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September 15, 2011, 03:30 PM | #76 |
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Kalchalsky is a carry case. It is a carry case that involves the discretionary issuing of a carry permit.
In Moore (and also Shepard), the issue isn't about a discretionary issuance of a permit. The issue is a complete ban on carrying an operational defensive firearm in any form (open or concealed). In his reply to the notice, Attorney Jensen simply states that the decision in Kalchalsky has no bearing whatsoever on the issues facing the court in Moore. David Jensen goes even further. He is saying that if this is all the State has, then he welcomes the States Notice of Supplemental Authority, as it bolsters his own case against the State of Illinois. He's right. The State, by submitting this case as an authority is implicitly acknowledging that the State has no permit and that there is in fact a complete ban on exercising a fundamental right. In the case of Palmer and Woollard, Alan Gura has shown how the Kalchalsky decision flies in the face of historical analysis as commanded by the Supreme Court in Heller and the 7th Circuit in Ezell. The Judge in Kalchalsky was very stupid. She let her emotions and bias override her judicial demeanor. We have seen this in some of the past decisions at district court, but never to this extent. |
September 16, 2011, 10:56 AM | #77 |
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Thanks for the clarification.
Sometimes very bad decisions by a court are the seeds for landmark rulings later on by a higher court. |
September 17, 2011, 10:06 AM | #78 |
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In Shepard v. Madigan (NRA case), we've had cross-motions for summary judgment hanging around and a motion for a preliminary injunction, just sitting out there. On 9/2, the defendants filed a Motion to Defer a Ruling on the Existing MSJ.
This motion says that the State needs time to effect Discovery... Since the entire suit "is a pure issue of law that requires no discovery", discovery is a stall tactic. Go back and see what happened in Benson and you'll see what Madigan is trying to do. Yesterday, the plaintiffs filed their Response to Motion to Defer Ruling. This is a 4 page brief, in which the plaintiffs NRA/Shepard is calling out the defendants stalling tactics. |
September 17, 2011, 10:39 AM | #79 |
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"And in their Motion to Defer Ruling on Summary Judgment, Defendants
expressly state that the Court may decide this Second Amendment question “without the use of extrinsic evidence.” Doc. No. 47 at ¶ 3 (emphasis added)." Duh ... Defendants expressly state the error in their Motion to Defer, i.e., the court may decide the issue of law without the use of extrinsic evidence of facts, but please give us some months (years?) to find that evidence the court doesn't need.
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September 17, 2011, 10:23 PM | #80 |
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I know this is unrelated, but to think that my tax dollars go to pay the salaries of such inept, incompetent bungling boobs...
I guess though that for me as a citizen desiring to fully exercise my 2nd Amendment Rights, it's to my advantage that the state is rife with ineffectual lawyers. |
September 21, 2011, 12:57 PM | #81 |
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What is the difference between Shepard v Madigan and Moore v Madigan?
Don't courts usually roll similar cases like these into one case? |
September 21, 2011, 01:23 PM | #82 |
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Other than some cosmetic differences?
Moore is a SAF/Gura case filed in the Central District and is being argued mostly on a point of law. Sheppard is a NRA case filed in the Southern District and has a more emotional argument. But because they are filed in different districts, they can not be combined. Now should a (bad) decision be reached in both cases at more or less the same time, then expect them to be combined at the Circuit level, on appeal. |
October 18, 2011, 07:33 AM | #83 |
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If Moore v Madigan overturns current IL state gun laws and the State legislature doesn't pass some kind of new regulations in a timely manner - what happens?
I mean could people in IL start carrying knowing that if we were arrested, the cases would be thrown out as unconstitutional? What would happen? |
October 18, 2011, 08:07 AM | #84 | |
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Quote:
I imagine at the very least you would have the County of Cook or City of Chicago(or both) pass some sort of ad-hoc ordnance. That aside, unrestricted CCW In Illinois, I have had dreams like that.... |
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October 18, 2011, 07:50 PM | #85 |
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what happens if Myerscough overturns current IL gun laws?
