Armed Citizen!

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oldFred

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Armed Citizen

Around 5:15 p.m. two men knocked on the door of a home in Gwinnett County, Ga. The homeowner looked to see who was at the door, but when he didn’t recognize the men, he retrieved his gun. When the two men received no answer to their knocking, they broke into the home. Once the criminals were inside, the homeowner fired at them, killing one, while the other fled.

Police were unable to locate the suspect who fled the scene. The homeowner has not been charged in the incident. (NBC 11Alive, Atlanta, Ga. 02/27/09)

:fire: Amen to ya brother...

From the NRA website
 
Last edited:
The Atlanta Journal Constitution, Atlanta, Ga. 01/15/09
State: GA
American Rifleman Issue: 1/20/2009
A man and his girlfriend were heading home from a night of dancing in Atlanta, Ga. The couple had just gotten inside their vehicle, when a stranger, identified as 29 year-old Jamarcus Usher, approached them. The man in the vehicle opened the glove box and retrieved his handgun. As the man asked Usher what he wanted, Usher responded by making a move for his waistband. The man in the vehicle swung open the door, hitting Usher. After being knocked back, Usher pulled his gun and raised it towards the man. But the armed citizen was too quick for the armed robber. The man fired, striking Usher multiple times, before Usher could fire a single shot. Usher died at the scene. Atlanta Police Detective Michael Willis quoted the armed citizen as stating that “he fired until the guy was no longer a threat”. Detective Willis also noted that he was impressed with the man’s accuracy.
 
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Thursday, March 05, 2009

A man detained after entering a MARTA station wearing a holstered firearm sued the transit agency Thursday, accusing it of illegal search and seizure.

The federal lawsuit was filed on behalf of Christopher Raissi and the gun-rights group, GeorgiaCarry.org.

Raissi was detained by MARTA police as he entered the Avondale station Oct. 14 with his firearm, the lawsuit said. The handgun was inside Raissi’s T-shirt and must have been exposed when he dropped his MARTA fare card and bent down to pick it up, said his lawyer John Monroe.

MARTA officers surrounded Raissi, seized the weapon and demanded to know why he was carrying a gun, the suit said.

Raissi showed the officers his Georgia firearms license and driver’s license and, at their request, gave them his Social Security number. He was escorted to another building, held about 30 minutes and released with his gun.

The officers had no probable cause or reasonable suspicion Raissi was committing, or about to commit a crime, the suit said. It noted the Georgia Legislature last year passed House Bill 89, which decriminalized the carrying of firearms on public transit.

MARTA does not comment on pending litigation, spokeswoman Cara Hodgson said.

Last summer, MARTA notified its customers about the new law. It also said the law requires anyone carrying a firearm on public transit to have a valid firearms license. MARTA police will strictly enforce all provisions of the law, the transit agency said.
 
Democrats show little appetite for gun control
By JIM ABRAMS
Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON — The National Rifle Association warned in a campaign ad that if Barack Obama were elected president he would try to take away hunters' guns and ammo. But with pro-gun Democrats a powerful force in Congress, it's already pretty clear there will be no messing with Americans' right to bear arms.

Twenty-two Democrats, including Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada, joined Republicans last week in a Senate vote to negate the District of Columbia's tough gun registration requirements and overturn its ban on rapid-fire semiautomatic weapons. More than 80 House Democrats voted for a similar measure last year.

"It was a pleasant surprise, but it's not a huge surprise that elected officials are listening to their constituents," said Chris W. Cox, the NRA's chief lobbyist.

It's not certain that the gun measure, attached to a bill on D.C. voting rights, will be a part of the final version of that bill. House plans to take up the voting rights bill this week were postponed Tuesday as Democratic leaders struggled over how to handle the gun issue.

But with six of 11 Democratic Senate freshmen — from pro-gun states such as Alaska, Colorado, New Mexico and Virginia — voting for the proposal last week, it was a clear sign of where Congress is heading on gun issues.

"There has been a shift in thinking among Democrats in the last six to eight years, away from old ideas about gun control and limiting access to guns and toward ideas about how you actually reduce gun crime," said Matt Bennett of Third Way, a group of moderate Democrats active on gun control issues.

That shift has been frustrating for lawmakers who have long decried the NRA's ability to block gun control legislation.

"We do not debate guns around here much anymore," said the Senate's no. 2 Democrat, Dick Durbin of Illinois, during debate on the D.C. gun amendment. "Basically, we reached a point where there are not many people who will stick their political necks out to vote for sensible gun control — too big a hassle."

A case in point is new Democrat Kirsten Gillibrand, a steadfast gun rights advocate when she represented a pro-gun, Republican-leaning district in upstate New York. Her appointment to succeed Hillary Clinton as New York's junior senator drew protests from gun-control Democrats, but after she voted against the D.C. gun amendment Republicans accused her of abandoning her principles for political expediency.

