Friday, April 24, 2009

GOAL Post 2009-15





GOAL Post 2009-15

Legislative Update from Olympia 24 April 2009

HB 1498 PASSES SENATE, GOES TO GOVERNOR

HB 1052: HOUSE CONCURS, GOES TO GOVERNOR

HB 1114 DIES AT CHAMBER CUT-OFF

EFFECTIVE DATE OF SB 5739

TWO DAYS AND COUNTING -- SPECIAL SESSION?

HB 1498 (involuntary commitment and restoration of rights) is on its way
to Governor Gregoire's desk.

On 16 April the House voted unanimously to concur in the Senate
amendments to 2SHB 1052 (alien firearm licenses). 2SHB 1052 now goes to
Governor Gregoire, who is scheduled to sign the bill on Saturday, 25 April.

HB 1114, which would have reinstated the minimum age of 14 for
unsupervised hunting, died at the second chamber cut-off. The bill was
placed on the floor calendar, then a hold was placed on it after several
amendments were filed.

SB 5739 (military CPL renewal), signed by Governor Gregoire last week,
takes effect on July 26, 2009. (Most laws passed during a legislative
session don't take effect until three months after the session to give
regulatory agencies time to prepare for the changes. In this case,
issuing agencies will have to be officially notified that military
members returning from out-of-state deployments have an extended period
to renew their CPLs.)

The fat lady is in the wings, pumping up her lungs to sing. The 2009
regular session of the legislature adjourns at or before midnight, 26
April. The principal focus of the long legislative session is
preparation of the biennial budget. If the biennial budget is not
completed at that time, a special session may be called.

In some states, the scope of a special session is limited to the reason
for which it was called. That is NOT TRUE in Washington. In Washington
if the legislature convenes a special session, ANY subject matter may be
addressed. As the saying goes, " No man's life, liberty, or property is
safe while the legislature is in session."

BILL STATUS:

The following bills have been filed for the 2009-10 biennium:

Bill # Subject
Sponsor Status

2SHB 1052 Alien firearm licenses Moeller (D-49)
To Gov.

ESHB 1114 Youth hunting age requirement Blake (D-19)
Died S. Rules

HB 1498 Involuntary commitment Hunter
(D-48) To Gov.

SB 5739 CPL renewal by military members King (R-14)
Signed by Gov

Key to abbreviations: S. = Senate, H. = House, HB = House Bill, SB =
Senate Bill, 2SHB = Second Substitute House Bill, ESHB = Engrossed
Substitute House Bill,

HEARINGS SCHEDULED:

There are no public hearings scheduled next week on gun-related bills.

LEGISLATIVE HOT LINE: You may reach your Representatives and Senator by
calling the Legislative Hotline at 1-800-562-6000. Toll free!!! The
hearing impaired may obtain TDD access at 1-800-635-9993. Also toll free!!!

1-800-562-6000 TDD 1-800-635-9993

OTHER DATA: Copies of pending legislation (bills), legislative
schedules and other information are available on the legislature's web
site at "www.leg.wa.gov". Bills are available in Acrobat (.pdf)
format. You may download a free version of Adobe Acrobat Reader from
Adobe's web site (http://www.adobe.com). You may also obtain hard copy
bills, initiatives, etc, in the mail from the Legislative Bill Room FREE
OF CHARGE by calling 1-360-786-7573. Copies of bills may also be
ordered toll free by calling the Legislative Hotline at (800) 562-6000.
You may also hear floor and committee hearing action live at
http://www.tvw.org/ (you need "RealAudio" to do this, available free at
the TVW web site).

By reading the House and Senate "bill reports" (hbr, sbr) for each bill,
you can see how individual committee members voted. By reading the
"roll call" for each bill, you can see how the entire House or Senate
voted on any bill. The beauty of the web site is that ALL this
information is available, on line, to any citizen.

GET THE WORD OUT: If you want to subscribe to the GOAL Post by e-mail,
send a message to "mailto:jwaldron%40halcyon.com". Please pass GOAL Post on to
anyone you believe may have an interest in protecting our rights.
Better yet, make a couple of copies of this message, post it on your gun
club's bulletin board, and leave copies with your local gun shop(s).
PERMISSION IS HEREBY GRANTED TO DUPLICATE OR REDISTRIBUTE GOAL POST
PROVIDED IT IS REPRODUCED IN ITS ENTIRETY WITHOUT TEXTUAL MODIFICATION
AND CREDIT IS GIVEN TO GOAL. I can be reached at "mailto:jwaldron%40halcyon.com"
or by telephone at (425) 985-4867. Unfortunately, I am unable to mail
hard copy GOAL Post to individuals. Limited numbers of hard copies MAY
be available at the Second Amendment Foundation book table at WAC gun shows.

If you feel you have received this message in error, or if you no longer
desire to subscribe to the GOAL Post, e-mail "mailto:jwaldron%40halcyon.com" and
place "unsubscribe GOAL Post" in the subject line.

Upcoming WAC gun show(s):

Puyallup 25-26 April

Monroe 2-3 May

"The right of the individual citizen to bear arms in defense of himself,
or the state, shall not be impaired, but nothing in this section shall
be construed as authorizing individuals or corporations to organize,
maintain or employ an armed body of men."

Article 1, Section 24

Constitution of the State of Washington

Copyright 2009 Gun Owners Action League of WA



__,_._,___

Gun Law Update - Obama Gun Treaty Analyzed, more

by Alan Korwin, Author
Gun Laws of America
April 24, 2009
http://www.gunlaws.com



1. CIFTA Gun Treaty Removes Congressional Oversight
2. Amend Constitution by Statute, Using EPA Laws
3. National Ammo Shortage Is Suspicious




Permission to circulate this report granted.



1. CIFTA Gun Treaty Removes Congressional Oversight
1. CIFTA Gun Treaty Removes Congressional Oversight


(Note: How this treaty can overrule U.S. law or the Constitution itself is
discussed at the end, after the treaty analysis below.)



I've completed my review of the South America gun-control treaty that Mr.
Obama wants to get ratified.


It is known as CIFTA, the Inter-American Convention Against The Illicit
Manufacturing Of And Trafficking In Firearms, Ammunition, Explosives, And
Other Related Materials. It can be found here verbatim:
http://www.oas.org/juridico/English/treaties/a-63.html


-- EVERY aspect of the treaty introduces major required gun controls, most
of which will affect average citizens (as well as the targeted criminal
syndicates, dictators and other bad actors).


-- The controls go way past anything EVER attempted by gun-control groups
in the United States.


-- NONE of the proposed gun controls are likely to pass by themselves
through Congress. If the treaty is enacted they don't have to -- they
become law when the treaty is ratified.


-- Virtually NO PROTECTIONS FOR RKBA are to be found, and the wordings are
loose enough to allow all sorts of attacks on gun rights American enjoy
today.


-- The U.S. government under this treaty GAINS POWER to manage firearms
almost any way it would like to, without checks and balances.


-- Once signed, many of the restrictions and government intrusions become
MANDATORY, and the full Congress, already cut out of ratification (only the
Senate approves treaties) would be cut out of the implementation process
entirely.


-- Top to bottom registration of all firearms, ammunition, ammunition
components and other related materials is required if they are "in transit"
and records must be kept indefinitely. This vague language, and the
requirement to comply are a gun-banner's dream and a rights advocate's
nightmare.


