WSJ: Free Plaxico Burress - New York City's gun law is unconstitutional.

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http://online.wsj.com/article/SB122835270947177981.html


New York Giants star receiver Plaxico Burress is facing a mandatory 3½ years in prison and the end of his football career. His crime? Not having a license, which New York City never would have issued him, for the exercise of his constitutional right to bear arms.

To be sure, Mr. Burress got caught because of what appears to have been stupid and irresponsible behavior connected with the handgun. But he does not face prison for shooting himself. His impending mandatory sentence highlights the unfairness and unconstitutionality of New York City's draconian gun laws.

Mr. Burress had previously had a handgun carry permit issued by Florida, for which he was required to pass a fingerprint-based background check. As a player for the Giants, he moved to Totowa, N.J., where he kept a Glock pistol. And last Friday night, he reportedly went to the Latin Quarter nightclub in midtown Manhattan carrying the loaded gun in his sweatpants. Because New York state permits to possess or carry handguns are not issued to nonresidents, Mr. Burress could not apply for a New York City permit.

At the nightclub, the handgun accidentally discharged, shooting Mr. Burress in the right thigh. He was not seriously injured, but he has been charged with criminal possession of a weapon in the second degree.

It appears that he put the unholstered gun in the waistband of his sweatpants, and when it slipped, he grabbed for it, accidentally hitting the trigger. To make matters worse, according to press accounts, he was seen drinking and may have been consuming alcohol -- which all firearms safety training (including the class he would have been required to take for his Florida permit) absolutely forbids for people handling guns. And of course Mr. Burress's handgun should have been holstered to prevent unintentional movement of the trigger. Fortunately, his negligent discharge did not harm anyone else.

Mr. Burress's behavior was bad. However, Mr. Burress is not facing prosecution for carelessness, but simply for carrying a weapon. This is unjust and perhaps unconstitutional. The legal issues are a bit tangled, but here is the background:

This summer, the Supreme Court ruled in District of Columbia v. Heller that the District's handgun ban, and its ban on use of any firearm for self-defense in the home, violated the Second Amendment, which guarantees the individual right to bear arms. D.C. is a federal enclave, and the Court did not rule whether the Second Amendment applies to state and local governments. But as other cases reach it in the wake of Heller, it will.

The Heller decision did not say that requiring a license to carry a gun was unconstitutional. But in New York State, nonresidents cannot even apply for the licenses to possess or carry a handgun. Unlike most other states, New York refuses to honor carry permits issued by sister states. Most observers believe that the Supreme Court will eventually make state and local governments obey the Second Amendment. If it does, New York's discrimination against nonresidents will probably be ruled unconstitutional.

And then there is the issue of the permitting process for residents. In 40 states, including Connecticut, law-abiding adults are issued permits once they pass a fingerprint-based background check and a safety class. In New Jersey, carry permits are virtually never issued. In New York City, carry permits are issued, but to applicants with some form of political clout rather than on the basis of his or her need for protection.

The Second Amendment might not require New Jersey or New York City to issue as liberally as Connecticut does. But with a population of several million and only a few thousand (consisting mainly of politicians, retired police and celebrities) able to get permits, New York City's licensing process is almost certainly unconstitutional on a number of grounds, including sheer arbitrariness.

Some commentators contend that Plaxico Burress should have hired bodyguards, instead of carrying a gun himself. Mr. Burress might now agree. But people who aren't as wealthy as he is also deserve to be safe, and they don't have the money for bodyguards. New York City needs to regularize its carry permit system so that law-abiding people can protect themselves, especially if their circumstances (such as being a witness to a gang crime) place them at heightened risk.

The Burress case also shows why mandatory sentences are a bad idea. He was careless but had no malign intent. Legislators and mayors like to appear tough by pushing through such draconian laws. Yet the victims are people like Mr. Burress whose conduct may have been improper, but who do not deserve the same sentences meted out to robbers and burglars.

Mr. Kopel is a policy analyst with the Cato Institute, in Washington, D.C., and research director of the Independence Institute, in Golden, Colo.
 
Here's another one that's pretty decent.

The Persecution of Plaxico Burress

by Johnny Kramer

Plaxico Burress, the New York Giants wide receiver responsible for catching the game-winning touchdown in this year's Super Bowl, accidentally shot himself in the leg with a gun he had in his pants last week in a New York City nightclub.

