Poper
Member
New Hampshire resident crossed into Massachusetts w/out MA permit.
Charge is dismissed by judge!
National Right to Carry, anyone?
Nation wide carry that somehow ends up giving us federal rules and oversight?Antis would help this along.
Except the Drivers License Compact was arrived at by states deciding to get together and agreeing on it. Even so, that took a long time and went through some evolution.Eh, if nationwide reciprocity came about with no further federal involvement other than simply mandating that all states must recognize valid licenses issued by any other state -- as are driver licenses -- it could work. But we will still have those states that basically render concealed-carry licenses useless with restrictive laws and gun-free zones. You know who you are...
Except the Drivers License Compact was arrived at by states deciding to get together and agreeing on it. Even so, that took a long time and went through some evolution.
Section 1.
Full Faith and Credit shall be given in each State to the public Acts, Records, and judicial Proceedings of every other State. And the Congress may by general Laws prescribe the Manner in which such Acts, Records and Proceedings shall be proved, and the Effect thereof.
Actually, no. The compact is used by its member states (45) to share driver's license information and traffic violation records with other states for legal purposes. Under the compact, crimes committed by drivers in other states can be treated as if they were committed in their home states.
Driver licensing (and marriage licensing) falls under "full faith and credit."
Article IV, Section I of the U.S. Constitution:
Not really. They just redefined the terms "marry" and marriage.The Constitution didn't exactly mandate that marriage only be between opposite sexes, either. It required some further action.
This judge used the standard set by SCOTUS in the NYSRPA V Bruen decision. And that is the way it is supposed to be according to SCOTUS. A different decision would be overturned.Different judge, different set of circumstances, may have different result.
And while you sit in prison, waiting for the appeal to be decided…This judge used the standard set by SCOTUS in the NYSRPA V Bruen decision. And that is the way it is supposed to be according to SCOTUS. A different decision would be overturned.
And driving is a privilege, not a right.Except the Drivers License Compact was arrived at by states deciding to get together and agreeing on it. Even so, that took a long time and went through some evolution.
...Driver licensing (and marriage licensing) falls under "full faith and credit."
Article IV, Section I of the U.S. Constitution:
...In drafting the Full Faith and Credit Clause, the Framers of the Constitution were motivated by a desire to unify their new country while preserving the autonomy of the states. To that end, they sought to guarantee that judgments rendered by the courts of one state would not be ignored by the courts of other states. The Supreme Court reiterated the Framers' intent when it held that the Full Faith and Credit Clause precluded any further litigation of a question previously decided by an Illinois court in Milwaukee County v. M. E. White Co., 296 U.S. 268, 56 S. Ct. 229, 80 L. Ed. 220 (1935).....
...The Court first interpreted the clause in the 1813 case Mills v. Duryee [11 U.S. 481]. Currently, the Court has heard numerous cases involving the Full Faith and Credit Clause. The Court says that the clause can be used in three different ways. First, the clause can command a state to take jurisdiction, or control, over a claim that started in another state. Second, the clause can determine which state's law should be applied when a case involves more than one state. And lastly, the clause directs states to acknowledge and enforce court judgments from other states. ...
...The Supreme Court has invoked the clause to police state-court proceedings in three contexts: (1) determining when a state must take jurisdiction over claims that arise in other states; (2) limiting the application of local state law over another state's law in multistate disputes; and (3) recognizing and enforcing judgments rendered in sister-state courts....
...Article IV, Sec. 1, has had its principal operation in relation to judgments. Embraced within the relevant discussions are two principal classes of judgments. First, those in which the judgment involved was offered as a basis of proceedings for its own enforcement outside the State where rendered, as for example, when an action for debt is brought in the courts of State B on a judgment for money damages rendered in State A; second, those in which the judgment involved was offered, in conformance with the principle of res judicata, in defense in a new or collateral proceeding growing out of the same facts as the original suit, as for example, when a decree of divorce granted in State A is offered as barring a suit for divorce by the other party to the marriage in the courts of State B....