-- "Transit licenses or authorizations" for transfers of firearms are
required for imported firearms, and loose language could include the same
for all domestic firearms.


-- Lengthy recordkeeping is required that directly conflicts with U.S.
law, and would be left up to bureaucrats and arbitrary controls and
implementation.


-- Home reloading of ammunition would become illegal and subject to severe
sanctions, without government licensing that is undefined and could include
almost any conditions, taxes and limitations, including scrupulous
inventorying, recordkeeping and unscheduled audit searches of people who
reload.


-- Similar licensing and controls will be required on anything made "that
can be attached to a firearm," known as "other related materials." This
includes components, parts, replacement parts and such items as wood or
composite stocks, slings, bayonets, bayonet lugs, sights, scopes, rails,
lasers, grips, flash hiders, suppressors, muzzle brakes and other
paraphernalia. Attaching any such parts without a government license would
be "illicit manufacture," a criminal act with undefined penalties.


-- Record sharing requirements ensure that any gun-owner data that must be
destroyed under current U.S. law can be easily stored abroad, and can be
retrieved at will as required under various international "cooperation"
clauses.




If I were advising Mr. Obama IN FAVOR of using this treaty for gun control
-- here is what I would suggest.


This creative vantage point helps me to underscore the serious threat the
treaty presents. I DO NOT approve of any of the anti-rights suggestions,
easily drawn from the treaty language -- they merely show you what
Americans face. Everything I outline below comes directly from the treaty
itself. Be sure you're sitting down.


Alan Korwin, Author
Gun Laws of America


-------------


To: Barack Hussein Obama, President of the United States
From: (As if written by the anti-gun-rights lobby)
Re: CIFTA Treaty


Dear Mr. President,

We commend your common-sense support of the CIFTA Treaty for reducing
illicit arms manufacture and gun trafficking. This is a brilliant stratagem
in the exhausting effort to rid our country of the scourge of gun violence.


With the treaty in place and ratified by the Senate, you will be obligated
to take certain steps with regard to private ownership of firearms that we
have never been able to move through the houses of Congress. Further, you
will be able to take these actions unilaterally, making swift change
possible and, under international obligation to act you are insulated from
direct criticism.


Our attorneys assure us the steps we outline here are in full compliance
with international law and the terms of the treaty itself. Article VI of
the U.S. Constitution unambiguously gives such a treaty a degree of
supremacy over the nation, its laws, the states and the public (even though
some in the powerful gun lobby deny this or point to questionable court
precedents). This is especially useful as we adapt to a global economy,
world courts, an empowered U.N. and environmental concerns on a planetary
scale.


In addition, we know that if a law can be interpreted to either spread or
curtail the proliferation of arms in the hands of average people, the
common-sense interpretation must be to curtail arms whenever possible.
CIFTA provides the perfect platform for this very reasonable approach.


There will be little disagreement that CIFTA's surface goal of keeping
arms out of the hands of dictators, tyrants, terrorists, violent criminal
cartels, syndicates and gangs, insurgents, non-state actors, and genocidal
regimes is a worthy goal. The value for domestic gun control here and
abroad is equally worthy, and lies in virtually every measure required to
track and control arms. We are eager to see your signature on this
important step forward for the safety of Americans.



[Language from CIFTA appears in brackets.]
[Language from CIFTA appears in brackets.]



Statement of Purpose

["...the urgent need to prevent, combat, and eradicate the illicit
manufacturing of and trafficking in firearms, ammunition, explosives, and
other related materials, due to the harmful effects of these activities on
the security of each state..."]


Note that "trafficking" is not explicitly limited by "illicit" and this is
critical. It is perfectly reasonable to bring all firearms trafficking
under control to properly manage the portion that is illicit or
undesirable. This construction is precise and appears throughout the
treaty.


["give priority... because of the links of such activities with drug
trafficking, terrorism, transnational organized crime, and mercenary and
other criminal activities"]


The unconditional inclusion of "other criminal activities" assures a broad
jurisdiction for every facet of existing and not-yet-defined gun crime,
even minor and paperwork violations, if so desired.


["international cooperation... appropriate measures at the national,
regional and international levels... pertinent resolutions of the United
Nations General Assembly on measures to eradicate the illicit transfer of
conventional weapons and on the need for all states to guarantee their
security... support mechanisms such as the International Weapons and
Explosives Tracking System (IWETS) of the International Criminal Police
Organization (INTERPOL)"]


The emphasis on globalization dovetails smoothly with current plans.
Potential exists to wed NICS and IWETS functionality.


["a 'know-your-customer' policy for dealers in, and producers, exporters,
and importers of, firearms, ammunition, explosives, and other related
materials is crucial for combating this scourge"]


Firearms dealers are specifically included in the web of CITRA.

["to eradicate illicit transnational trafficking in firearms is not
intended to discourage or diminish lawful leisure or recreational
activities such as travel or tourism for sport shooting, hunting, and other
forms of lawful ownership and use recognized by the States Parties]


This is one rare spot where "trafficking" and "illicit" are connected, and
then only for transnational acts. We do not expect this to inhibit any
reasonable domestic gun-control activity associated with CIFTA. The sapient
inclusion here of "acceptable" gun activity is neatly compartmentalized and
removed from the ability to apply controls.


["this Convention does not commit States Parties to enact legislation or
regulations pertaining to firearms ownership, possession, or trade of a
wholly domestic character"]


While the treaty doesn't seem to require Parties to enact domestic gun
laws, the careful wording does not prevent Parties from enacting domestic
gun laws either. And it additionally requires that the parties "will apply
their respective laws and regulations in a manner consistent with this
Convention," binding future actions into compliance, while giving a
comfortable appearance of autonomy. Our attorneys were impressed with how
well this is drafted.



Article I, Definitions.

The definitions are suitably robust and need little description here.

However, "Illicit manufacture" includes any ammunition made, "b. without a
license from a competent governmental authority of the State Party where
the manufacture or assembly takes place;". This unequivocally places
dangerous homemade "reloading" operations under any reasonable controls
deemed necessary. Such controls are not optional. Any so-called hobbyist
operating outside a yet-to-be designed licensing scheme would be in
violation. Penalties are to be independently determined by the Parties.


Also note that "an accessory that can be attached to a firearm" is
included as "other related materials," and also subject to illicit
manufacture rules. This provides the broadest controls over anyone making,
transporting, possessing or transferring such items as wood or composite
stocks, slings, bayonets or bayonet lugs, sights, scopes, rails, lasers,
grips, flash hiders, suppressors, muzzle brakes and other paraphernalia.
The tax dollars from this new revenue source is not determined but believed
to be potentially large.




Article II, Purpose.

Reiterates introductory remarks, promotes exchanges of information.



Article III, Sovereignty.

Ensures that territorial jurisdictions and a nonintervention policy are
maintained.




Article IV, Legislative measures.

["States Parties that have not yet done so shall adopt the necessary
legislative or other measures to establish as criminal offenses under their
domestic law the illicit manufacturing of and trafficking in firearms,
ammunition, explosives, and other related materials... the criminal
offenses established pursuant to the foregoing paragraph shall include
participation in, association or conspiracy to commit, attempts to commit,
and aiding, abetting, facilitating, and counseling the commission of said
offenses."]


