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|    Message 11,973 of 12,782    |
|    BeamMeUpScotty to zinn    |
|    Re: Judge upholds Rhode Island's high-ca    |
|    15 Dec 22 12:46:38    |
      XPost: alt.politics.communism, ri.politics, alt.politics.usa.con       titution.gun-rights       XPost: alt.politics.congress, alt.politics.corruption, alt.politics.election       XPost: alt.politics.misc, alt.politics.obama, alt.politics.scorched-earth       XPost: alt.politics.socialism.mao, alt.politics.trump, alt.conspiracy       XPost: alt.apocolypse, alt.politics.usa, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh       XPost: alt.infowars, alt.beam-me-up.scotty.there-is-no.intellige       t-life.down-here, alt.politics.guns       XPost: alt.politics.libertarians       From: NOT-SURE@idiocracy.gov              On 12/15/22 3:37 AM, zinn wrote:       > PROVIDENCE — As the deadline approaches for gun owners to give up their       > high-capacity firearm magazines or face legal consequences, a federal       > judge on Wednesday upheld a newly enacted state law banning magazines that       > carry more than 10 rounds of ammunition.       >       > U.S. District Court Chief Judge John J. McConnell Jr. refused to grant a       > request by a Chepachet gun store and several Rhode Island gun owners for a       > preliminary injunction blocking the law, which on Sunday will make       > possession of a large-capacity gun magazine a felony in Rhode Island.       >       > McConnell found that the plaintiffs Big Bear Hunting and Fishing Supply;       > three Rhode Island residents — Mary Brimer, James Grundy and Jonathan       > Hirons; and, a Newport homeowner who lives in Florida, Jeffrey Goyette,       > had not shown that they would suffer irreparable harm if the law was       > allowed to take effect, and that allowing its enforcement was in the       > public's interest.       >       > Rhode Island politics:RI gun-control lobby buoyed by election wins       >       > "It is not entirely accurate to say that the victims of mass shootings are       > chosen randomly. True, they are random in that their identities are       > usually not known to the shooter, and it appears to matter not to the       > shooter whether the next one killed is a particular person or the woman       > standing next to him. But in actuality, victims have not been chosen       > randomly. They have been chosen because they are attending a synagogue in       > Pittsburgh or church in Sutherland Spring. Or because they are sitting in       > a school classroom in Newtown or a high school classroom in Parkland. Or       > because they were at a concert in Las Vegas or a nightclub in Orlando,"       > McConnell said. "They were not chosen because of anything they did, but       > because of what they represented to a particular person with a gun and a       > lot of ammunition."       >       > "Consistent with its obligation to protect public safety, but consonant       > with its fealty to the Constitution, the Rhode Island General Assembly has       > responded with, among other firearms regulations, the [large capacity       > magazine] Ban. It is inevitable that Rhode Island will one day be the       > scene of a mass shooting. The LCM Ban is a small but measured attempt to       > mitigate the potential loss of life by regulating an instrument associated       > with mass slaughter," the judge wrote.       >       > The ruling came as Wednesday marked 10 years since a gunman shot and       > killed 26 people at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut.       > Twenty of those killed were children between 6 and 7 years old.       >       > Sandy Hook to Uvalde: Congress has proposed many gun control laws. Only       > one has passed.       >       > Combatting gun violence:RI police find guns — and people who shoot them —       > with ballistics 'fingerprinting' machine       >       > The plaintiffs, he said, had not shown that the magazines represented       > "arms" as seen in the Second Amendment, nor had they presented credible       > evidence establishing them as a weapon of self-defense.       >       > The Second Amendment protects the right to people to "keep and bear arms,"       > and at its core the right to self-defense, McConnell observed.       >       > The ban was a reasonable and measured approach to restricting large-       > capacity magazines, which in practice easily convert handguns into semi-       > automatic weapons capable of rapid fire, he said.       >       > He accepted the opinion of an expert for the state that throughout history       > "high capacity firearms ... were understood to be weapons of war or anti-       > insurrection, not weapons of individual self defense."       >       > McConnell, likewise, rejected arguments that the law represented an       > unconstitutional "taking" without just compensation.       >       > In ruling, the judge cited doctrine establishing that a regulatory       > restriction that is a valid exercise of police powers does not entitle a       > property owner to compensation, meaning that the policy is in the public       > interest, is reasonably designed to accomplish a purpose and is not overly       > burdensome. The prohibition, he said, was a reasonable response to the       > public safety interests of the state.       >       > He relied, in part, on testimony from another state witness, Dr. Megan       > Ranney, an expert in emergency room medicine with a focus on the public       > health fallout from gun violence. Ranney produced evidence that the       > ability to spray bullets results in more injuries, often with multiple       > wounds, making treatment more complex and victims more numerous.       >       > McConnell found that data produced by Ranney, though sparse, showed "a       > connection between employment of LCMs and increased injuries, both in       > number and seriousness."       >       > The judge determined that any burden placed on owners to sell, forfeit or       > modify their magazines under the law was "minor."       >       > "If this is even a burden at all, it pales in comparison to the       > substantial nature of the public safety interest at stake," McConnell       > said.       >       > State lawmakers hail ruling       > State leaders on Wednesday praised McConnell's 59-page opinion issued       > Wednesday afternoon.       >       > “The legislation placing restrictions on high capacity magazines was       > carefully developed and thoroughly reviewed, and it was enacted after       > lengthy public testimony in both the Senate and the House Judiciary       > Committees," Senate President Dominick J. Ruggerio and House Speaker K.       > Joseph Shekarchi said in an email. "We firmly believed that the       > restrictions are necessary, reasonable and in the best interests of public       > safety, and that they would be upheld in a court of law, just as similar       > provisions in other states have been upheld. We are grateful to Chief       > Judge John McConnell for his decision today.”       >       > Attorney General Peter F. Neronha, who spoke in support of the gun       > restrictions at the State House, said Judge McConnell made the right call.       >       > "We are pleased with the Court’s decision and are confident it is the       > correct ruling. We are still reviewing the decision and expect we will       > have additional comment very soon," Brian Hodge, spokesman for the              [continued in next message]              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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