitutional carry might sound to some people, it would make staying in compliance with the myriad laws a nightmare, and many law abiding gun owners eventually would get snagged by the odd patchwork of disparate city ordinances. |
February 22, 2013, 11:41 AM | #404 |
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I suppose they could do a lot things. But if they do nothing, but they know the clock is ticking and if the anti-gunners can't come together, it'll be great in early June. I think the onerous regulations can be held up or defeated.
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February 22, 2013, 11:51 AM | #405 | |
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February 22, 2013, 12:02 PM | #406 | |
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From the dissent:
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Hamilton is either like Rip VanWinkle or he's an ostrich. Still, it's gratifying when you hear them in their own words concede a point. Why a right as basic as the right to exist - the right to survive and defend one's self doesn't warrant strict scrutiny is another issue. IMO, Hamilton, Rovner, Wood and Williams don't want a society where individuals can fend for themselves therefor they don't think strict scrutiny should apply. Which is illogical and another way of saying "we don't want people with guns so we reject any logical argument or anything that may say otherwise" They're rejecting based on their preference not on the logic of the argument. This isn't news, their anti-2A arguments constitute a house of cards and what we're seeing is Gura take apart their house of cards one card at a time. The wheels of justice grind slowly, (I was going crazy waiting to hear something in Moore and I'm still going crazy waiting for the fricken oral arguments in Kwong!) But what I think we're seeing is the anti-gunners house of cards collapsing in slow motion. I don't see how may issue and good cause restrictions can stand given that self defense is a right that extends beyond the home. I think the new frontier for the antis is going to be instituting onerous permitting fees and mandatory insurance, things of that nature - throwing up any obstacles that can concievably withstand contitutional muster. |
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February 22, 2013, 12:07 PM | #407 |
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Here the Document http://www.ca7.uscourts.gov/tmp/Q00LR0HM.pdf
My read was this is far from a good win... The text is disturbing in that it spells out a long list of places where the court believes restrictions can be imposed. It also spells out that the 2A in its opinion only exist for the right of self defense and that in its opinion the 2A does not apply to militia style weapons. I don't know what to say... Its kind of a win but not so much....
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February 22, 2013, 12:15 PM | #408 | |
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No bill at all would mean very little change for the people of Cook and Chicago. No one will get a permit other than the elite few. |
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February 22, 2013, 12:34 PM | #409 | |
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February 22, 2013, 12:58 PM | #410 | |
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I don't know why the dissenters felt compelled to spell out a list of things gun control politicians in Illinois can do post Moore. Maybe they realized that Chicago has legal minds like Paul Castigliano who don't have a clue, so they decided the anti-gun faction there needed help.
Besides being inappropriate IMO, they seem to give some bad advice citing Kachalsky as giving governments the right to issue based on "proper cause". Not ony that but they are saying it in the section where they are discussing that Moore leaves the State a good deal of constitutional room for reasonable public safety measures. Posner says in thew majority opinion: Quote:
Only people who have had an overt threat against them ever get car jacked, or raped, mugged, robbed ? Only people who transport diamonds and money or a similar occupation are in danger of being car jacked or robbed? Only those people have the need of self defense, therefore only those people are allowed to exercise that right? Plenty of evidence in society that this is not so. Probably a hundred true stories on this forum alone refuting that assumption. I mean, if the dissenting judges want to argue that point - that's OK, they could argue it in the section where they list why they think the panel's dicidion was wrong. But they're putting this out in the section where they are discussing what Illinois can still do. It seems to me that they have a flawed understanding of what Moore really says and the ramifications of the decision. |
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February 22, 2013, 01:14 PM | #411 |
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The dissenters are seriously upset about this, so yes, I'm willing to believe at least part of their actions are derived from a desire to strike back at this ruling, weaken it as much as they can, etc.
It is going to be a slam dunk that the state can dictate time, place and manner restrictions. So, even if the dissenters didn't spell out some, the list will be common enough knowledge soon. It's the next battleground -- exactly how long a list can we possibly get away with? It helps to think of the antis as petulant children. They're crying, whining, pouting and throwing temper tantrums. If they don't get their way, they'll take their ball and go home. But in the end, freedoms are growing in Illinois, so it's a Good Thing. |
February 22, 2013, 06:18 PM | #412 |
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Thank you Mac59 and Lugar_carbine...