Once the treaty is signed, laws (if needed) or "other measures"
(regulations, memoranda of understanding, policies, operations manuals, AG
opinions, basically any legal construct without limitation) are required to
implement the terms of the treaty. This is excellent for our purposes. We
believe the legal framework exists to handle most if not all the
requirements outside cumbersome legislative channels, facilitating easy
adoption of the treaty's conditions.


Some objections may be raised by opposition leaders or the gun lobby, but
the signed treaty puts this game well into the home stretch by the time
such annoyances arise.




Article V, Jurisdiction.

["Each State Party shall adopt such measures as may be necessary to
establish its jurisdiction over the offenses"]


CIFTA doesn't even contemplate statutes, just "measures" for establishing
jurisdiction, including rules for extradition.




Article VI, Marking of Firearms.

Serial numbers and similar markings already required on firearms by U.S.
law become an international standard, and now include place of manufacture
and name and address of importers, plus special marks for arms retained for
official use. There is no enforcement mechanism for rogue nations that do
not comply.




Article VII, Confiscation or Forfeiture.

["States Parties shall adopt the necessary measures to ensure that all
firearms, ammunition, explosives, and other related materials seized,
confiscated, or forfeited as the result of illicit manufacturing or
trafficking do not fall into the hands of private individuals or businesses
through auction, sale, or other disposal."]


The treaty, when signed, will once and for all end the intolerable
practice of returning guns and accessories back to the public after they
have fallen into police hands. Our legal opinion is that even recovered
stolen guns would also be unreturnable, since these have been illegally
trafficked as defined. State laws allowing gun resales and auctions will
become null and void, under the U.S. Constitution's supremacy clause. This
may impact some police departments that have come to rely on such revenues,
but the net gain in public safety and gun control is more than worth the
small loss, which could perhaps be mitigated through use of bailout funds
or other government monies.




Article VIII, Security Measures.

["States Parties, in an effort to eliminate loss or diversion, undertake
to adopt the necessary measures to ensure the security of firearms,
ammunition, explosives, and other related materials imported into, exported
from, or in transit through their respective territories."]


It seems clear that the only way to effectively meet this common-sense
security obligation (eliminate loss or diversion of firearms and related
supplies) is to have universal registration and tracking of all firearms in
the country. This long-sought elusive goal now within reach. The phrase "in
transit" effectively touches every firearm, all ammunition and related
gear.




Article IX, Export, Import, Transit Licenses

Port of entry and exit requirements already in place cover this section.



Article X, Strengthening Controls at Export Points

Same as above.



Article XI, Recordkeeping

["States Parties shall assure the maintenance for a reasonable time of the
information necessary to trace and identify illicitly manufactured and
illicitly trafficked firearms to enable them to comply with their
obligations under Articles XIII and XVII."]


This provision provides clear authority to establish large scale
comprehensive gun-registration databases. The "reasonable time" for
recordkeeping had been determined by the FBI, under former AG Reno, as
permanently.


We do anticipate some political objections to this provision, since U.S.
laws place some restrictions on firearm recordkeeping on the public.
However, as we learned under Attorney General Janet Reno, during the
original implementation of the NICS background checks, government systems
can be set up in any manner desired with little effective oversight, and
only after prolonged and arguable challenges need the systems be changed.
The true nature of such complex systems remains difficult to ascertain, is
difficult to monitor on an ongoing basis, can be modified in future
iterations to more closely reflect desired policy without raising warning
flags, and system backups maintained by allies do not fall under the same
controls as domestic versions.




A review of the remaining 19 Articles of the treaty will be provided
shortly. These are minor and deal largely with exchange of information
among the parties, cooperation, training (for which the U.S. can play a
significant role by financing and controlling programs among the Parties),
mutual legal assistance (another area where the U.S. can exert significant
influence), "controlled delivery" or sting operations, extradition of U.S.
citizens, and structural elements such as a consultative committee,
periodic meetings, ratifications, withdrawal, effective dates and dispute
settlements.




An interesting "Annex" exempts certain items from the definition of
explosives, including:


["compressed gases; flammable liquids; explosive actuated devices, such as
air bags and fire extinguishers; propellant actuated devices, such as nail
gun cartridges; consumer fireworks suitable for use by the public and
designed primarily to produce visible or audible effects by combustion,
that contain pyrotechnic compositions and that do not project or disperse
dangerous fragments such as metal, glass, or brittle plastic; toy plastic
or paper caps for toy pistols; toy propellant devices consisting of small
paper or composition tubes or containers containing a small charge or slow
burning propellant powder designed so that they will neither burst nor
produce external flame except through the nozzle on functioning; and smoke
candles, smokepots, smoke grenades, smoke signals, signal flares, hand
signal devices, and Very signal cartridges designed to produce visible
effects for signal purposes containing smoke compositions and no bursting
charges."]


END OF ANALYSIS

------



The Supremacy Issue

Numerous attorneys and others wrote to challenge my position in Page Nine
#63
http://www.gunlaws.com/Page9Folder/PageNine-63.htm that Mr. Obama's
run-around gun treaty could conveniently bypass the legislative process and
the Constitution, like John M. says here:


"While your item in "Page 9" about Congress and the Obamanation
Administration using an Inter-American Treaty on 'arms trafficking' to do
an end-run around the Second Amendment is certainly scary, I'm not ready to
concede (as you appear to do) that a treaty supersedes the Constitution
under Article VI." He goes on to describe why Art. VI and other safeguards
will protect us.


Many people went into greater detail. Cases were cited (Reid v. Covert;
Missouri v. Holland; Whitney v. Robinson; Cherokee Tobacco). One
high-placed lobbyist felt fairly safe because, "While an international
treaty bypasses House consideration, it requires two-thirds of the Senate
for ratification - a tall order even in ObamaNation."


Other people were less sure, like Chuck G. here: "I'm still up in the air
about it as I've heard all my life exactly what you stated."


I too always heard what he had heard -- treaties supercede the
Constitution -- and always thought it odd. Go read Article VI, cl. 2
yourself. The language is crystalline. One attorney at a high-profile think
tank believes, "The federal government will have arguable legal authority
to seize our guns and ammunition if this treaty is signed." So...


1. Opinions on the supremacy issue are inconsistent (though often
adamant).


2. People who say the treaty won't be a problem point to a number of
SCOTUS decisions, and perhaps stare decisis. Maybe that makes those folks
fully comfortable with where Mr. Obama is heading on this. Less so for me.


3. SCOTUS precedents are increasingly ignored by those in power, with
groovy rationalizations each time. And SCOTUS decisions have so eviscerated
key elements of the Constitution, my faith there is shaken, not stirred.


4. The courts, which should provide more balance, a) don't, b) are run by
the very people they're supposed to balance, and c) all too often use the
completely worthless rational-basis test, knowing it's worthless, to allow
every short-of-insane law to stand.


5. Given a choice of support for gun-rights or outright gun bans, we know
which way this administration will go.


6. Four of the current SCOTUS Justices have expressed interest in defining
U.S. law from foreign sources, leaving us one vote away from a new
understanding of the supremacy clause.


