BATF'S AT IT AGAIN
By Neal Knox
WASHINGTON, D.C. (Nov. 1) -- The Oct. 25 BATF raid
on Jerry Michel's Specialty Firearms in Mesa, Ariz.,
sounded all too familiar -- as if we had turned
back the calendar a quarter-century, to the heyday
of BATF civil liberties abuses under President Jimmy
Carter.
"They were throwing vintage collector's items in mint
condition through the air and into a trashcan 10 feet
away," Jerry told Angel Shamaya, Director of
KeepAndBearArms.Com, who has interviewed Jerry and
other witnesses. One such gun was a Winchester 94
Antique, a 1960's era new-in-box commemorative, Jerry
told me.
"They took it out of the factory box and pitched it
into a plastic garbage can that had a bunch of my
other guns in it."
In the 1970's I heard the same kind of story, from
several dealers and collectors, including the guy who
saw his unfired commemoratives thrown onto a concrete
floor -- and got them back test-fired "to determine
if they had been used in a crime."
Jerry's story was a reminder of the importance of
next week's election, which will be over long before
most of you read this column. It will determine not
only who sets the legislative agenda, and who appoints
the Supreme Court, but it will determine whether, under
a President Gore, the BATF ratchets up its infringements
of the law and the Constitution, or a President George
W. Bush tightens the reins on the Federal gun police.
Jerry's entire stock of guns, plus his personal collection,
-- a total of 274 guns, about $300,000 worth -- were taken,
along with his records and about 3,000 Form 4473's.
The guns ranged from a .50 caliber rifle to a black powder
pistol. They included newly customized Ruger 10/22's (some
belonging to customers), consignment guns, a pair of Colt
Single Actions, military-look semi-autos and legal full
autos which Jerry had owned for 15 years.
The Colt Single Actions, with mother-of-pearl grips, were
among those taken from their boxes and casually tossed into
the garbage cans.
BATF found three Berettas with no serial numbers. Except
they were Brownings with serial numbers under the grips.
The raid started with Jerry being enticed out of the shop
-- which doubles as his residence -- just a few minutes
after he opened. He was grabbed and held by three of
some 30 state and Federal officers. The two guns that
he routinely carries in the shop were taken from him
(though they had to let one arm free so he could show
them how to get a Freedom Arms .22 out of its belt buckle
holster).
As stunned as he was, he broke out laughing when he saw
the swarm of officers. "You must really think I'm
dangerous," he told them.
The two guns he was carrying were the only ones he was
allowed to keep. Other personal guns -- including the
full autos and guns he had owned since he was 10 --
clearly marked as not for sale, were carted away.
What happened inside the store was videotaped by a
surveillance camera. But the BATF took that crucial
videotape.
Jerry was handcuffed and taken to Mesa Police HQ by a
BATF agent and a Phoenix policeman, read his Miranda
rights, and held for about three hours.
"Am I under arrest?," he said he asked.
"No," they replied.
"Can I leave?"
"No, you're being detained."
Other than being told his paperwork wasn't in order,
and that he had sold two guns to straw purchasers --
which Jerry angrily denied -- he has never been told
the reason for the raid and seizure, nor had any
charges been filed by Nov. 1.
When he was taken back to his store, he was
fingerprinted and had mug shots taken in front of
friends and gawkers.
When Angel called BATF he was told that Jerry did
not have a Mesa pawnbroker's license, a $100 ticket
supposedly required to sell used guns in the city
-- which would almost certainly violate the state's
preemption law. But Jerry doesn't pawn guns.
The Federal interest in Mesa's ordinance is an
obscure provision of the law requiring all licensed
dealers to be in compliance with local laws and
zoning restrictions.
Unlike some other recent much-hyped BATF raid targets,
Jerry has no criminal record, "not even a speeding
ticket," he told me.
In those other raids BATF used highly questionable
search warrants to justify fishing expeditions which
produced clearly illegal items. The "violation" of
Mesa's ordinance may be a way to rummage around for
something unlawful.
Jerry adamantly denies that he has anything illegal
or has knowingly committed any offense. I sure hope
he's right.
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ADDITIONAL INFORMATION FROM ANGEL SHAMAYA:
For clarity's sake, it was actually John Arbon of
CPHV.com who was told by ATF that the war against
Jerry Michel was waged for his not having a pawn
permit. When Neal, Jerry and I spoke on Nov 1, we
covered so much ground I can easily understand how
Neal arrived at that conclusion, no biggie.