Since Burress' pistol was unregistered in New York, he has been charged with two counts of second-degree criminal possession of a weapon in what prosecutors call "a strong case." If he's convicted, Burress – who apparently has never been in any significant legal trouble before – will face a mandatory minimum of 3½ years in state prison for each count, with a potential maximum of 15 years for each count.

And, while New York doesn't recognize registrations from other states anyway, Burress' gun was also unregistered in New Jersey, where he lives, so it's possible that he could face further charges there over the incident.

Burress appeared in Manhattan Criminal Court on Monday, showing no limp or other signs of the injury. He didn't enter a plea, was released on $100,000 bond, and was ordered to return to court on March 31.

The "crime"

According to The New York Times, "Burress arrived at the Latin Quarter nightclub in Manhattan at 1:20 a.m. Saturday morning, with four others, including two teammates.

"The criminal complaint, released by prosecutors Monday, said that an onlooker then saw Burress near the V.I.P. area of the club holding a drink in his left hand and fidgeting his right hand in the area of the waistline of his pants. The witness then heard a single 'pop' sound before hearing Burress say, 'Take me to the hospital.'

"Burress was on the ground, with his legs shaking, when a bloody gun – a .40-caliber Glock pistol – fell out of his pant leg and onto the floor, the onlooker said. The bullet, which broke through the skin of Burress's right thigh and pierced muscle tissue, traveled through the leg before lodging itself somewhere in the club.

"Burress left the club by 1:50 a.m., the police said, and arrived at the hospital at 2:04 a.m., according to surveillance cameras at the hospital."

The parasites must have smelled Burress' blood

Burress was driven to the hospital by teammate Antonio Pierce. According to The San Francisco Chronicle,"The cover-up, police sources said, began almost immediately. The .40-caliber Glock was placed in the glove compartment of Pierce's Escalade and the teammates drove off, with a number of phone calls made before Burress arrived at New York-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center at 2:04 a.m., the sources said. Burress gave an alias, sources said, and the hospital did not call police, though it was required by law to do so.

"Burress left the hospital at 1 p.m. Saturday, and when police called a short time later – alerted to the shooting by a television news report – an administrator claimed confidentiality laws prohibited her from discussing patients.

"Later, a high-ranking police official called the administrator and told her she was wrong, at which point the administrator acknowledged Burress had been admitted, sources said.

"The hospital said it is cooperating with police and is doing its own investigation."

Now, the Chronicle story reported, Pierce and some of the hospital staff who treated Burress may also face charges.

"'We are investigating both the hospital's failure to report the shooting and Antonio Pierce's role that evening,' Deputy Commissioner Paul Browne, the NYPD's top spokesman, said after Burress surrendered and was charged with gun possession for accidentally shooting himself at Manhattan's Latin Quarter nightclub.

"Pierce, meanwhile, seemed confident he did nothing wrong. 'I don't see myself getting arrested,' he said Monday in an interview on WFAN Radio.

"Police said neither the NFL nor the Giants are fully cooperating.

"The NFL, Browne said, reneged on its promise to make Pierce available Monday and a similar promise to produce two Giants trainers went unfulfilled.

"The trainers, police sources said, might have been among those contacted by Burress and others to discuss treating him without police knowing.

"By late Monday, one member of the Giants' medical staff did talk to detectives, as did a players' union official.

"'You have a series of events, and there is a universe of silence after this shooting,' Browne said.

"Previous reports described Burress as alerting club security to his gun and accidentally firing it as he tried to hand it to a security member. Police, however, said that was not the case."

New York News Day reported that New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg "blasted Giants receiver Plaxico Burress yesterday, calling for him to be prosecuted 'to the fullest extent of the law' for accidentally shooting himself in the right thigh with an illegal handgun – particularly because as a sports hero, he is both a public figure and a role model.

"'If we don't prosecute [him] to the fullest extent of the law, I don't know who on Earth we would,' Bloomberg said. 'It makes a sham, a mockery of the law. And it's pretty hard to argue the guy didn't have a gun and that it wasn't loaded. You've got bullet holes in and out to show that it was there.'

"Burress' attorney, Benjamin Brafman, asked people not to prejudge the case.

"'I think the mayor can at times influence pending legal proceedings,' he said. 'I am just asking the mayor and everyone else to take a deep breath ... [and not prejudge].'