Gillibrand's spokesman, Matt Canter, said the senator supports Second Amendment rights. But she also believes that local governments have the right to put legitimate limits on firearms and that law enforcement must have the tools to protect the public from gun violence, he said.

A major turning point came last June, when the Supreme Court, in a 5-4 vote overturning D.C.'s ban on handgun possession, confirmed that the Second Amendment gives private citizens the right to bear arms.

Gun control advocates were consoled that the decision also specifies that gun rights are not open-ended, that government can impose some restrictions in the public interest.

With the court ruling, the argument that gun control will lead to gun bans no longer applies, said Paul Helmke, president of the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence. "The slippery slope doesn't go anywhere anymore, and I think people realize that."

For the time being, any gun-related legislation will be incremental. Helmke's group is urging the Obama administration to overturn a rule imposed in the last days of the Bush administration allowing people to carry concealed, loaded weapons in most national parks.

There will also be a push to repeal the so-called Tiahrt amendment, named after Rep. Todd Tiahrt, R-Kan., that limits the authority of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives to disclose gun-trace data to the public and requires that certain records submitted to the National Instant Criminal Background Check System be destroyed after 24 hours.

Both the Third Way's Bennett and Helmke said it may take another major gun crime, like the shootings at Columbine High School or Virginia Tech, to get Congress to act on more ambitious gun control initiatives.

Those include overturning a law enacted in 2005 that denies gun crime victims the right to sue firearms manufacturers and dealers for damages.

Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., said she plans to push legislation to reinstate a federal ban on some assault weapons that became law during the Clinton administration in 1994 but expired under the Bush administration in 2004. Another long-term goal is requiring that all gun shows conduct background checks before selling firearms.

The NRA's Cox said his group is gearing up to fight a new assault weapons ban, noting that Obama supports one and that Attorney General Eric Holder recently linked the proliferation of military-style weapons to the violence along the Mexican border. "It's laughable if it wasn't so serious to suggest that diminishing the Second Amendment will positively impact the situation down in Mexico," Cox said.

But he said the NRA is also prepared to work with Democrats, as it did in 2007 in the wake of the Virginia Tech shootings, to pass legislation making it easier to flag prospective gun buyers with a history of mental problems.
 
Ga. senators take on D.C. guns

By Bob Keefe

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Thursday, February 26, 2009

Washington —- An economic meltdown, global warming, two wars and a new administration may be important stuff, but for Georgia’s congressional delegation, so is the right to have a gun.

Republican Sens. Saxby Chambliss and Johnny Isakson on Wednesday co-sponsored legislation that would give residents of the District of Columbia the right to possess handguns for the first time in more than 30 years.

The Washington, D.C., city council outlawed pistols, automatic weapons and high-capacity semiautomatic firearms in 1976 as a way to stem the city’s soaring gun violence. The U.S. Supreme Court overturned the ban last year, but the city council is looking at ways to rewrite its local laws to keep restrictions on such guns.

Isakson and Chambliss’ legislation is attached to a bill that would give the district its first voting seat in the House. The Senate passed the voting bill Tuesday.

The right to have a pistol in Washington is simply a basic constitutional right, Chambliss said.

“Only a government that does not trust its citizens would refuse them the right to bear arms,” Chambliss said in a statement. “The right of Americans in every part of the country to own guns, whether for sport or protection, is clearly defined in the Constitution and must not be compromised.”

Meanwhile, Rep. Paul Broun, an Athens Republican, announced Wednesday he was teaming up with Rep. Dan Boren (D-Okla.) to establish a Second Amendment Task Force. The task force is necessary to “educate elected officials and the public on the necessity of the Second Amendment to maintaining our freedom and liberty,” Broun said in a statement.

Broun’s Washington office is known for the stuffed animals he bagged on safaris.
 
"We do not debate guns around here much anymore," said the Senate's no. 2 Democrat, Dick Durbin of Illinois, during debate on the D.C. gun amendment. "Basically, we reached a point where there are not many people who will stick their political necks out to vote for sensible gun control — too big a hassle."

That is encouraging.


For the time being, any gun-related legislation will be incremental. Helmke's group is urging the Obama administration to overturn a rule imposed in the last days of the Bush administration allowing people to carry concealed, loaded weapons in most national parks.

That isn't.


Both the Third Way's Bennett and Helmke said it may take another major gun crime, like the shootings at Columbine High School or Virginia Tech, to get Congress to act on more ambitious gun control initiatives.

And it is downright disgusting to hear they will continue promoting "gun free zones" - and then use any carnage that occurs there as a catylist for more gun bans.
 
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