Re: Continuing vitality IN LAW of the unorganized militia

2009-11-20 Thread Philip F. Lee
19, 2009 1:12 PM To: List Firearms Reg Cc: postHeller Subject: Continuing vitality IN LAW of the unorganized militia Thanks. *** Professor Joseph Olson, J.D., LL.M. o- 651-523-2142 Hamline

Continuing vitality IN LAW of the unorganized militia

2009-11-19 Thread Joseph E. Olson
I've got 10 USC 311(b)(2). There are still STATE militias (defense forces?) in Alaska, California, Ohio I believe. Also didn't the Governor of Deleware call out his unorganized militia to patrol seacoast beaches in WWII? ANYONE HAVE CITATIONS??? Need ASAP, of course. Thanks.

Re: Continuing vitality IN LAW of the unorganized militia

2009-11-19 Thread Charles Curley
On Thu, 19 Nov 2009 12:12:04 -0600 Joseph E. Olson jol...@gw.hamline.edu wrote: I've got 10 USC 311(b)(2). There are still STATE militias (defense forces?) in Alaska, California, Ohio I believe. I seem to recall that most states have a statutory definition of the militia, but currently no

Re: Continuing vitality IN LAW of the unorganized militia

2009-11-19 Thread Charles Curley
On Thu, 19 Nov 2009 11:48:06 -0700 Charles Curley charlescur...@charlescurley.com wrote: Also, the US Army put together something called the Alaska Territorial Guard. They were guides and other folk familiar with Alaska, and provide their own kit, including weapons.

Re: Continuing vitality IN LAW of the unorganized militia

2009-11-19 Thread jon . roland
Texas has a State Guard, considered part of the state militia, with a commander appointed by the governor, but a few years ago the people of Texas removed the power of the governor to command militia himself. Various statutes leave command by default of county militia to the sheriffs, but does not

RE: Continuing vitality IN LAW of the unorganized militia

2009-11-19 Thread Raymond Kessler
: Continuing vitality IN LAW of the unorganized militia Texas has a State Guard, considered part of the state militia, with a commander appointed by the governor, but a few years ago the people of Texas removed the power of the governor to command militia himself. Various statutes leave command by default