You guys have the right info a google search just does not come up with. 1,000,000 different web sites - it pulls up and nothing but junk! Glad to see in print that Madigan is denied and once again wasting MY money with her chess moves. If she is smart, she will embrace it and help with the new legislation instead of showing her feathers like she is supposed to if she is to ever chase after the Governor's position. |
February 22, 2013, 07:05 PM | #413 |
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SAF posted a news release today... the Moore ruling stands!
Does the 180 day clock run from the original ruling, or start now? |
February 22, 2013, 07:52 PM | #414 |
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The 180 days runs out in June. Hearings on a new law are ongoing in Springfield. The proposal on the table, as I understand it, is a NRA backed "shall issue" plan with permits being issued by the Illinois State Police, and no opt out for Chicago--state pre-emption.
The only thing left to find out is whether Madigan will file for cert. I don't know when her time runs on that, but she had originally stated her intent to do so. Obviously, if a bill is signed into law, any such petition would be moot. Further, filing for cert will not stop the clock on the 180 days for the injunction unless she files for and gets a stay. |
February 22, 2013, 08:32 PM | #415 | |
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The 180 day clock would not have stopped unless the rehearing was granted and the decision was vacated. Jun e 6th is when the stay expires and the injunction will be in full force.
The 90 day clock for petition for a grant of cert begins today. The petition must be filed by May 20th, if my count is correct. Here's the counter point: Once the petition for cert is filed, Madigan can ask for a continuance of the stay... and it will be granted. Quote:
There was one thing they added that I thought was hilarious! They used the problematic shooting of innocents, by NYC cops, when they indiscriminately and en masse shot the BG. The problem with that data-point is that we can empirically show that the police are not very good shots. There are literally dozens of such cases. However, when a defensive shooter (Good Guy = GG) engages a BG outside the home and on the street, the Good Guy uses less shots and makes more direct hits. Add to that, that the GG does not engage the BG en masse with a bunch of other shooters. It is almost always done alone. So even if a lot of shots occur, it is not hundreds of shots as most often occur with massed police forces. |
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February 22, 2013, 11:06 PM | #416 |
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In the dissent they cite a few news articles on the NY shootings..
It's not like those sources were some expert assessment of the event or some emprical treatment by criminologists or anything . Was that material presented by defendents as part of the case or did the dissenting judges just decide to go reference that stuff themselves (maybe it was just Hamilton, not the whole gang, I don't know). |
February 23, 2013, 12:52 AM | #417 |
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Lugar, that was what made it so hilarious. This outside of any judicial notice of the case. It was inserted to make a point that was never brought up!
Over at MDShooters.com, esqappellate informed us that according to FRAP 41, Madigan has 7 days to file a stay of mandate pending cert. If she doesn't file for the stay by next week, she will not be filing a petition to the SCOTUS. |
February 23, 2013, 01:58 AM | #418 | |
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February 23, 2013, 09:12 AM | #419 | |
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Now, what the details are of course remains to be seen, but I am expecting something (Chicago area) similar to when firearms were recently allowed to be registered and owned in Chicago in your home- but not your garage. Not a whole lot of hard work here. The ordinance was not rewritten, it was just edited (actually lines crossed out and few sections added or excluded). Of note, it had/has: specific makes that are banned forms limiting quantity and annual registering of firearms fee requirement and Certified completion of Firearms Course requirement finger printing and photo id for Chicago Firearms Permit taken at police station Now, my point being, they already have a pretty good block on who is getting these permits by having course and fee requirements. This amounting to time and several hundreds of dollars will exclude a lot. So in addition to above, I think the big area of debate will be the banned areas of carry! They can add AW bans of AR type, but these are already banned in Cook county and magazine capacity is also already limited to 12 (Cook County) and 10 (Chicago), so that is not an issue. Just don't allow in schools(National debate at moment) and places of assembly. Not in liquor stores? There is one on every corner, so that sounds a bit ridiculous. I would turn to look at other states for their take on this. What about the el and buses or on the Metra commuter train? I realize Chicago has a lot more intricacies than downstate, where driving around a little town in your pickup is about the only contact you will have. (And we used to have hunting acreage downstate and a pickup, so I am not being prejudice!) So I think Madigan (AG-IL) and Rahm (M-Chicago) should sit down and have a little meeting sooner rather than later. |
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February 23, 2013, 10:29 AM | #420 |
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Dissenting Delusions
In my read of the dissenting opinion it seems clear to me that these judges still reject the individual right of self defense and right to life. Their list of excluded places was merely a list of all public places plus a list of some private property. It's essentially a list of all places outside the home where most people assemble - for work, commerce, recreation, etc. So, according to them, the only place you can have a gun anyway is inside your home. I'm sure this is ONLY due to the McDonald ruling, without this they wouldn't relent there either. So they obviously contend that public safety is superior to right to life. Who do they think the public is? A collection of non-individuals? A collection of individuals bereft of right to life? (A collection of individuals bereft of right to life are called victims.) The important question is where does an individual have a right to life? Only in their home? That's absurd.