7. Perhaps the biggest issue, though, making all else moot, is that new
regs you can easily forecast coming from this treaty will be portrayed as
a) required by international law so we're only doing what's right, b)
required by Article VI however you like to read it, c) consistent with
precedent, and most of all, d) not violative of the Second Amendment so no
big deal.


After all, if, for instance, every home reloading enthusiast simply has to
get a government license, pay an annual tax called a "fee," pass a test,
accept "routine" BATFE searches without notice like FFLs must, and keep
detailed records so government can fulfill its obligation to track all guns
and ammo, backed up with threats of prison time for paperwork errors or a
miscount of a single round, what's wrong with that?


Besides, you have an attorney general to protect you who's on record
saying a ban on any working firearm in your own home is acceptable under
2A, so, what me worry?


You have a choice: assume the treaty won't be a problem, the supremacy
clause will void any abuse and just let Mr. Obama enact the treaty, or
remain a bit more skeptical of this man's motives. Choose wisely.



Alan.

P.S. If Mr. Obama is indeed a Marxist at heart as so many people fear and
some evidence tends to support, a debate over constitutional principles
would be pointless.






2. Amend Constitution by Statute, Using EPA Laws
2. Amend Constitution by Statute, Using EPA Laws


"The National Parks Service has announced it will not challenge a court
order that temporarily stops the late-term Bush administration policy of
allowing CCW-permit holders to carry in National Parks."


That's the news media's backwards way of saying the bureaucrats running
the National Parks are delighted they don't have to allow CCW-permit
holders to exercise their civil rights in the parks, at least for now.


U.S. District Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly issued a temporary injunction,
favoring a lawsuit brought by gun-control and environmental activists. She
gave the Interior Dept., which runs the parks, until April 20 to respond.


The idea that parks must first undergo environmental-impact approval
before partially honoring the right to keep and bear arms is a complete
subterfuge and extremely dangerous on several grounds.


Most obvious, there is NO environmental impact of carrying an unfired gun
in a park or elsewhere. Even fired, at the rate CCW permitees fire their
guns, the impact is so small it is essentially unmeasurable. The District
Court/EPA/Brady effort is a transparent deception, used by hoplophobes and
gun banners, to stop a ruling that would restore limited civil rights (for
government permitees only) and could save lives and deter crime.


The original 25-year-old ban was created during the Reagan era, reversing
the right to carry that existed on these public lands since the nation's
founding.


A bigger problem however is that, if EPA can be used to stop mere
concealed carry on the basis of enviro-impact, what does that say for any
form of outdoor marksmanship? The impact difference between carry and use
is obvious. If the precedent of allowing EPA to regulate CCW stands, this
invites the wholesale destruction of any outdoor target practice on public
land. Officials know this. Nationwide, public land is a mainstay of
open-air exercise of the right to bear arms -- for practicing for
proficiency and safety.


Using environmental threats to deny the civil and human right of self
defense and the constitutional right to keep and bear arms is environmental
terrorism.


The biggest problem though is that this repugnant scheme uses a statute
and its regulations -- the EPA machinery -- to suppress the Constitution
itself, namely the Second Amendment.


An ongoing and increasing problem, EPA and numerous other federal
agencies, FHA, FCC, FTC, FDA, TSA, EEOC and others have suppressed First
Amendment free-speech guarantees for decades. Now, using EPA legislation,
people in charge are making inroads into infringing RKBA out of existence.
Such activity is patently illegal. The terms of the Constitution can only
be changed by amendment, as described in the Constitution itself, and not
by law making from Washington or anywhere else.


People suggesting or implementing such actions should be quickly removed
from office for violation of their oath, and brought up on charges of
denial of civil rights and abuse of power. That had better happen soon,
because we are reaching a tipping point. How many abuses and usurpations
need we endure before people take to their pitchforks?






3. National Ammo Shortage Is Suspicious
3. National Ammo Shortage Is Suspicious


Call me skeptical, but something doesn't smell right about the length and
severity of the ammo shortage in America. We're not short of ammo, we're
out. Since November. This is the end of April. WalMart shelves are bare.
Big 5 Sports here in Phoenix got its weekly truck and it had 3 boxes of
.38s (150 rounds), no 9mm, no .357, no .380, no .45. Dealers I've asked
uniformly say their orders are just not being filled, and they get no word
on what or when they'll get more.


Anyone with DIRECT connections to ammo makers is encouraged to ask
questions, get names, and let me know what you hear. I've seen the
unsubstantiated rumors on the web that there's a conspiracy, but the talk
sounds wacky and the parts don't make sense. Why would for-profit companies
voluntarily cut back production in hard economic times when demand has
exploded?


That said, note that most American gun owners are not short of ammo. They
have plenty socked away. They just can't buy more, or replace supplies used
at the range and elsewhere. The situation is most acute however for
newcomers, of which there are hundreds of thousands scared into buying
their first gun, who learn quickly that a new gun without some shells isn't
much of a good deal.


Also note that this panic/obsessive buying is a shot across the bow for
the temperature of America -- what would it take to trigger similar runs on
supplies of toilet paper, bottled water, tobacco, liquor, batteries, light
bulbs, canned goods, coffee, medicines and any other commodities people
depend upon. If ammo, a minor niche product is any gauge, we live in
delicate times.



==========================================
Sign up for future updates on my home page
==========================================


Permission to circulate this report is granted.



Alan Korwin
Bloomfield Press
"We publish the gun laws."
4848 E. Cactus, #505-440
Scottsdale, AZ 85254
602-996-4020 Phone
602-494-0679 Fax
1-800-707-4020 Orders
http://www.gunlaws.com
alan@gunlaws.com
Call, write, fax or click for free full-color catalog
(This is our address and info as of Jan. 1, 2007)



"One man with courage is a majority."
--Thomas Jefferson


"No one could make a greater mistake than he who did nothing
because he could do only a little."
--Edmund Burke



============

Resources from my company, Bloomfield Press:

If you want to help make a difference,
take a look at my page on Tactics That Work:
http://www.gunlaws.com/Tactics%20That%20Work.htm


To see prior issues of my media watchblog, Page Nine:
http://www.gunlaws.com/PageNineIndex.htm


For researched info on News Media Bias:
http://www.gunlaws.com/NewsAccuracy.htm


See my latest papers, news, Updates and more:
http://www.gunlaws.com/newstuff.htm


To find a law anywhere in the country,
use our widely acclaimed National Directory:
http://www.gunlaws.com/links/index.htm


You can check out our growing line of Specialty Books
with DVDs for gun owners and supporters of freedom
and plain-English guides to gun laws across the nation:
http://www.gunlaws.com/books.htm


And finally, for logical, common-sense, reasonable
positions on gun issues, try my Position Papers:
http://www.gunlaws.com/updates.htm

Friday, April 17, 2009

GOAL Post 2009-14





GOAL Post 2009-14

Legislative Update from Olympia 17 April 2009

HB 1498 PASSES SENATE, GOES TO GOVERNOR

HB 1052: HOUSE CONCURS IN SENATE AMENDMENTS

HB 1114 DIES AT CHAMBER CUT-OFF -- MAYBE

EFFECTIVE DATE OF SB 5739

NINE DAYS AND COUNTING -- SPECIAL SESSION?

HB 1498 (involuntary commitment and restoration of rights) is on its way
to Governor Gregoire's desk.

