Re: DC Rejects Handgun Application
Posted: Fri Jul 18, 2008 6:09 pm
Shouldn't they be held in contempt of court, jailed and removed from power?
The focal point for Texas firearms information and discussions
https://www.texaschlforum.com/
Charles L. Cotton wrote:Actually, it was non-attorney elected officials of D.C. that trampled constitutional rights and lawyers that restored them.OverEasy wrote:It's not the guns that are dangerous, it's the lawyers! (sorry Chas.)
Chas.
I tried above, unsuccessfully, to explain that nobody in the DC government has done anything (in this case failed to obey a court order) which opens them up to being held in contempt of court -- yet. We should not expect that to happen until a court order is disobeyed.Molon_labe wrote:Shouldn't they be held in contempt of court, jailed and removed from power?
That is an interesting thought...But the Congress is only transient in nature within the district...And the only reason they are there is because they are elected to represent us in that district...Its like being in the military, you may be stationed somewhere as a part of your duty, but you still have a "home of record" that trumps most situations, not all of them, but some...57Coastie wrote:There is another possible player, here, of course, and that is the U. S. Congress, the real governor of DC, and they haven't been heard from yet. Given the way our Constitution sets out the government of DC in Art. 1, Sec. 8, is not the Congress equally derelict here as is the DC Council? Just an idle thought.
IANAL, but Ah kin read purty good.57Coastie wrote:With respect, in Heller the Supreme Court did not "order" the District of Columbia to register Mr. Hellers handgun(s). This may be considered nit-picking, but it is a very important nit, if we hope to really understand what has happened, and what is likely to happen next, in the judicial system.Frost wrote: I can not imagine the arrogance needed to refuse to comply with an order of the Supreme Court of the United States of America.
KB,KBCraig wrote:IANAL, but Ah kin read purty good.57Coastie wrote:With respect, in Heller the Supreme Court did not "order" the District of Columbia to register Mr. Hellers handgun(s). This may be considered nit-picking, but it is a very important nit, if we hope to really understand what has happened, and what is likely to happen next, in the judicial system.Frost wrote: I can not imagine the arrogance needed to refuse to comply with an order of the Supreme Court of the United States of America.
Explain for me, please, your statement in light of the Court's holding (p.64):
In sum, we hold that the District’s ban on handgun
possession in the home violates the Second Amendment,
as does its prohibition against rendering any lawful fire-
arm in the home operable for the purpose of immediate
self-defense. Assuming that Heller is not disqualified
from the exercise of Second Amendment rights, the Dis-
trict must permit him to register his handgun and must
issue him a license to carry it in the home.
....
We affirm the judgment of the Court of Appeals.
It is so ordered.
It should also be noted here, TX, that 55 Senators and 250 Representatives, a bi-partisan group of legislators, representing more than half of the U.S. Congress, signed on to an amicus curiae brief in the Heller case in favor of Mr. Heller. If these guys put their votes where their mouths are this issue might get settled rather quickly.TX_shooter wrote:The House has already spoken on this matter. It never made it to the senate floor for a vote though.
http://usgovinfo.about.com/od/guncontrol/a/dcguns.htm
The only firearm in issue before the Supreme Court was Mr. Heller's 9-shot revolver, and it appears that DC is moving ahead, albeit slowly, to register that revolver and to issue him a license to carry it in his home. While I certainly do not know all the details, at the moment DC appears to be complying with the literal command of the Court's judgment, and most knowledgeable commentators expect Mr. Heller to receive his registration and license for that revolver in due course.
The Court took care, you will note in your quotation, that it is entirely possible, while perhaps unlikely, that Mr. Heller might, for example, be found for the first time, rightly or wrongly, to have been convicted of a violent felony, and, if so, DC may even now deny him his registration and license. How the Court's decision applies to any other firearms, owned or possessed by any other individual, or even Mr. Heller himself (for example, his semiautomatic handgun) remains to be seen, and, given DC's apparent intent to stall, those cases will require other lawsuits to be filed. If such lawsuits follow Mr. Heller's (or if he succeeds in getting the issue of his semiautomatic before the DC authorities without risking going to jail) and registration and licensing are denied, the applicant may bring a lawsuit in the District Court of the District of Columbia, as Mr. Heller did. If the District Court rules in favor of the applicant that court will order DC to issue the registration and license; DC can appeal to the U. S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit; and the "loser" in the Circuit Court can appeal to the Supreme Court; and here we go again.
It is my guess, and just a guess, that DC will issue Mr. Heller his registration and license, but only for his 9-shot revolver, and that DC will continue to put roadblocks in the way of further applications until the District Court either slaps DC good or the Circuit Court or the Supreme Court orders that DC be slapped. As our knowledgeable mentor and moderator, Chas., has suggested, this is the point where I would think sanctions might come into play and, hopefully, DC would undertake to change its laws/regulations in such a way that it will start going down the path laid out by the Supreme Court in its opinion.
1. The Court's one command appears to be on the way to being obeyed. DC has neither failed to comply with that one command (with respect, again, only to Mr. Heller's revolver) nor has it yet shown credible evidence that it may not comply with that command.flintknapper wrote:So basically, the Court is going to "count to ten" before requiring it's unruly child (D.C.) to comply with a plain and simple command.
Assuring the District of Columbia and the rest of the country, that this particular court will not see another 2nd Amendment case come before them again with this particular line up...57Coastie wrote:The Court, in Heller, went way beyond what it actually decided about Mr. Heller's revolver, and gave us some hints about how it would likely rule with respect to some other issues if they were to come before them.
I think there is indeed something we down here in Texas can do, and this was reinforced just a few moments ago when I received one of the recurring NRA heads-up emails, which I am sure is true for many of you, which contains the following paragraph:stevie_d_64 wrote:The problem with us, is that we are down here in Texas, and those folks up in D.C., that feel like we do about all of this, are too few, and possibly unwilling to press the issue...At this particular time...
Unless I am mistaken, DC continues to require that long-rifles and shotguns be rendered inoperable. How do we reconcile that with this:57Coastie wrote:1. The Court's one command appears to be on the way to being obeyed. DC has neither failed to comply with that one command (with respect, again, only to Mr. Heller's revolver) nor has it yet shown credible evidence that it may not comply with that command.flintknapper wrote:So basically, the Court is going to "count to ten" before requiring it's unruly child (D.C.) to comply with a plain and simple command.
In sum, we hold that the District’s ban on handgun
possession in the home violates the Second Amendment,
as does its prohibition against rendering any lawful fire-
arm in the home operable for the purpose of immediate
self-defense. Assuming that Heller is not disqualified
from the exercise of Second Amendment rights, the Dis-
trict must permit him to register his handgun and must
issue him a license to carry it in the home.
....
We affirm the judgment of the Court of Appeals.
It is so ordered.
2. The DC local goverrnment is not the child of the Supreme Court -- it is the child of the U. S. Congress. The U. S. Congress could abolish the current DC local government in its totality overnight and take on the function to itself, as provided in the Constitution, rather than delegating it to its current power structure. I wonder how many readers think that would improve things in general?
It is time that I back out of this, as my continued efforts to show that nobody has been shown to disobey any court order are fruitless.Liberty wrote:I'm not a lawyer, but it seems to me. If I don't follow a court order, They will send me to jail. Why isn't the Chief of police and the city council arrested and allowed to spend some time with KB and associates. These guys are in contempt of the highest court of the land, and they are free to walk the streets. Tossing these treasonous sons of dogs into jail would waken the rest of the politicians up to the concepts of the Bill of Rights.