The SC ruled in Heller that individuals have a right to defend their lives by themselves. The question these carry cases pose is where this right exists. And only in one's home simply isn't a defendable argument. The good news is that the Posner's ruling prevails. On to the Supreme Court. |
February 23, 2013, 10:13 PM | #421 | |
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That could be a restaurant, sporting event, political rally, or just three of us talking on the street. The dissenting opinion seems to have gotten that idea. By calling a place "sensitive" under the Heller dicta, you could ban carry quite easily and still keep the mantle of respecting the Constitution. Keep a close eye out for rhetoric along those lines.
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February 25, 2013, 11:08 AM | #422 | |
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Is not the nature of law to encapsulate all the possibilities and address them?
I don't buy the dissenters just offering up a vague line of "public gatherings". Then we could offer a line where it is legal to conceal carry anywhere (outside of public assembly - which is defined in the zoning code) that you feel you are in danger. Two can play this game. Just look at WI and be done with it! Quote:
There, I just did it for them. Just decide about public transportation? Anyone know what other major cities do for this.? I am not saying either way, but I think it would be similar to assembly so would be banned as well and probably for the best. |
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February 25, 2013, 11:23 AM | #423 |
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No that wont work because then you will get some crap like. Cant carry near a public road or whatever. I get that they could be specific but the antis have some special kind of brain damage or something.. They will always seek the widest possible prohibition for anyone who is not one of them.
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February 25, 2013, 10:23 PM | #424 |
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Anti-gun politicians in Illinois have begun to construct their gun control laws somewhat along the lines laid out by the diseenting opinion.
I guess some justices on CA7 like giving pro-bono legal advice disguised as a dissenting opinion, at least for causes that they believe in. From what I understand, the anti-gunners (mostly Chicago machine politicians) buried the NRA bill in committee and have put forth a shell bill which doesn't say much of anything but will be filled in with amendments. So anyway, here is an amendment that looks an awfull lot like what Tom Servo talked about, with the exception that there is a bit of a qualifier on what a gathering is: http://www.ilga.gov/legislation/full...ID=12&Session= There are further amendments which prohibit carrying a handgun just about everyplace other than your own property: http://www.ilga.gov/legislation/full...ID=12&Session= Other places that are also prohibited: your vehicle restaurants truck stops any place that has video gaming to include but not limited to casinos church, temple, or other place of worship zoos parks amusement parks museums schools, colleges, daycare state government buildings libraries hospitals and mental health clinics public transportation Combine these with the exclusion on private property I can't really see anywhere an Illinois citizen can carry. Maybe walking or riding a bike down the street. As long as you just ride on the street and don't actually arrive at a destination. As far as I can tell, this collection of amendments re-create the current Illinois UUW law in scope and totality, but they do it one explicitly named location or type of location at a time. It will be interesting to see how it plays out. Last edited by Luger_carbine; February 25, 2013 at 10:43 PM. |
February 25, 2013, 10:38 PM | #425 | |
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Each one of their amendments references Heller, McDonald and Moore:
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