"Bloomberg has made his war on illegal guns a signature issue. He also had harsh words for the hospital where Burress was treated, New York-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center. He said hospital management should be charged for failing to report the incident, and that the hospital workers involved should be fired.

"'It is just an outrage that the hospital didn't do what they are legally required to do,' he said. 'It's a lame excuse that they didn't know – this is a world-class hospital in a city where we all know what goes on in the streets of our city, and we all should be working together to get guns off the streets.'

The statement "we all should be working together to get guns off the streets" is shockingly immoral and fascist – and laughably impossible, even if it were a lofty goal.

The News Day story continued, "Police didn't learn what had happened until they saw it on the television news Saturday afternoon, several hours after the shooting occurred at a Manhattan nightclub, Bloomberg and police officials said. The mayor also blamed Giants management for failing to notify authorities.

"'The Giants should have picked up the phone right away, as good corporate citizens,' he said.

Quick, somebody add "good corporate citizens" to the list of creepy fascist terms before we forget it.

In rebuttal to Bloomberg's charges, News Day concluded, "Pat Hanlon, a spokesman for the Giants, disputed this. 'In the early hours of Saturday morning, as we started to get a sense of what we were dealing with, we did, in fact, notify NFL security, which then contacted the police,' Hanlon said in an e-mailed statement."

It's understandable that any one person or organization doesn't want to further provoke the State. But wouldn't it be great, just once, for a large organization in a situation like this – like the NFL – rather than bowing and scraping before their masters and timidly pledging their "full cooperation" (with the State's attempts to gather evidence to shake them down for money or even to lock them in cages for non-crimes), to tell the State – as the average 18th- or 19th-Century American likely would have – to f**k off?

Who's the victim?

To summarize, Burress is being prosecuted not for damaging another person's body or property, for which that person has filed a complaint, seeking restitution and/or damages; he's being prosecuted for not having a permission slip from the State to carry his own property. And the people who helped him get medical treatment are being threatened for not turning Burress in to the State for not having a permission slip and because the piece of his property, for which he didn't have a permission slip, involved in the victimless incident happened to be a gun; and for not cooperating with the State, once the non-crime came to its attention, in helping it gather evidence to prosecute Burress for the non-crime, and possibly to prosecute them for their involvement in the non-crime too.

The despicable treatment by the State of Burress, and the equally despicable threatening of those who went out of their way to help him with his accidental injury, is another example of the State's hegemonic relationship with the people it "serves," as Butler Shaffer has quipped, "the way a cannibal 'serves' his neighbor."

In a free society, Burress would be responsible for paying his hospital bill and for any damage to the nightclub, after which he could put the whole unpleasant accident behind him and get on with his life.

Instead, the State is going to ruin Burress' career and life, and cause unspeakable anguish for his loved ones, by locking him in a cage inside a socialist hellhole for a "crime" that hurt no one except for himself – and even that, just barely. The only victim in this "crime" is Burress.

State "justice"

The State is not what keeps the amorphous, ill-defined entity it calls "society" from descending into "chaos."

And its criminal "justice" system does not exist to make victims whole again; rather, it's a giant make-work scam for parasitical "law enforcement" officials, politicians, and court employees. As the sickening Burress case shows, much of the State's "law enforcement" consists of work that wouldn't exist in a free society, prosecuting victimless crimes and trying to outlaw peaceful, voluntary behavior.

And much of the real crime that occurs (like murders and robberies) wouldn't happen if the State weren't creating black markets in commodities like narcotics; forcibly preventing people from defending themselves and their property through things like gun control laws; and socializing property like streets so that there's no owner who has to be concerned about the safety of his paying customers.

And when one of those real crimes occurs, thanks to the wonders of socialism, the victim not only has to pay with his taxes for the police force that failed to protect him or his property (and may also fail to catch a suspect), but if someone is charged, the victim will suffer the further indignity of paying for the trial, and further still of paying for the perpetrator's incarceration if he's convicted.

There's nothing the State can do that the market can't do better, faster, cheaper, and fairer. If the persecution of Plaxico Burress is an example of the State's "justice," how could free market courts be any worse?

December 3, 2008

Johnny Kramer [send him mail] holds a BA in journalism from Wichita State University. He is one of the authors and editors of the first-ever biography of Ron Paul, Ron Paul: a Life of Ideas. For more information on his work, or to hire him as a writer, editor, or to speak at your next event, please visit his website.

