No.If an officer dies fighting for gun confiscation is it still an innocent life?
No.If an officer dies fighting for gun confiscation is it still an innocent life?
I'm not aware of the dude in MD that got killed last year having done absolutely anything that would have warranted confiscation. Please correct me if I'm wrong. - On the last day of his life, all he did was defend what was his.These reported cases don't help us.
Until someone who isn't a nutcase gets their rights infringed the movement will gain momentum.
If someone makes the charge and you answer the door and try to shoot it out with the police who are investigating aren't you proving that the call was justified?I'm not aware of the dude in MD that got killed last year having done absolutely anything that would have warranted confiscation. Please correct me if I'm wrong. - On the last day of his life, all he did was defend what was his.
Sent from my Moto G (5) Plus using Tapatalk
I'm not aware of the dude in MD that got killed last year having done absolutely anything that would have warranted confiscation. Please correct me if I'm wrong. - On the last day of his life, all he did was defend what was his.
Sent from my Moto G (5) Plus using Tapatalk
If someone makes the charge and you answer the door and try to shoot it out with the police who are investigating aren't you proving that the call was justified?
If someone makes the charge and you answer the door and try to shoot it out with the police who are investigating aren't you proving that the call was justified?
Paul Harvey just phoned with the rest of the story.
was awakened Monday morning at 5:17 a.m. when two officers from Anne Arundel County knocked on his door. A law-abiding gun owner, Willis answered the door “with a gun in his hand,” according to a police department spokesman. They were there to serve him with an “extreme risk protective order” and remove his legally owned firearms.
According to the spokesman, Willis put his firearm down to read the ERPO but then, apparently recognizing that it wasn’t a legal search warrant issued by a judge in accordance with protections guaranteed to him by the Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, but instead was issued by a local judge under Maryland’s newly minted “red flag” law, he retrieved his firearm.
The spokesman said that Willis “became irate.” In the melee that followed, one of the firearms carried either by one of the officers or by Willis went off. One of the officers then pulled his own sidearm and shot Willis dead.
In addition to the same article reference:
So successful have the unconstitutional raids been in Anne Arundel County that the department is building a new storage facility specifically to accommodate all the firearms they are expected to confiscate under the new law.
https://www.thenewamerican.com/usne...wner-killed-during-red-flag-confiscation-raid
F W I W
What was illegal about it? and what were his qualifications to determine that at the scene?
Keeping in mind we're speaking of a US Citizen that was 61 years old and presumably properly educated in Civics, unlike others which is another conversation.No, it was a legal order and he decided to gun it out instead of fight it out in court like he should have.
What is necessary is a vehicle / sound legal method ( without Throwing out due process & the Constitution ) to accurately recognize legitimate threats posed by individuals.Now the rest of the world just sees that red Flag laws are necessary.