On 16 April the House voted unanimously to concur in the Senate
amendments to 2SHB 1052 (alien firearm licenses). 2SHB 1052 now goes to
Governor Gregoire.

HB 1114, which would have reinstated the minimum age of 14 for
unsupervised hunting, should have died at 5 p.m. today at the second
chamber cut-off. The bill was placed on the floor calendar, then a hold
was placed on it after several amendments were filed. However, a Senate
floor session is scheduled for tomorrow. Procedural rules don't always
apply.

SB 5739 (military CPL renewal), signed by Governor Gregoire last week,
takes effect on July 26, 2009. (Most laws passed during a legislative
session don't take effect until three months after the session to give
regulatory agencies time to prepare for the changes. In this case,
issuing agencies will have to be officially notified that military
members returning from out-of-state deployments have an extended period
to renew their CPLs.)

The 2009 regular session of the legislature adjourns at or before
midnight, 26 April. The principal focus of the long legislative session
is preparation of the biennial budget. If the biennial budget is not
completed at that time, a special session may be called.

In some states, the scope of a special session is limited to the reason
for which it was called. That is NOT TRUE in Washington. In Washington
if the legislature convenes a special session, ANY subject matter may be
addressed. As the saying goes, " No man's life, liberty, or property is
safe while the legislature is in session."

BILL STATUS:

The following bills have been filed for the 2009-10 biennium:

Bill # Subject
Sponsor Status

2SHB 1052 Alien firearm licenses Moeller (D-49)
To Gov.

ESHB 1114 Youth hunting age requirement Blake (D-19)
S. Rules

HB 1498 Involuntary commitment Hunter
(D-48) To Gov.

SB 5739 CPL renewal by military members King (R-14)
Signed by Gov

Key to abbreviations: S. = Senate, H. = House, HB = House Bill, SB =
Senate Bill, 2SHB = Second Substitute House Bill, ESHB = Engrossed
Substitute House Bill,

GOAL POSITION ON BILLS

2SHB 1052 SUPPORT

ESHB 1114 SUPPORT

HB 1498 SUPPORT

HEARINGS SCHEDULED:

There are no public hearings scheduled next week on gun-related bills.

LEGISLATIVE HOT LINE: You may reach your Representatives and Senator by
calling the Legislative Hotline at 1-800-562-6000. Toll free!!! The
hearing impaired may obtain TDD access at 1-800-635-9993. Also toll free!!!

1-800-562-6000 TDD 1-800-635-9993

OTHER DATA: Copies of pending legislation (bills), legislative
schedules and other information are available on the legislature's web
site at "www.leg.wa.gov". Bills are available in Acrobat (.pdf)
format. You may download a free version of Adobe Acrobat Reader from
Adobe's web site (http://www.adobe.com/). You may also obtain hard copy
bills, initiatives, etc, in the mail from the Legislative Bill Room FREE
OF CHARGE by calling 1-360-786-7573. Copies of bills may also be
ordered toll free by calling the Legislative Hotline at (800) 562-6000.
You may also hear floor and committee hearing action live at
http://www.tvw.org/ (you need "RealAudio" to do this, available free at
the TVW web site).

By reading the House and Senate "bill reports" (hbr, sbr) for each bill,
you can see how individual committee members voted. By reading the
"roll call" for each bill, you can see how the entire House or Senate
voted on any bill. The beauty of the web site is that ALL this
information is available, on line, to any citizen.

GET THE WORD OUT: If you want to subscribe to the GOAL Post by e-mail,
send a message to "mailto:jwaldron%40halcyon.com". Please pass GOAL Post on to
anyone you believe may have an interest in protecting our rights.
Better yet, make a couple of copies of this message, post it on your gun
club's bulletin board, and leave copies with your local gun shop(s).
PERMISSION IS HEREBY GRANTED TO DUPLICATE OR REDISTRIBUTE GOAL POST
PROVIDED IT IS REPRODUCED IN ITS ENTIRETY WITHOUT TEXTUAL MODIFICATION
AND CREDIT IS GIVEN TO GOAL. I can be reached at "mailto:jwaldron%40halcyon.com"
or by telephone at (425) 985-4867. Unfortunately, I am unable to mail
hard copy GOAL Post to individuals. Limited numbers of hard copies MAY
be available at the Second Amendment Foundation book table at WAC gun shows.

If you feel you have received this message in error, or if you no longer
desire to subscribe to the GOAL Post, e-mail "mailto:jwaldron%40halcyon.com" and
place "unsubscribe GOAL Post" in the subject line.

Upcoming WAC gun show(s):

Puyallup 25-26 April

Monroe 2-3 May

"The right of the individual citizen to bear arms in defense of himself,
or the state, shall not be impaired, but nothing in this section shall
be construed as authorizing individuals or corporations to organize,
maintain or employ an armed body of men."

Article 1, Section 24

Constitution of the State of Washington

Copyright 2009 Gun Owners Action League of WA

JOHN LOTT: ABC’s Shameful ‘20/20′ Experiment

John Lott, PhD, economist at the University of Maryland, recently posted an editorial on Fox. It is an excellent review of ABC's biased report on firearms, so I'm presenting it in it's entirety.

Note that ABC is owned by Disney, who, despite Florida Law which allows employees to have firearms locked in their personal vehicles while at work, still forbids it. Disney lobbied the Florida State legislature to amend the bill to exclude employers who had explosives on their property from allowing gun owners to have their Civil Rights. Disney's explosives? Fireworks....but I digress.....


ABC’s Shameful ‘20/20′ Experiment


By John R. Lott, Jr.

Gun control advocates look desperate. Last Friday night, on April 10, ABC aired a heavily promoted, hour long “20/20″ special called “If I Only Had a Gun.” It is ABC’s equivalent of NBC’s infamous exploding gas tanks in General Motors pickups where NBC rigged the truck to explode. With legislation in Texas and Missouri advancing to eliminate gun-free zones at universities, perhaps this response isn’t surprising.

The show started and ended by claiming that allowing potential victims to carry guns would not help keep them safe –- not even with hundreds of hours of practice firing guns.

No mention was made of the actual multiple victim public shootings stopped by people with concealed handguns nor did they describe who actually carried out such shootings. Instead, ABC presented a rigged experiment where one student in a classroom had a gun. But sometimes even the best editors can’t hide everything the camera sees.

The experiment was set up to make the student fail. It did not resemble a real-world shooting. The same scenario is shown three times, but in each case the student with the gun is seated in the same seat –- the center seat in the front row. The attacker is not only a top-notch shooter –- a firearms expert who teaches firearms tactics and strategy to police -– but also obviously knows precisely where the student with the gun is sitting.

Each time the experiment is run, the attacker first fires two shots at the teacher in the front of the class and then turns his gun directly on the very student with the gun. The attacker wastes no time trying to gun down any of the unarmed students. Thus, very unrealistically, between the very first shot setting the armed student on notice and the shots at the armed student, there is at most 2 seconds. The armed student is allowed virtually no time to react and, unsurprisingly, fails under the same circumstances that would have led even experienced police officers to fare poorly.

But in the real world, a typical shooter is not a top-notch firearms expert and has no clue about whether or not anyone might be armed and, if so, where they are seated. If you have 50 people –- a pretty typical college classroom –- and he is unknown to the attacker, the armed student is given a tremendous advantage. Actually, if the experiment run by “20/20″ seriously demonstrated anything, it highlighted the problem of relying on uniformed police or security guards for safety: the killer instantly knows whom to shoot first.