Copyright © 2008 LewRockwell.com

Source: http://www.lewrockwell.com/kramer/kramer22.html
 
New York Giants star receiver Plaxico Burress is facing a mandatory 3½ years in prison and the end of his football career. His crime? Not having a license, which New York City never would have issued him, for the exercise of his constitutional right to bear arms.

He needed his Golden Ticket! Just give him the magical, government-issued Golden Ticket and everything would've been fine!

Some commentators contend that Plaxico Burress should have hired bodyguards, instead of carrying a gun himself. Mr. Burress might now agree. But people who aren't as wealthy as he is also deserve to be safe, and they don't have the money for bodyguards. New York City needs to regularize its carry permit system so that law-abiding people can protect themselves, especially if their circumstances (such as being a witness to a gang crime) place them at heightened risk.

And there's another dimension of the whole "body guard" thing. Not only is this a possibility reserved for the top-shelf wealthy; but if Burress isn't able to get a firearms permit, how the hell is his body guards going to?
 
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Plaxico Burress, the New York Giants wide receiver responsible for catching the game-winning touchdown in this year's Super Bowl,

Lock him up and throw away the key...
 
1. He broke the law. He should pay. If I did the same, there wouldn't be any article written about me and I'd be seeing my wife and kids only on the weekends.

2. He's an irresponsible idiot and if he had been issued a permit, it certainly would have been pulled after this incident.

3. Glock. Again.
 
1. He broke the law. He should pay. If I did the same, there wouldn't be any article written about me and I'd be seeing my wife and kids only on the weekends.

So blind obedience to the law is paramount now? How do you feel if there was a law that required that you could only own single shot rifles? Would you still follow it?
 
perhaps he has the $$$ to bring it to a high enough court...

He will if it comes to it- the alternative is giving back a signing bonus and forgoing 3 years of multimillion pay. That's a no-brainer.

The bigger question: Would NYC want to force the issue and take the chance that their gun laws get struck down?
 
There better be an enormous outcry if does anything less than 3.5 years in jail. I am sure there are other not-so-fortunate souls serving the exact sentence right now.
 
So blind obedience to the law is paramount now? How do you feel if there was a law that required that you could only own single shot rifles? Would you still follow it?

It doesn't matter if you like the law or even agree with the law. The bottom line is the fact that it is the law...so you obey it until such time that it is no longer the law. It is the duty of every good American to question any law that limits their rights as this does. It is also their right to challange it and work to change it. But until you are successful in doing so it is still the law and you must comply with it or pay the penalty.

And he has proven his moron status anyways, why chance a problem by carrying where it is illegal (and he knew it), carrying a glock in the waistband of a pair of sweats is just stupid and an accidental discharge waiting to happen, drinking while carrying an illegal concealed handgun is a pair of striped pajamas in your size being held by a new friend called Bubba One Tooth, guaranteed! [slap]
 
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NYC

1. He broke the law. He should pay. If I did the same, there wouldn't be any article written about me and I'd be seeing my wife and kids only on the weekends.

2. He's an irresponsible idiot and if he had been issued a permit, it certainly would have been pulled after this incident.

3. Glock. Again.
*******
That`s not the point. The point is even if he had applied for a permit he most likely would have been denied. The problem is NYC`s refusal to issue carry permits to the average citizen. I hope his lawyer points this out and uses it as a point in his trial.
 
1. He broke the law. He should pay. If I did the same, there wouldn't be any article written about me and I'd be seeing my wife and kids only on the weekends.

An unConstitutional regulation that violates his Rights. Hopefully he has the money to fight it.

2. He's an irresponsible idiot and if he had been issued a permit, it certainly would have been pulled after this incident.

He shouldn't have to be issued a permit to use his Rights and he most certainly shouldn't lose his Rights because of an accident even if it was stupidity.

3. Glock. Again.

I can't disagree here.
 
There better be an enormous outcry if does anything less than 3.5 years in jail. I am sure there are other not-so-fortunate souls serving the exact sentence right now.

Wouldn't you rather him beat the charges and set precedent for non-resident carry?
 
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB122835270947177981.html


New York Giants star receiver Plaxico Burress is facing a mandatory 3½ years in prison and the end of his football career. His crime? Not having a license, which New York City never would have issued him, for the exercise of his constitutional right to bear arms.

