What any father would do


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2dogs
January 25, 2003, 11:28 AM
www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=30683

What any father would do

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Posted: January 25, 2003
1:00 a.m. Eastern


By Paul Walfield
© 2003 WorldNetDaily.com


Ronald Dixon has two children, two jobs and a desire to keep all of them. On the night of Dec. 14, 2002, he awoke to find a stranger walking in the hall outside his bedroom. After calling 911, Mr. Dixon saw the man enter his 2-year-old son's room and he knew he could not wait for the police. He picked up his 9mm. pistol and went to protect his children.

When he entered his son's bedroom and confronted the burglar, the thief charged Mr. Dixon who then fired his 9mm. twice. The burglar was hit and fled down the stairs and out of the Dixon home. When the police arrived, they arrested the wounded career burglar, and they also arrested Mr. Dixon.

Mr. Dixon's home you see is in Brooklyn, N.Y., and he needs to be an example to everyone. Regardless of the circumstances, anyone who possesses an unregistered handgun must face jail time in New York. Accordingly, his possession of the unregistered 9mm. is a misdemeanor, and he now faces up to one year in prison. Brooklyn had nearly 500 shootings last year, and District Attorney Charles Hynes cannot condone illegal firearms.

It does not matter that Mr. Dixon purchased the handgun legally in Florida, or that he was in the process of registering it in Brooklyn. It doesn't matter that Mr. Dixon did what any reasonable person would have done under the circumstances. According to the District Attorney, he must spend time in jail for his "crime."

Andrew Friedman, who is Ronald Dixon's attorney, turned down a plea bargain offered by the DA in which his client would spend four weekends in prison. According to the article in the New York Daily News, Dixon holds two jobs, and weekends in jail would certainly cause the loss of one of them.

The Second Amendment is a short concise recitation of an American's right to possess a firearm. The fact that that right "shall not be infringed," has never hampered legislatures from chipping away at it in a consistent and methodical manner. Unlike any other amendment to the Constitution, the Second, is viewed by the left as fair game. Of course, to do that they need to misinterpret it.

The left has determined that the Second Amendment should only apply to "a well regulated militia" and not to individuals. By doing so, individual Americans have no right to a gun and therefore are subject to any restrictions or bans the government decides upon. Gun ownership then becomes a privilege and not a right under the Constitution.

The ACLU takes the position that the Second Amendment only refers to the state militia. However, if our forefathers intended it to mean only that, why did they add the phrase, "right of the people to keep and bear arms"?

Additionally, even if we assume for the sake of argument that the Second Amendment refers to a "militia," what did that mean to the framers of the Bill of Rights? Militia, as was known in the 18th century, was described by George Mason, who along with Patrick Henry opposed the Constitution without a Bill of Rights, as "the whole people." In 1787, the Federal Farmer, published in New York in the Poughkeepsie Country Journal, referred to the militia as in fact "the people themselves."

Even in the infamous Supreme Court case of United States vs. Miller decided in 1939, Justice McReynolds in describing the purpose of the Second Amendment determined that the debates, history, and writings at the time of its creation show plainly that militia meant, "all males physically capable of acting in concert for the common defense."

Some may argue that times have changed and that the need for individuals to own guns has been made obsolete by the creation of modern police forces. However, that argument would remain hollow for a father in the middle of the night watching a criminal enter his child's bedroom.



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Paul Walfield is a freelance writer and member of the State Bar of California.

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El Tejon
January 25, 2003, 11:34 AM
Oh, make him stop! The Second Amendment has nothing to do with defending home and hearth from crime. Self-defense/defense of others is separate and distinct from the Second Amendment.

Double Naught Spy
January 25, 2003, 12:36 PM
Legally purchased in Florida. Illegally imported into New York. Was "in the process" of getting the gun registered...whatever that means, but he apparently did know he possessed an illegal weapon, then he understood that the use of that weapon would cause him some problems and he did what he did knowing the rammifications. It sucks to be him.

4v50 Gary
January 25, 2003, 05:17 PM
He broke the letter of the law, not the spirit of the law. The DA can't distinguish between the two.

GregoryTech
January 25, 2003, 05:33 PM
Isn't there a "law of competing harms" or some such thing?

King
January 25, 2003, 07:55 PM
We'll if they take Mr Dixon to a jury trial for his misdemeanor, he'll hopefully get off. Letter or the law and spirit of the law not withstanding, what reasonable persons would convict this guy.

What do they call that? Jury Nullification?

Glad I don't live there.

Standing Wolf
January 25, 2003, 09:19 PM
You couldn't pay me to live in New York.

Blackhawk
January 26, 2003, 12:59 AM
A pox on the DA. :fire:

standingbear
January 26, 2003, 07:55 AM
exactly,what any loving father woiuld do.seems he had a choice,worry about going to jail on a gun charge or taking out the trash.he made the RIGHT choice here.appatantly,he knew it could happen to him and was willing to take a stand.hes got guts.he deserves not to be jailed,but rather recognized for saving the life of his son(putting his sons' wellfare above his own) as well as preventing future breakins(homicides) by the trash that broke in.top it off,he saved the taxpayers a bunch of money.by my accounts,he is a HERO.

BogBabe
January 26, 2003, 08:36 AM
This is a prime example of why such licensing and registration needs to be abolished. These laws do nothing but make criminals out of law-abiding citizens.

This man did nothing wrong. Yes, he "broke the law" by not having registered his gun yet, but I repeat: He did nothing wrong.

Laws that make criminals out of people who did nothing wrong are evil and should be abolished at once.

Tamara
January 26, 2003, 08:43 AM
Oh, make him stop! The Second Amendment has nothing to do with defending home and hearth from crime. Self-defense/defense of others is separate and distinct from the Second Amendment.

Yes, but the Second Amendment does enumerate his right to bear arms. What he does with those arms between repelling British invasions and overthrowing corrupt tyrannies is, indeed, separate and distinct.

Flatfender
January 26, 2003, 02:31 PM
Could be worse for him. He could be in prison in England for being a "Danger to Burglars".:rolleyes:

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