Yet, in the ABC experiment, the purposefully disadvantaged students are not just identified and facing (within less than 2 seconds) an attacker whose gun is already drawn. They are also forced to wear unfamiliar gloves, a helmet, and a holster. This only adds to the difficulties the students face in handling their guns.

Given this set-up the second student, Danielle, performed admirably well. She shot the firearms expert in his left leg near the groin. If real bullets had been used, that might well have disabled the attacker and cut short his shooting spree.

Nevertheless, even terrible shooters can often be quite effective. Despite all of ABC’s references to the Columbine attack, the network never mention the armed guard at the school. He had an unusually poor target shooting record –- indeed it is reported that he couldn’t even hit a target. Yet, his bravery still saved many lives because his poorly aimed shots forced the two killers to engage in gunfire with him. This slowed down their killing spree and gave many students a chance to escape the building. The guard was only forced to retreat and leave the school himself because of the homemade grenades that the Columbine murderers had.

The Columbine murderers strongly and actively opposed passage of Colorado’s right-to-carry law, particularly the part that would have allowed concealed handguns being legally carried on school campuses. What goes unnoticed is that the Columbine attack took place the very day that the state legislature scheduled final passage of the concealed handgun law.

Time after time the attackers in these multiple victim public shootings consciously avoid areas where people might be able to defend themselves. In the attack on the Jewish community center in Los Angeles in which five people were wounded, the attacker had apparently “scouted three of the West Coast’s most prominent Jewish institutions—the Museum of Tolerance, the Skirball Cultural Center and the University of Judaism—but found security too tight.”

In the real world, even having a gun and pointing it at an attacker has often convinced the attacker to stop shooting and surrender. Examples include high schools in Pearl, Mississippi and Edinboro, Pennsylvania, as well as the Appalachian Law School in Virginia. Street attacks in Memphis to Detroit ended this way, too, without any more shots fired.

Even if the cases don’t get much attention, gun permit holders stop these multiple victim attacks on a regular basis. Ironically, just this past Saturday, the day after ABC’s broadcast, a permit holder in Columbia, Texas stopped a mass robbery by fatally shooting the criminal. Some Web sites have started collecting these and other defensive gun use cases (e.g., see here, here, and here).

ABC’S “20/20″ exaggerates “the danger of accidentally hitting a friend” when confronting an attacker. The show cites as an example is a man who mistook his wife for an intruder. Obviously that case is a tragedy, but those cases are exceedingly rare. But why didn’t they present a single multiple victim attack as an example? Simple, because it has not happened.

ABC pushes the notion that gun show regulations, rather than arming potential victims, can stop these attacks. But very few criminals get their guns from gun shows: a U.S. Justice Department survey of 18,000 state prison inmates showed that less than one percent (0.7%) of prisoners had obtained their gun from a gun show. Even adding flea markets and gun shows together raises the number to just 1.7 percent. There is not a single academic study showing that regulating private individuals selling their own guns — the so-called “gun show loophole” — reduces any type of violent crime. What the regulations have accomplished is cutting the number of gun shows by 25 percent.

The show ends with this claim:

“If you are wondering where are all the studies about the effectiveness of guns used by ordinary Americans for self-defense, well keep searching, we could not find one reliable study and the ones we found were contradictory.”

Yet, “contradictory” is an overstatement. There have been 26 peer-reviewed studies published by criminologists and economists in academic journals and university presses. Most of these studies find large drops in crime. Some find no change, but not a single one shows an increase in crime.

You would think that if gun control worked as well as ABC implies, there wouldn’t be these multiple victim public shootings in those European countries with gun laws much stricter than those being publicly discussed in the United States or by ABC. Yet, multiple victim public shootings are quite common in Europe. In just the last few days, there have been a shooting at a college in Greece and in a crowded café in Rotterdam. Of course, the worst K-12 public school shootings are in Europe.

Given the hundreds of millions of dollars that have been spent annually in the United States for police officers on campus and other programs, one would hope that this relatively inexpensive alternative, where people are willing to bear the costs themselves to protect others, would be taken more seriously.

ABC never mentions a simple fact: all multiple victim public shootings with more than 3 people killed have occurred where permitted concealed handguns are prohibited. Rather than studying what actually happens during these shootings, ABC conjured up rigged experiments aimed at convincing Americans that guns are ineffective. Unfortunately, ABC’s advice, rather than making victims safe, makes things safer for attackers.

John Lott is a senior research scientist at the University of Maryland and the author of More Guns, Less Crime (University of Chicago Press, second edition, 2000) and The Bias Against Guns (Regnery, 2003). Much of the discussion here is based on both books. John Lott’s past pieces for FOX News can be found here and here.

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Self Protection is Not Vigilantism

There's a discussion going on about reduction of funding for law enforcement and how people should respond. In a recent dust-up, State Senator Tim Sheldon from Mason County suggested that
"There's always an open season on criminals in Mason County... I think the Mason County citizens are very well aware of how to protect themselves in a situation that might need a response."
The Mason County Sheriff, when asked for a response, " told the [Mason County] Journal he found Sheldon's remark inappropriate, adding that he doesn't want to promote vigilantism."
Sheldon denied Friday that he is urging people to take the law into their own hands, and he claimed that news reports, including Seattle-area television accounts, already are
"driving some criminals back to Pierce and King counties...Our sheriff thinks we're a magnet for crime, because we're a rural county. My point is our citizens are probably better armed than any other county. So the message is, don't attempt a home invasion in Mason County or you may get a hot Mason County lead enema," Sheldon said.
So what is the case with people defending themselves? Are they "taking the law into their own hands?" Do they become vigilantes?
What is vigilantism, anywho?
a member of a volunteer committee organized to suppress and punish crime summarily (as when the processes of law are viewed as inadequate) ; broadly : a self-appointed doer of justice
the act of defending oneself, one's property, or a close relative
It is sad when in the course of sensationalizing something, but the journalists, who should be word smiths, and law enforcement, who should know the law better don't seem to know the difference.
In Washington State, we have the following enumerated in the Constitution:
SECTION 24 RIGHT TO BEAR ARMS.
The right of the individual citizen to bear arms in defense of himself, or the state, shall not be impaired, but nothing in this section shall be construed as authorizing individuals or corporations to organize, maintain or employ an armed body of men.
Now this doesn't allow or condone the extra-judicial law enforcement, it only allows a person to defend oneself.
State laws (RCW 9A.16.020 Use of force — When lawful.) allow the use of force for, among other things,
(3) Whenever used by a party about to be injured, or by another lawfully aiding him or her, in preventing or attempting to prevent an offense against his or her person, or a malicious trespass, or other malicious interference with real or personal property lawfully in his or her possession, in case the force is not more than is necessary;
(4) Whenever reasonably used by a person to detain someone who enters or remains unlawfully in a building or on real property lawfully in the possession of such person, so long as such detention is reasonable in duration and manner to investigate the reason for the detained person's presence on the premises, and so long as the premises in question did not reasonably appear to be intended to be open to members of the public;
Again, the use of force is legal to defend yourself, and in self-defense is different from the vigilantism to which the Sheriff and the media refers. Vigilantism is not legal.
What the Sheriff knows, or should know, but doesn't tell you is that law enforcement is not responsible for your safety. This was last re-stated by the US Supreme Court in Castle Rock v Gonzales, in which they held that,
The town of Castle Rock, Colorado and its police department
could not be sued under
42 USC §1983 for failure to enforce a
restraining order against respondent's husband, as enforcement of the
restraining order does not constitute a property right for 14th Amendment purposes.
In other words, law enforcement is not responsible for your safety. You are.
However, you are also responsible for your own acts. The height of irresponsibility is illustrated in the comments by one person to the Mason County Commission meeting,
“And I’m a kind of bad shot, so if I have to protect myself and I miss when I go to court, I guess I can say my state senator told me to do it,” said resident John Strasburger.
No, sir. You are responsible not only for your own protection, but for your actions, also.

