Monday, April 09, 2007



Arrogant Texas cops

Keith Patton was driving home one night in February when police officers pulled over his red Ford Explorer for a traffic stop. His license and insurance form were in his gym bag on the floor near the back seat. Under the bag was a .357 Magnum. Mr. Patton, 51, an oil-field geologist, software tester and martial arts instructor from suburban Katy, told the police about the gun, which he said he had bought hours before from a co-worker for target shooting. Moments later, he was handcuffed and on his way to jail, facing a charge of unlicensed carrying of a weapon.

The arrest might have been routine elsewhere, but this is Texas, where a code rooted in the days of the highwayman recognizes the right of travelers to be armed, and the Legislature has repeatedly endorsed that principle. Defiant police officers and prosecutors, however, saying they retain law enforcement discretion, have continued arresting and bringing cases against motorists like Mr. Patton found with unlicensed handguns.

The conflict has led to a legal standoff and a new effort by legislators to resolve the issue. It has also inspired an unlikely alliance between the gun lobby, which has long drawn support from the political right, and civil liberties advocates, long identified with the left, in defense of pistol-packing travelers. In a report issued in February, the Texas affiliate of the National Rifle Association joined the American Civil Liberties Union of Texas and the Texas Criminal Justice Coalition "to spotlight unlawful, unnecessary governmental encroachment on average law-abiding citizens."

The report, "Above the Law: How Texas prosecutors are placing their own judgment over that of the Legislature and the law of the land," found that district and county attorneys had instructed police officers to "unnecessarily" interrogate drivers and arrest them or take their weapons, "even if they are legally carrying the gun."

"It's all the self-interest of the job," said Scott Henson, a civil liberties advocate and blogger who wrote the report. Mr. Henson contends that police officers are opposed to citizens' carrying guns and that prosecutors depend on gun charges to strengthen weak cases and prompt plea bargains.

Like many other states, Texas bans the carrying of concealed handguns without a license. Obtaining a license requires a background check and a gun-safety course. By long-established law, however, Texans can cite "traveling" as a defense to possession of an unlicensed handgun. But while traveling was widely understood to denote a journey of some distance, it was never defined. (Travel on planes and other interstate conveyances banning weapons falls under federal jurisdiction.)

In 1997, the State Legislature tried to clarify the law by removing unlicensed carrying of a weapon as an offense while traveling. But it left unresolved whether traveling required making an overnight stop, crossing county lines or other conditions. In 2005, lawmakers sought to remove the ambiguity by declaring that anyone in a private vehicle who was not engaged in criminal activity or otherwise barred from possessing a firearm was "presumed to be traveling," and thus exempt from restrictions on concealed handguns.

Terry Keel, a former member of the Texas House of Representatives who sponsored the bill, explained its intent in a statement entered into the record: "In plain terms, a law-abiding person should not fear arrest if they are transporting a concealed pistol in a motor vehicle."

But the measure hardly ended the controversy. Almost as soon as it became law in September 2005, the Texas District and County Attorneys Association signaled its displeasure by advising members that the act did not rule out arrests of otherwise law-abiding drivers carrying weapons. The association said it was up to the courts to determine whether a person was, in fact, traveling. "Therefore," it declared, "officers are still acting within their lawful discretion if they arrest a person who might qualify for the traveling defense or the new traveling presumption." Or, as Charles A. Rosenthal Jr., the district attorney of Harris County, which includes Houston, argued, "The presumption of innocence does not make the person innocent."

More here




Australia: Grandmother sends gun-toting burglar packing: "An elderly woman helped turn the tables on an armed robber who raided a house with a gun and baseball bat in Melbourne's west yesterday. The dazed burglar was last seen limping from the Sunshine West house with one shoe missing after being tackled by the grandmother, her two daughter-in-laws and son. Five children aged three to 12 were at the Mounsey St house when the heavily built man, aged about 30, knocked at the door and pushed his way inside, brandishing the weapons. The woman, in her 60s, jumped on the robber and started to beat him. Her daughter-in-law, 38, picked up the intruder's baseball bat and turned it on him as her son managed to briefly hold down the man. They and another daughter-in-law snatched back handbags he had grabbed and the grandmother went to a neighbour's to phone police. The 184cm man broke free and fled before police arrived. His bat, imitation pistol and one shoe were recovered at the scene."


MA: South coast is up in arms: "Local gun owners say their firearms are primarily for hunting and target shooting -- but they also like the feeling of protection that they get from keeping a gun in the house. 'The nice thing about a firearm is that it's an ultimate equalizer,' the supervisor said. 'There are some women who are very good at this sport. You put a 300-pound guy on the other end and a woman's going to lose. But put a gun in her hands and that takes his advantage away.' Lately, the supervisor -- like many local gun owners -- has been spending a lot of time discussing Charles D. Chieppa, a New Bedford homeowner who used a legal Walther P38 semiautomatic to kill a suspected burglar in 2004. A jury found Mr. Chieppa not guilty of second-degree murder last Tuesday. Many gun owners reacted to the ruling with both surprise and satisfaction. But the supervisor said the verdict also made him and colleagues at the range think about what would happen if they ever drew their weapons on a real person, not just a paper target."

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