Mr. Kopel is a policy analyst with the Cato Institute, in Washington, D.C., and research director of the Independence Institute, in Golden, Colo.
Wow... that was in the Journal?? I'm impressed. Hopefully, he fights it hard and that miserable abortion, the Sullivan Act, will go away.

That`s not the point. The point is even if he had applied for a permit he most likely would have been denied. The problem is NYC`s refusal to issue carry permits to the average citizen. I hope his lawyer points this out and uses it as a point in his trial.
Incorrect; he would very likely HAVE been issued a carry permit for NYC because he's one of the beautiful people. YOU wouldn't get one, I won't get one, my squire sister who lives in Brooklyn won't get one... but he'd likely get one if he'd applied. That's just how NYC works. (Did you know that Steve Tyler of Aerosmith has a NYC carry permit? He does.)

Wouldn't you rather him beat the charges and set precedent for non-resident carry?
I'd love to see it... I'd call up Bloomberg's office just to gloat.
 
Wouldn't you rather him beat the charges and set precedent for non-resident carry?
I really hope this will not be a case used to try and set any precedent around responsible gun ownership and licensing. This will be a high profile case that just feeds into the stereotype of a gangsta sports thug packin' a "foetee".
 
Given what I know: Glock in the waistband at a nightclub while drinking. I disagree, he should loose his rights.

I disagree that anyone should lose their rights over something so menial and stupid. In most of the rest of the US this would have just been a gun accident, not a spanish inquisition.

-Mike
 
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And there's another dimension of the whole "body guard" thing. Not only is this a possibility reserved for the top-shelf wealthy; but if Burress isn't able to get a firearms permit, how the hell is his body guards going to?

If they own a security company in the NYC area there is probably an "out" for them to get permits in the law, etc, eg, like what gets used for rent-a-cops, armored car guys there, etc. Doubt it would be cheap or simple for
them, though.

-Mike
 
There is simply no point in trying to argue one way or the other about the reasons why this should or should not have to go to the courts...

It is very, very simple. In NYC, owning a handgun and being able to carry it in public legally, even by the best shooters in the world, could cause some problems.

Now, this issue IS multi-faceted with regard to NYC proper.

Of the 5 boroughs of the city, Manhattan is certainly the busiest. There are many many places in the other boroughs where one could be plopped down and think they are in some standard suburbia. But only to a point, of course.

For example, if you are walking around in Bay Ridge in Brooklyn, you'd feel like you are in a standard urban area where everyone's lawn is about the size of your reloading machine. But on the sidewalks, you can walk around for a time and see maybe a geriatric walking the dog, or some folks playing chess on the steps of their brownstone.

But in Manhattan, at most any time of day, there are people EVERYWHERE. If anyone here has been in any part of Manhattan from Canal St in Chinatown up through the upper east and west sides, at any time of day except 4 AM, you know that there are people EVERYWHERE.

Imagine what could happen, for those of you whom have experience with Manhattan, if a law-abiding citizen tried to defend him/herself with a handgun at Times Square on a typical late-afternoon? Or at Penn Station? Grand Central? Columbus Circle? The lower west side?

My Lord… One stray bullet and an innocent is wounded/killed. Maybe more than one. There are simply too many people about to have a clear "beyond the target".

I for one do not condone keeping people from having the ability to defend themselves in ANY place or situation. But NYC (Manhattan) is certainly a special case, simply because of it's population density. Maybe we should separate Manhattan from the other 4 boroughs when it comes to gun ownership?

Bleh, besides…Manhattan is one of the safest places on earth, at any time of day. All you need to do is look really pissed-off, or crazy, and nobody will mess with you. ;-)
 
I for one do not condone keeping people from having the ability to defend themselves in ANY place or situation. But NYC (Manhattan) is certainly a special case, simply because of it's population density. Maybe we should separate Manhattan from the other 4 boroughs when it comes to gun ownership?

The problem I have with this statement is this "problem" you speak of- not having a backstop, it could exist anywhere. NYC, Manhattan, whatever, is not "special" in this regard.

By this logic, that means you probably favor banning guns in shopping malls too, around christmastime- you know, because there's too much of a chance that a stray bullet from a defender could hit an innocent bystander... Those malls have a pretty high density of bullet tampons per square foot, too.

By your logic, NYPD shouldn't be allowed to carry guns in Manhattan either. Last I knew their Glocks didn't have
special, "bad guy only" seeking bullets in them that couldn't possibly hurt an innocent bystander.

-Mike
 
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