If Moore v Madigan overturns current IL state gun laws and the State legislature doesn't pass some kind of new regulations in a timely manner - what happens?
I mean could people in IL start carrying knowing that if we were arrested, the cases would be thrown out as unconstitutional? What would happen? |
October 18, 2011, 07:51 PM | #86 | |
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October 18, 2011, 10:45 PM | #87 |
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The pro-gun legislators tried to pass 148 and couldn't.
If Myerscough rules Illinois law unconstitutional. Then the anti-gun legislators will suddenly want to pass some kind of legislation. But at that point - all the pro-gun legislators have to do is say "screw you" And after a time - Illinois gun laws can not be enforced - so it reverts to constitutonal carry (I beleive). |
October 18, 2011, 10:47 PM | #88 |
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Isn't Illinois like one of the last hot spots in the country for the NRA to focus on? I mean - there's New Jersey, California, NYC... But wouldn't Illinois be one of the NRA's top priorities now?
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November 3, 2011, 01:40 PM | #89 | ||
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This was initially posted in the Current 2A Cases thread, but it bears repeating here.
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Can any of our attorneys proffer an explanation of what might be going on? |
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November 3, 2011, 02:40 PM | #90 |
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I looked at the docket and even consulted with another attorney here in our office (who used to clerk for a federal judge). I don't know what's going on, but the only other sealed documents in the docket are summons, which probably contain Madigan's home address. This thing appears to be a letter, but there's no indication of who sent the letter, or what personal information it might contain. If anyone wants to make a quick call to the court, the clerk should at least be able to provide some general information on what it is and why it's sealed.
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November 3, 2011, 05:22 PM | #91 |
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Maybe the State of Illinois decided to capitulate; that it's not worth fighting this anymore.....and maybe you will see a Republican Mayor of Chicago too but hey anything can happen.
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November 3, 2011, 05:23 PM | #92 |
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On first blush, the "letter" appears to have come from an outside source directed to the Court (Judge Myerscough). So whatever else this may be, it pertains only the SAF/Moore case and not the (almost identical) NRA/Sheppard case (nothing in that docket even remotely similar).
Which only brings up more questions.... |
November 3, 2011, 11:03 PM | #93 |
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I doubt the letter just contains isolated personal information such as an address or social security number. Typically, these are simply redacted before filing. The letter might not even be related to the merits of the case. It could, for example, contain a threat of some sort. I have no reason to believe it is. I'm just pointing out how speculative this can get.
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November 4, 2011, 08:48 AM | #94 |
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KyJim, you're right about all that. It is also ordinarily the responsibility of counsel to redact documents before submission. What I've suggested is speculative, but I'll see if I can find some time today to call the court and see what's going on. (No guarantees, though, as I have a very busy day in front of me.)
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November 4, 2011, 05:46 PM | #95 |
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Not that the judge was moving along quickly or anything but does this delay the ruling ?
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November 4, 2011, 10:51 PM | #96 | |
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November 5, 2011, 07:45 AM | #97 |
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Unfortunately, I did not get around to calling the court on Friday.
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November 8, 2011, 10:15 PM | #98 |
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On the Illinois carry forum people have speculated that someone wrote the judge directly.
Maybe it was someone who was a victim of gun violence and he or she felt the need to wax poetic on the matter. I hope it wasn't the opposite - a gun nut writing Judge Myerscough to "set her straight". |
November 9, 2011, 02:18 PM | #99 | |
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November 9, 2011, 04:50 PM | #100 |
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^ It's my understanding that sending a Judge ex-parte communications in reference to a case can be illegal (in some situations). I could be wrong.
But I'm not getting down on someone for exercising constitutional rights. If they want to file for their permit, and protest on the steps of the courthouse and hold up signs, and give a speech about why the judge should rule one way or the other - that's fine. I'm all for it. Yay First Amendment. But that isn't what happened. |
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