Related question: What are known instances of civilians using firearms to
defend themselves against off-duty cop violence and how are these cases
typically adjudicated (if there is any typical possible)? I have to
imaging the burden of proof shifts dramatically when the person receiving a
bullet
_
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Joseph E. Olson
Sent: Sunday, March 25, 2007 6:20 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Ucla. Edu
Subject: Re: To Serve and Protect
No. At my University sex with a student is a capital offense.
I know of three instances
Folks: Just a reminder that the focus of this list is the law
and policy of firearms regulation, discussed on a level helpful to
people doing academic research in the field. General questions of
police misconduct are not, it seems to me, squarely on-topic (though I
realize that they're
On Mar 26, 2007, at 10:14 AM, Guy Smith wrote:
Related question: What are known instances of civilians using
firearms to
defend themselves against off-duty cop violence and how are these
cases
typically adjudicated (if there is any typical possible)? I have to
imaging the burden of proof
They get away with it because the police brass let them.
It's a mild form of political corruption. Which the politicians enjoy.
Let's see if SENATOR Webb speaks out against it. ;-)
Autumn Rose Press [EMAIL PROTECTED] 03/26/07 5:03 PM
Is this accurate? Is there legislation that allows them
Until the Clinton administration any Congressperson could get a deputy US
Marshal letter for the asking. I vaguely remember that being exposed in the
press and they stopped issuing them. That would indicate that there is no
direct statutory authority. But I'm not good enough at Westlaw to
Autumn Rose Press quotes from the Drudge Report:
... Thompson was booked for carrying a pistol without a license
(CPWL) and
for possessing unregistered ammunition. ...
^^
What is registered ammunition? And how does one recognize it?
--
--henry