Katrina victims still haven't got their guns back.

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jsalcedo

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http://www.shreveporttimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20051117/NEWS01/511170315/1002/NEWS



Lawmaker pushes to have storm victims' guns returned
November 17, 2005
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By Dan Turner
dturnergannett.com

BATON ROUGE -- Louisiana needs to apply pressure to get law enforcement agencies to return firearms confiscated from hurricane victims, says state Rep. Steve Scalise, R-Metairie.

Citing a 36-year-old state law that conflicts with the Louisiana and U.S. constitutions, law officers seized weapons from hurricane victims, particularly in the New Orleans area. Although a court has ordered the return of the weapons, some people haven't gotten back their guns, Scalise said Wednesday.


"I don't think it's good policy that we keep this on the books, but the session did not allow us to address that," he told the House Criminal Justice Committee.

"I brought a resolution to at least bring it to people's attention that this is something we want to state, as a matter of public policy, that we don't agree with that law. We also want to repeal that law. And I (will) have a bill to (do) that in the next special session or, at the latest, in March."

Gun Owners of America's Web site, gunowners.org, includes video of out-of-state police on temporary assignment in Louisiana kicking down a homeowner's door, confiscating weapons and taking a woman from the house even though she had not broken the law, Scalise said. The officers may have been looking for trapped hurricane victims, he said, but the seizure of the weapons was among the constitutional problems created in that situation.

"Do you think they were just overreacting?" state Rep. Jane Smith, R-Bossier City, said.

"Probably," Scalise said.

Committee members agree with Scalise on the need to change the law but are concerned about possibly hampering law enforcement if and when similar situations arise.

Recalling televised images of people looting after Hurricane Katrina, committee members said they want to ensure police have the authority needed to maintain control.

"What went on in the New Orleans area during Katrina went past all-out gang war," committee Chairman and state Rep. Danny Martini, R-Metairie, said.

The committee unanimously approved Scalise's resolution.
 
I'm glad that has happened, and I hope the pressure is kept up in the legislature. This whole affair does not need to just be forgotten as time passes. The lawsuit will address some aspects of the problem but it is good to see legislative notice too.

lpl/nc
 
Committee members agree with Scalise on the need to change the law but are concerned about possibly hampering law enforcement if and when similar situations arise.

They had darn well better "hamper law enforcement" if the officers in question are invading people's homes without warrant and stealing their firearms...
 
Invasions

benEzra said:
They had darn well better "hamper law enforcement" if the officers in question are invading people's homes without warrant and stealing their firearms...

Ahhh...this is one of the more disquieting issues in the aftermath of Katrina. Saw several video clips and newspaper photos of heavily-armed police using pry-bars and other entry tools to batter down the front doors of what appeared to be undamaged homes (no visible high-water mark on the house, nor debris on the porch) to search for 'victims'. In each case, the formerly secure dwelling was left wide open....:fire:
 
Agreed. Once the vanished into the black hole of guberment, it's all over. They have either been destroyed (right, and I believe in the Easter Bunny) or sold on the black market.
:cuss:
 
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