Pennsylvania: City to enforce law on lost guns

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  • Lambo

    R.I.P.
    Dec 6, 2005
    4,523
    Bel Air, Maryland
    http://www.philly.com/philly/news/local/24167474.html


    Posted on Wed, Jul. 9, 2008



    City to enforce law on lost guns
    By Jeff Shields
    Inquirer Staff Writer

    Mayor Nutter and City Council are to announce today that police are poised to begin enforcing a new and fiercely disputed law that requires gun owners to report within 24 hours firearms that are lost or stolen. Enforcement would actually begin in 30 days. Nutter is expected to set out during a news conference today a monthlong grace period in which owners of lost and stolen guns could come forward beyond the 24-hour limit that a new City Council ordinance requires, according to the mayor's office.
    That ordinance was one of five signed by Nutter in April. In addition to establishing criminal penalties for those who fail to contact police within 24 hours of discovering their firearms missing, the laws also establish definitions and penalties for assault weapons, limit handgun purchases to one a month, and restrict gun ownership from unstable individuals or those subject to an order of protection.
    All five laws were challenged in state court by the National Rifle Association, local gun owners, and firearms dealers.
    Common Pleas Court Judge Jane Cutler Greenspan struck down the assault-weapon ban and one-gun-a-month limit as contrary to state law. But she ruled that the NRA and other plaintiffs could not challenge the other three laws because they had no standing to sue.
    Both sides are appealing, and the case is headed to Commonwealth Court.
    C. Scott Shields, representing the NRA and other plaintiffs, said he would seek an immediate injunction if city began to enforce the law.
    The Pennsylvania Supreme Court is expected to have the final say on the legality of the city's ordinances. While the U.S. Supreme Court this month struck down a District of Columbia ban on handguns, Nutter and others noted that the court left some room in its opinion for local regulation of firearms.
    The city is not yet ready to enforce the other two laws, which restrict gun ownership from those accused of domestic abuse, or individuals deemed a risk to themselves or others, said Nutter's spokesman, Doug Oliver. Those laws require regulations that are still being worked on, Oliver said.
    http://www.pafoa.org/forum/
     

    Allium

    Senior Keyboard Operator
    Feb 10, 2007
    2,728
    someone might just report them all "missing" just to bypass the bullshi. fell off the boat, nope nothin to see here....
     

    novus collectus

    Banned
    BANNED!!!
    May 1, 2005
    17,358
    Bowie
    Someone who did a straw purchase could simply just report the gun stolen the day after they give it to the person they bought it for. Also, the only people that would admit they knew the gun was "stolen" from their house more than 24 hours earlier would be the idiots that would have admitted doing the straw purchase anyway.
     

    Spot77

    Ultimate Member
    May 8, 2005
    11,591
    Anne Arundel County
    This law has nothing to do with fighting crime; it's about punishing gun owners who have stood up to the extremist liberals in Philly and blocked them from trampling all over the Constitution and PA state law.

    The only people this law will affect are the law abiding citizens who have become victims of a burglery or who are ignorant of such an ignorant law.

    We all know thatit's not about "fighting crime," it's about control.
     

    bean93x

    JamBandGalore
    Mar 27, 2008
    4,571
    WV
    if you had a gun lost or stolen would you report it?

    i dont know if i am for or against this law.
     

    novus collectus

    Banned
    BANNED!!!
    May 1, 2005
    17,358
    Bowie
    if you had a gun lost or stolen would you report it?

    i dont know if i am for or against this law.

    If you were out of town for a few days and came back to discover that not only was your house broken into three days before, but that you were also being investigated for a crime, how shitty would that be?

    If you were living in a home and used your guns maybe once a month and you did not notice your basement was broken into for weeks and your gun was stolen, do you think the police will believe you when you said you did not know it was stolen?


    This law does nothing to stop crime, it only makes lawful gun owners become a victim twice. Once for being robbery victims, and the second for being investigated as a criminal or even charged as a criminal when they really did nothing wrong.
     

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