In fact, Jerry and I went to the federal courthouse
in Phoenix today to pick up the search warrant affidavit.
(For those who don't know, a search warrant affidavit
is a written declaration made under oath before a notary
public or other authorized officer. In this case, it is
the Statement of Probable Cause that serves as the sworn
testimony given to the judge to entice him to sign the
gun confiscation order.)
The specific "law" the ATF used which relates to the
pawn permit is fascinating. According to the affidavit,
and I quote precisely, so poor punctuation is on ATF's
part:
The definition of a Secondhand Dealer, as defined in
MCC Code 5-7-1, is any person engaged in the business
of buying, selling trading, exchanging or otherwise
dealing in any of the following items; secondhand goods,
wares, merchandise, or articles; old stamp old coins and
money; and "precious items" as defined in ARS 44-1601.
This definition applies whether such business is the
principal or sole business carried on, managed or
conducted with a branch or department of some other
business.
Also according to the affidavit as part of the testimony
used to jack Mr. Michel up is a statement that Mr. Michel
does have, in good standing, "a valid City of Mesa
Transaction Privilege Sales Tax License, #00082967. The
affidavit states that he has a "regular" license, but not
a "secondhand dealer's license."
The villain.
Also relating to Mr. Knox's above, to my knowledge and
Jerry's, there were no "state" police involved insofar
as the State of Arizona is concerned, only City and
Federal. Neal offers an apology to all state officers
for the oversight. His draft was correct, but we covered
a lot of ground that day.
Jerry asked me to be brief in relaying the contents of
this affidavit, so I will. First, a bit of commentary
of the experience of acquiring the affidavit. I called
the courthouse to ask if the affidavit had been released
to the general public yet. I persisted through the usual
maze of recordings until, by accident, I reached a live
person. I then persisted until I got to the proper desk
in the room where court case records are held.
I said, "In reference to case number _____, will you
please confirm that it has been released so I can
justify a trip to the downtown area to pick it up?"
"I'm sorry. I can't tell you that over the phone. You
can come down here and I will check for you when you
get here."
"Ma'am, are you telling me that if I live two hours
away, I must invest 4 hours of driving just to get you
to walk over to that filing cabinet to let me know if
what I need is there?"
"Yes."
"Are you in the same room as the filing cabinet that
would contain the file for court case #_____?"
"Yes."
"Will you please go open the drawer and tell me if the
file is there so I don't have to waste 4 hours of my
life finding out it is not there?"
"No. You must come down here in person to see if it
has been released. Thank you. Click."
Your tax dollars at work.
So Jerry and I arrange to meet in a downtown location
and walk in together. He asked me to be a witness, and
I was eager to meet these fine people who'd tell me to
waste 4 hours of precious drive time to have the file
not be there. We left our hardware in our cars as the
federal building is metal-detectored.
It was there.
Here is, for now, the only thing Jerry's comfortable
with me saying: As we read the 15 page Statement of
Probable Cause, Jerry said at least 5 times, "That is
NOT TRUE!" He belabored several points at length,
and at even greater length before we left. There is
at least one and are possibly three or four things
that the ATF couldn't prove if they tried. And they
surely won't try on some of their "statements of
probable cause," because they'd lose. They used as
much inflammatory "evidence" as they could pull out
of a dark smelly place in order to get a judge to
sign a confiscation order, and that is that.
And they DO accuse him of making straw sales, as well,
(He contests every last one of them, vehemently.)
I will produce as much of this affidavit as Jerry
permits, as soon as he says I can do so. Though it's
now a matter of public record available to anyone,
I respect this man enough to do what he asks. I also
respect the opinions of Neal Knox, Larry Pratt and
David Hardy (former NRA lawyer who is still closely
allied with them), and they all suggested to not
pound on this too much until ATF files charges.
Also noteworthy: We asked the clerk to make two copies
of this document, which totals 19 pages including the
search warrant, the list of items to be stolen, and the
Statement of Probable Cause. 19 pages, times 2. For our
38 pages, we were handed a bill for $19.00 and told to
walk across the hall to pay it.
We did.
Finally, for now: the ATF used 5 undercover agents
and has been after Jerry since at least March 2,
2000. Certainly thousands and likely tens and maybe
even hundreds of thousands of dollars were used to
attack this man.
And all it would have taken was a couple of phone calls.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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