Sunday, April 12, 2009

Disarmament as Public Policy?

Mr. Obama was recently in Prague and gave a speech in which he advocated nuclear disarmament.



In case you don't want to listen to the whole thing, there is a
transcript available from Stephen Rose. What caught my eye was this:
The basic bargain is sound: Countries with nuclear weapons will move towards disarmament, countries without nuclear weapons will not acquire them, and all countries can access peaceful nuclear energy. To strengthen the treaty, we should embrace several principles. We need more resources and authority to strengthen international inspections. We need real and immediate consequences for countries caught breaking the rules or trying to leave the treaty without cause.



Now let's look at an excerpt from the Urban Policy portion of the Obama Administration Agenda:

Address Gun Violence in Cities: ... Obama and Biden also favor commonsense measures that respect the Second Amendment rights of gun owners, while keeping guns away from children and from criminals. They support closing the gun show loophole and making guns in this country childproof. They also support making the expired federal Assault Weapons Ban permanent.


And in case you don't remember what he means by "Respect the Second Amendment rights of gun owners", from his Nomination Acceptance Speech:

The -- the reality of gun ownership may be different for hunters in rural Ohio than they are for those plagued by gang violence in Cleveland, but don't tell me we can't uphold the Second Amendment while keeping AK-47s out of the hands of criminals.


So where does that get us? Well, let's blend these concepts and see what we get as a more fundamental position:
  • If we disarm our nuclear forces as a first step, other nuclear countries will feel better about doing the same.
  • If there is organized nuclear disarmament, then rogue players will be discouraged from developing their own weapons.
  • If there is an agreement, then nuclear countries will be unlikely to share their nuclear technology with non-nuclear countries.
  • If we disarm Americans, then there will be less gun violence.
Sounds nice, but there is one teeny flaw in the logic: Antisocial persons. They don't care about laws and agreements.

Diagnostic criteria

Three or more of the following are required:

  1. Failure to conform to social norms with respect to lawful behaviors as
    indicated by repeatedly performing acts that are grounds for arrest;
  2. Deceitfulness, as indicated by repeatedly lying, use of aliases, or conning
    others for personal profit or pleasure;
  3. Impulsivity or failure to plan ahead;
  4. Irritability and aggressiveness, as indicated by repeated physical fights or
    assaults;
  5. Reckless disregard for safety of self or others;
  6. Consistent irresponsibility, as indicated by repeated failure to sustain
    consistent work behavior or honor financial obligations;
  7. Lack of remorse, as indicated by being indifferent to or rationalizing
    having hurt, mistreated, or stolen from another.

This is the nature of many of the people who commit the mass murders as we have seen. These are the people who concern those of us who own guns for self-protection.
We also realize that expecting someone who doesn't abide by laws against murder, assault, rape and robbery to suddenly follow a law about weapons posession is unrealistic.
Sociopaths, who comprise only 3-4% of the male population and less than 1% of the female population, are thought to account for approximately 20% of the United States' prison population and between 33% and 80% of the population of chronic criminal offenders.
Furthermore, whereas the "typical" U.S. burglar is estimated to have committed a median five crimes per year before being apprehended, chronic offenders - those most likely to be sociopaths - report committing upward of fifty crimes per annum and sometimes as many as two or three hundred. Collectively, these individuals are thought to account for over 50% of all crimes in the U.S.
Mealey, L., "The Sociobiology of Sociopathy: An Integrated Evolutionary Model," Behavioral and Brain Sciences, Volume 18, Number 3, pp. 523-541, 1995.


So where does this leave us? Well, I fear that there is an assumption that disarmament, whether nuclear by the country or by individuals, will lead to better behavior on the part of those who mean us harm.

And since the poilice are not obligated to provide protection to individuals (see Castle Rock v Gonzales), we need a way to protect ourselves.

Friday, April 10, 2009

GOAL Post 2009-13

Legislative Update from Olympia 10 April 2009

SSHB 1052 PASSES SENATE

HBs 1114 AND 1498 AWAITING SENATE FLOOR VOTE

SB 5739 PASSES LEGISLATURE

16 DAYS AND COUNTING

2SHB 1052 was amended on the Senate floor and passed with a unanimous
vote. It now awaits a concurrence vote in the House. If the House
fails to accept the Senate amendment, it will go to a conference
committee. At this time, it is expected the House will concur in the
Senate action.

ESHB 1114 (reinstating the minimum unsupervised hunting age to 14) and
HB 1498 (involuntary commitment and reinstatement of firearm rights)
remain in Senate Rules awaiting a full floor vote. A vote is expected
well before the 17 April chamber cut-off date.

SB 5739 (military CPL late renewal) was signed into law by Governor
Gregoire today. The bill extends the 90 day period for renewal of an
expiring CPL and waives the $10 late fee for late renewal. A returning
military member has 90 from the date of return/reassignment/release to
renew his or her CPL with the normal $32 renewal fee.

There are two weeks left in the 2009 regular legislative session. The
legislature MUST adjourn by midnight Sunday, 26 April.

BILL STATUS:

The following bills have been filed for the 2009-10 biennium:

Bill # Subject
Sponsor Status

2SHB 1052 Alien firearm licenses Moeller (D-49)
S. Rules

ESHB 1114 Youth hunting age requirement Blake (D-19)
S. Rules

HB 1498 Involuntary commitment Hunter
(D-48) S. Rules

SB 5739 CPL renewal by military members King (R-14)
Signed by Gov

Key to abbreviations: S. = Senate, H. = House, HB = House Bill, SB =
Senate Bill, 2SHB = Second Substitute House Bill, ESHB = Engrossed
Substitute House Bill,

GOAL POSITION ON BILLS

2SHB 1052 SUPPORT

ESHB 1114 SUPPORT

HB 1498 SUPPORT

HEARINGS SCHEDULED:

There are no public hearings scheduled next week on gun-related bills.

LEGISLATIVE HOT LINE: You may reach your Representatives and Senator by
calling the Legislative Hotline at 1-800-562-6000. Toll free!!! The
hearing impaired may obtain TDD access at 1-800-635-9993. Also toll free!!!

1-800-562-6000 TDD 1-800-635-9993

OTHER DATA: Copies of pending legislation (bills), legislative
schedules and other information are available on the legislature's web
site at "www.leg.wa.gov". Bills are available in Acrobat (.pdf)
format. You may download a free version of Adobe Acrobat Reader from
Adobe's web site (http://www.adobe.com). You may also obtain hard copy
bills, initiatives, etc, in the mail from the Legislative Bill Room FREE
OF CHARGE by calling 1-360-786-7573. Copies of bills may also be
ordered toll free by calling the Legislative Hotline at (800) 562-6000.
You may also hear floor and committee hearing action live at
http://www.tvw.org/ (you need "RealAudio" to do this, available free at
the TVW web site).

