State challenges feds over gun-rights restoration

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State challenges feds over gun-rights restoration

Postby hammAR on Mon Aug 20, 2007 2:31 pm

http://www.billingsgazette.net/articles/20...3-gunrights.txt

State challenges feds over gun-rights restoration
The Associated Press

CHEYENNE - The state of Wyoming says the federal agency that enforces gun laws was wrong to reject a state law that seeks to allow people convicted of misdemeanor domestic violence to regain their firearms rights in the state courts.

Wyoming this week filed its opening brief in the U.S. Court of Appeals in Denver, challenging a ruling issued in May by U.S. District Judge Alan Johnson of Cheyenne.

Johnson ruled against the state's claim that the Federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives arbitrarily rejected a 2004 state law allowing people convicted of domestic violence to petition in state court to restore their gun rights.

The federal agency had warned Wyoming that if it continued to allow people with such domestic violence convictions to buy guns, the agency would no longer recognize more than 10,000 concealed-carry permits issued by the state as a substitute for federal background checks for firearms purchases.

Congress in 1996 expanded the law that bans convicted felons from owning guns to apply to people convicted of misdemeanor domestic violence.

Although states have the ability to expunge convictions, Wyoming's law specified that convictions could be removed for purposes of restoring firearms rights yet remain intact for purposes of enhancing punishment for any subsequent conviction.

Johnson ruled that the BATF has the authority to determine whether a state law is insufficient to remove a federal prohibition against a person carrying firearms.

The Wyoming Attorney General's Office issues concealed-carry permits for firearms in the state. Attorney General Pat Crank has said he's aware of one person who has obtained a concealed carry permit after having a misdemeanor conviction expunged.

In its brief filed this week, Crank's office states that the BATF is trying to circumvent federal law.

The state argues that Congress has specified that states should be able to set up their own systems of restoring gun rights to people convicted of domestic violence by erasing the disqualifying conviction.

"The BATF is attempting to administratively undo what Congress has legislatively done," the AG's brief states. "The BATF simply does not agree, on a policy basis, with the Wyoming Legislature's decision and has self-appointed itself the omnipotent role of deciding who should, and should not, possess firearms."

Crank didn't immediately respond to a telephone message left at his office Friday.

In past interviews, Crank has emphasized that state judges and prosecutors carefully scrutinize all petitions from people convicted of domestic violence who ask to have their gun rights restored. This week's legal brief from the state says the restoration process "is not some reckless, haphazard procedure."

Wyoming's legal challenge has drawn attention on both sides of the gun-control debate nationwide. The National Rifle Association weighed in supporting the state's position in Johnson's court. The Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence in Washington, D.C., applauded Johnson's ruling in May.

Daniel Vice, senior attorney at the Brady Center, said Friday that his group continues to follow the state's case.

"We believe that the state and the gun lobby should not be trying to make it easier for domestic violence abusers to get dangerous weapons like firearms," Vice said.

"This case could be important nationwide, because it's a real concern whether the federal government will be allowed to do its job and enforce the law to prevent dangerous people from getting guns. And if Wyoming is able to skirt the law and enable dangerous people to get guns, then other states could do that too, at the behest of the gun lobby."

Ashley Varner, a spokeswoman for the NRA in Fairfax, Va., said Friday that she would look into whether the group intends to stay involved in the case at the appellate level. She didn't immediately respond with word of the NRA's position.
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Re: State challenges feds over gun-rights restoration

Postby 1911fan on Mon Aug 20, 2007 7:25 pm

Sad part is, I was looking up Pat Cranks address to send a re-election donation and find out he has resigned.
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