May 30, 2005
@ 01:43 PM
Categories: Three Rivers MI

May 30, 2005
@ 01:37 PM

Everything you wanted to know about Michigan's CPL but didn't know where to ask.


 
Categories: Bill of Rights

May 3, 2005
@ 08:58 PM

Michigan House Bill 4694

(Authorize concealed pistol for certain state employees): Introduced by Rep. Leon Drolet on April 28, 2005, to allow state workers with concealed pistol permits (CPLs) to carry a concealed firearm when doing off-site inspections on private property as part of their duties. Under current law, CPL holders doing inspections for the state (such as Family Independence Agency workers making home visits) are not permitted to carry while on duty.

Text on the bill can be read here.


 
Categories: Bill of Rights

May 1, 2005
@ 03:38 PM

For immediate release

Michigan residents with CCW permits now will no longer have to worry about their permit lapsing during renewal process and will be able to carry their spouse's registered weapon under legislation introduced by Rep. Rick Jones, R-Grand Ledge.

Under current law, if the board does not decide on renewal or rejection prior to the expiration of the CCW, the permit holder can no longer use the permit until renewed. Jones' measure would extend the existing permit until the board issues or denies the renewal.

"Renewal applicants are law-abiding people. If they were going to commit a crime, they wouldn't be applying for a renewal," Jones said. "This decreases the amount of bureaucratic red tape and worry placed on residents when renewing a concealed weapons permit."

Jones is also introducing legislation to allow permit holders to carry a weapon registered to their spouse.

"Rather than make a husband and wife buy another gun, we let the CCW holder carry their spouse's," Jones said. "This is just plain common sense and makes the CCW permit more user-friendly to the good law-abiding residents of Michigan".

Text and Analysis:
House Bill 4642 (2005)
House Bill 4643 (2005)

Link and text via the MCRGO.


 
Categories: Bill of Rights

April 30, 2005
@ 08:34 PM

Rep. Ronald Paul from Texas has introduced H.R. 1703 to restore the second amendment rights of all Americans. The text of the bill can be found here.


 
Categories: Bill of Rights

April 26, 2005
@ 02:49 PM

Some firearm legislation that is currently being considered in the Michigan House.

House Bill 4650 (Expand "strawman" firearms purchase ban): Introduced by Rep. LaMar Lemmons III on April 21, 2005, to explicitly define as a crime purchasing or attempting to purchase a firearm with the intent of furnishing the firearm to a minor or any other individual prohibited from having a firearm, and establish penalties. Note: "Straw-man" gun purchases in which the buyer of record is actually acquiring the firearm for another are already prohibited. This bill adds provisions regarding minors and ineligible buyers. Details and Comments here.

House Bill 4651 (Expand "strawman" firearms purchase): Introduced by Rep. LaMar Lemmons III on April 21, 2005, to provide sentencing guidelines for the crime defined by House Bill 4650 of purchasing a firearm with the intent of furnishing it to a minor. Details and Comments here.

House Bill 4653 (Require pistol sale registration): Introduced by Rep. LaMar Lemmons III on April 21, 2005, to require sellers to register pistol sales with the state police. Details and Comments here.

House Bill 4654 (Repeal "duty to retreat" in home self defense): Introduced by Rep. Tom Casperson on April 21, 2005, to establish in law that a person who uses deadly force for self defense in his or her home or contiguous private property need not first flee from a threatening attacker. Details and Comments here.

I am glad they are considering repealing the "duty to retreat." portion of the law. As far as I am concerned if someone is in my house to do harm to my family or me, my only duty is to protect my family. It is the attacker who has a duty. His duty is to get out of my house post haste, like his very life depended on it because it may.


 
Categories: Bill of Rights

April 21, 2005
@ 09:55 PM

Titled: Retooling CCW zones

Pack heat in your house of worship? Carry a concealed handgun to your child's teacher conference in a school or day-care center? What about a pistol in the hospital emergency room?

Since July 1, 2001, Michigan residents licensed to carry a concealed pistol have been prohibited from carrying it in these and several other pistol-free zones. Now, a Michigan lawmaker -- state Sen. Alan Cropsey, R-DeWitt -- is conducting Senate Judiciary Committee hearings into revisions of the CCW law. One proposed change is to ease up these no-carry zones, possibly dropping some of them.

Gun-control advocates argue that licensed handgun bearers would provide security that does not exist under the present law. And they have a point.

In recent weeks a trio of unrelated attacks killed three people in an Atlanta, Ga., courtroom on March 11; seven in a Milwaukee, Wis., church on March 12; and eight at Red Lake High School in Minnesota on March 21. Would some of those people be alive today if someone had been armed and able to disable or obstruct the gunmen?

It's an interesting question. The article does a pretty good job of just presenting the information without pushing the reader one way or another. I really wish more of the main stream media would present news stories in this way.

For the record I believe I should be able to openly carry my firearm with me where ever I go.

But thats just me.


 
Categories: Bill of Rights

April 19, 2005
@ 11:05 PM

If any of you reading this Blog are from the Three Rivers, Michigan area I invite you join the Liberty1st Forum. And yes even if you are not from the Three Rivers area you are still welcome. We talk about much that doesn't have anything to do with Three Rivers politics. Check it out here.

In the mean time here are some pictures of various places in Three Rivers you might enjoy.

Down Town


 
Categories: Three Rivers MI

April 19, 2005
@ 10:40 PM

Titled: Stop Unjust Forfeiture of Motor Vehicles According to Speak Out Michigan there are bills that would force the police to return a vehicle of a car if the owner is not convicted of a crime. I am not sure how long they will keep this particular text up so I am going to post the whole thing. Afterword I will post a link to the bill's text.

Michigan law allows the police to confiscate a motor vehicle if they suspect that anyone used the vehicle for an illegal purpose. It doesn't matter whether the owner gave consent. It doesn't even matter whether someone stole the vehicle.

For example, if the police claim that they found any marijuana in your car, they can seize your car. How the marijuana got there doesn't matter. Maybe it fell out of the pocket of an auto mechanic, valet parking attendant, or auto thief. Or maybe the wind blew a miniscule amount of marijuana through an open window. The police can confiscate your car.

Although the government sometimes is required, and often is willing, to return the vehicle to an innocent owner, the owner must pay a large fee. In Wayne County the fee is $900.

Senate Bills 138-143 will help protect innocent owners from unjust forfeiture. These bills will require the government to return a motor vehicle, without any fee, if (A) the owner is not charged with a crime, civil infraction, or civil violation, or (B) the owner is charged with, but found not guilty of, a crime, civil infraction, or civil violation.

Please ask your state senator and state representative to support Senate Bills 138-143.

SpeakOutMichigan provides an easy way to send e-mail to them. It provides a prewritten letter, to which you can add personal comments. Type in your zip code and SpeakOutMichigan will identify your state legislators and send them the letter. It takes only a minute or two.

SpeakOutMichigan also provides an easy way to send e-mail to your friends, so that they can contact their state legislators. Again there is a prewritten letter.

Help protect yourself and other innocent owners from unjust forfeiture.

Support Senate Bills 138-143.

Here is the text of the bill(s).


 
Categories: Bill of Rights

April 18, 2005
@ 10:17 PM

Did you know there was a Museum of Left Wing Lunacy? Me neither. However we do now.

Also there is a Conservative Brotherhood, which bills themselves as a group of African American writers whose politics are on the right hand side of the political spectrum. Expanding the dialog beyond traditional boundaries, they seek to contribute to a greater understanding of African Americans and America itself through advocacy and commentary.

I can't remember how I found the first link but I found the second one via The Black Informant.


 
Categories: Blogs and Stuff