By reading the House and Senate "bill reports" (hbr, sbr) for each bill,
you can see how individual committee members voted. By reading the
"roll call" for each bill, you can see how the entire House or Senate
voted on any bill. The beauty of the web site is that ALL this
information is available, on line, to any citizen.

GET THE WORD OUT: If you want to subscribe to the GOAL Post by e-mail,
send a message to "mailto:jwaldron%40halcyon.com". Please pass GOAL Post on to
anyone you believe may have an interest in protecting our rights.
Better yet, make a couple of copies of this message, post it on your gun
club's bulletin board, and leave copies with your local gun shop(s).
PERMISSION IS HEREBY GRANTED TO DUPLICATE OR REDISTRIBUTE GOAL POST
PROVIDED IT IS REPRODUCED IN ITS ENTIRETY WITHOUT TEXTUAL MODIFICATION
AND CREDIT IS GIVEN TO GOAL. I can be reached at "mailto:jwaldron%40halcyon.com"
or by telephone at (425) 985-4867. Unfortunately, I am unable to mail
hard copy GOAL Post to individuals. Limited numbers of hard copies MAY
be available at the Second Amendment Foundation book table at WAC gun shows.

If you feel you have received this message in error, or if you no longer
desire to subscribe to the GOAL Post, e-mail "mailto:jwaldron%40halcyon.com" and
place "unsubscribe GOAL Post" in the subject line.

Upcoming WAC gun show(s):

Puyallup 25-26 April

Monroe 2-3 May

"The right of the individual citizen to bear arms in defense of himself,
or the state, shall not be impaired, but nothing in this section shall
be construed as authorizing individuals or corporations to organize,
maintain or employ an armed body of men."

Article 1, Section 24

Constitution of the State of Washington

Copyright 2009 Gun Owners Action League of WA
__,_._,___

Saturday, April 4, 2009

GOAL Post 2009-12

Legislative Update from Olympia 3 April 2009

SB 5739 PASSES LEGISLATURE

HB 1052 IN SENATE RULES

SB 5193 DIES IN COMMITTEE

FINAL THREE WEEKS OF THE SESSION

NO PUBLIC HEARINGS SCHEDULED

SB 5739 (military CPL renewal) passed the legislature and now goes to
the Governor for her signature. Given the unanimous votes in both
chambers, I would not expect a problem with the Governor. The bill
waives the $10 late fee, or complete new application requirement if
expired more than 90 days, for service members returning from overseas
deployments.

HBs 1052, 1114 and 1498 are all in Senate Rules, awaiting a pull to the
floor for a full vote of the Senate. Again, given the unanimous votes
on 1052 and 1498, I would not expect a problem in passing the Senate.
HB 1114 received 70 votes in the House, so it, too, is likely to pass
the Senate.

SB 5193 (alien firearm licenses) died in committee at the policy cut-off
this past Monday. While the approach is somewhat different, HB 1052
accomplishes essentially the same task as SB 5193.

There are three weeks left in the 2009 regular legislative session. The
legislature MUST adjourn by midnight, 26 April. The bills we are
tracking are moving well within remaining cut-off deadlines.

There are no public hearings scheduled next week on gun-related bills.

BILL STATUS:

The following bills have been filed for the 2009-10 biennium:

Bill # Subject
Sponsor Status

2SHB 1052 Alien firearm licenses Moeller (D-49)
S. Rules

ESHB 1114 Youth hunting age requirement Blake (D-19)
S. Rules

HB 1498 Involuntary commitment Hunter
(D-48) S. Rules

SB 5193 Alien firearm licenses Delvin
(R-8) Died H. Jud

SB 5739 CPL renewal by military members King (R-14)
Passed, to Gov

Key to abbreviations: S. = Senate, H. = House, HB = House Bill, SB =
Senate Bill, 2SHB = Second Substitute House Bill, ESHB = Engrossed
Substitute House Bill, Jud = Judiciary, HS&C = Human Services &
Corrections, NatRes = Natural Resources, Oceans and Recreation

GOAL POSITION ON BILLS

SHB 1052 SUPPORT

HB 1114 SUPPORT

HB 1498 SUPPORT

SB 5739 SUPPORT

HEARINGS SCHEDULED:

There are no public hearings scheduled next week on gun-related bills.

LEGISLATIVE HOT LINE: You may reach your Representatives and Senator by
calling the Legislative Hotline at 1-800-562-6000. Toll free!!! The
hearing impaired may obtain TDD access at 1-800-635-9993. Also toll free!!!

1-800-562-6000 TDD 1-800-635-9993

OTHER DATA: Copies of pending legislation (bills), legislative
schedules and other information are available on the legislature's web
site at "www.leg.wa.gov". Bills are available in Acrobat (.pdf)
format. You may download a free version of Adobe Acrobat Reader from
Adobe's web site (http://www.adobe.com). You may also obtain hard copy
bills, initiatives, etc, in the mail from the Legislative Bill Room FREE
OF CHARGE by calling 1-360-786-7573. Copies of bills may also be
ordered toll free by calling the Legislative Hotline at (800) 562-6000.
You may also hear floor and committee hearing action live at
http://www.tvw.org/ (you need "RealAudio" to do this, available free at
the TVW web site).

By reading the House and Senate "bill reports" (hbr, sbr) for each bill,
you can see how individual committee members voted. By reading the
"roll call" for each bill, you can see how the entire House or Senate
voted on any bill. The beauty of the web site is that ALL this
information is available, on line, to any citizen.

GET THE WORD OUT: If you want to subscribe to the GOAL Post by e-mail,
send a message to "jwaldron@halcyon.com". Please pass GOAL Post on to
anyone you believe may have an interest in protecting our rights.
Better yet, make a couple of copies of this message, post it on your gun
club's bulletin board, and leave copies with your local gun shop(s).
PERMISSION IS HEREBY GRANTED TO DUPLICATE OR REDISTRIBUTE GOAL POST
PROVIDED IT IS REPRODUCED IN ITS ENTIRETY WITHOUT TEXTUAL MODIFICATION
AND CREDIT IS GIVEN TO GOAL. I can be reached at "jwaldron@halcyon.com"
or by telephone at (425) 985-4867. Unfortunately, I am unable to mail
hard copy GOAL Post to individuals. Limited numbers of hard copies MAY
be available at the Second Amendment Foundation book table at WAC gun shows.

If you feel you have received this message in error, or if you no longer
desire to subscribe to the GOAL Post, e-mail "jwaldron@halcyon.com" and
place "unsubscribe GOAL Post" in the subject line.

Upcoming WAC gun show(s):

Monroe 4-5 April

Puyallup 25-26 April

"The right of the individual citizen to bear arms in defense of himself,
or the state, shall not be impaired, but nothing in this section shall
be construed as authorizing individuals or corporations to organize,
maintain or employ an armed body of men."

Article 1, Section 24

Constitution of the State of Washington

Copyright 2009 Gun Owners Action League of WA