Legal Defenses Against Gun Confiscation Part 1
Legal
Defenses Against Gun Confiscation Part 1
We are offering methods besides writing your Congressman.
You may want to save this as reference material. The following is applicable to California
and other People’s Republic states such as Connecticut, New Jersey, and Maryland.
Coming will be other articles on the "how to" defend yourself against the
tyranny that is coming: Running Campaigns, Unregistering Your Gun, and Effective Lobbying.
Just Say, "Go
Away."
Rights are like muscles, you must exercise them or they
gradually weaken. The following information is provided as a public service by The
Lawyer's Second Amendment Society, Inc.
Disclaimer: The following is not legal advice but is for informational purposes only.
You should use your own judgment and/or consult an attorney before deciding what to do.
August 20, 1999 The Attorney General of the State of California ("AG") is
embarking on a massive effort to confiscate firearms (so-called "assault
weapons") in the possession of United States citizens residing in the State of
California. You may see evidence of this at http://www.sksbuyback.org. The Attorney
General, Bill Lockyer, plans to have his agents attempt to trick the citizens into
voluntarily handing over these firearms to them. Luckily for the citizens, they have
protections from such trickery. You need to know how to assert your rights if you want to
defeat this trickery, whether in this instance or in the future as the government becomes
even more depraved as it tries to take away more and more of our inalienable rights.
Following is some information about your rights that the government hopes you don't know.
Our right to keep and bear arms is one of those inalienable rights "endowed by
[our] Creator," as set forth in the Declaration of Independence. The GunTruths.com
web site (http://www.GunTruths.com) provides ample evidence that our right to keep and
bear arms is an inalienable, individual right retained by the people and protected and
guaranteed by the Bill of Rights. We must use the Bill of Rights to preserve and protect
our rights. We must not voluntarily cede our inalienable rights to the government.
Inalienable rights, by their nature, cannot be given, or taken, away.
The AG hopes that the good citizens residing in California will voluntarily cede their
right to keep and bear arms. The government of California is embarking on a test of the
citizens residing in California to see whether they will voluntarily turn in their SKS
Sporters and register their "assault weapons." If the good citizens residing in
California voluntarily turn in their SKS Sporters, and register these other weapons
voluntarily, the AG will have achieved its goal at relatively little cost, and will have
learned that even the gun-owning citizens are weak and ignorant of their rights. The
ultimate goal of the current government of the State of California is to slowly,
incrementally, confiscate all firearms of military pattern so that the citizens will no
longer have the means to be the "well regulated militia, necessary to the security of
a free State," referenced in the Second Amendment to the United States Constitution.
The AG hopes that the good citizens residing in California will not know, and assert,
the rights their forefathers fought and died for. The AG hopes it will be able to
intimidate the good people into voluntarily turning in, or registering, their weapons by
threatening them with felony prosecutions, and jail sentences. These threats are being
communicated on the internet, in letters to selected individuals and through
advertisements on the radio and through other media.
What The Government Hopes
Won't Happen
What if the good citizens did the following upon
receiving a knock on their doors?
The citizen calls through the door, "Who is it?"
The reply is, "I'm police officer/deputy sheriff/special agent Smith."
The citizen replies, "Go away. I'm not interested in spending any of my time
talking to you. Get off my property."
That should do it. The agent of the government might be a little more persistent, but
if the good citizen understands, and asserts, his rights against the government, the above
scenario is all that should happen.
Why? Because no citizen is required to talk to anyone from the government unless he
wants to. You have the right to be left alone. Unless the government has probable cause to
suspect you of a crime, you are free to be left alone. You do not even have to produce
"identity papers." Yet. The Fifth Amendment protects the citizen's right to be
free from incriminating himself in a criminal case.
What The Government Hopes
Will Happen
Upon knocking on your door, and you opening it, the
police officer/deputy sheriff/special agent will say, "I'm Officer Smith and this is
my partner Officer Jones. We understand you are in possession of an illegal assault weapon
and we're here to retrieve it." They may wave papers in your face, such as a record
of sale.
You say, "Oh, well in that case, come on in. I'll show you where it is. I figured
you'd find me."
Then they will confiscate your firearm and arrest you. Later, when your attorney files
a motion to suppress the evidence before your trial, the judge will deny the motion on the
grounds that you volunteered the evidence to the police. You will then be convicted of
being in possession of an "illegal" firearm.
Other Things You May Want
To Think About
If you are in possession of a so-called
"illegal" SKS Sporter or "assault weapon," you should consider
purchasing an inexpensive dictation tape recorder and an inexpensive video camera, and
keeping it near your front door. When the agents from the government (and they will come
in pairs, as they are cowardly) come to your door, you should be in a position to gather
evidence of their trickeries. They will try to trick you.
For example, they may say, "We know you have an illegal firearm in your house. We
want it. It is illegal for you to have it. You must let us in, pursuant to the new
law." And, as mentioned above, they may say they have "evidence" that a
certain weapon was sold to you.
One response would be the same as above, "Go away. I'm not interested in spending
any of my time talking to you. Get off my property. I'm recording this."
Tell them you are recording this event. That will get their attention. You may want to
set up a system whereby you can speed dial your phone to a neighbor who can also be
videotaping the officers outside your door.
Another alternative response could by, "Slide your search warrant under my
door." The government agents will almost certainly not have a search warrant,
provided you have been very circumspect in the recent past about what firearms you own.
Why, then, would it be almost certain that the government agents will not have a search
warrant? Because, according to the Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution,
"no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation,
and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be
seized." Did you know that Article 1 of the California Constitution is a Declaration
of Rights, and that section 13 of the Declaration of Rights says: "The right of the
people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers and effects against unreasonable
seizures and searches may not be violated; and a warrant may not issue except on probable
cause, supported by oath or affirmation, particularly describing the place to be searched
and the persons and things to be seized?" (The full text of the California
Constitution can be found at http://www.ca.gov/s/govt/govcode.html.
You must ask yourself this question, "What judge is going to issue a search
warrant to search my home for an allegedly illegal firearm, if I haven't had anyone in my
home recently who might be a snitch, who would be able to say under oath, 'I saw this man
in possession of an illegal firearm of a certain type, and it was stored in this location
in his house and I saw it this morning?'" If the only "evidence" the
government has is that months earlier you purchased a certain weapon, that in itself would
only tell a judge that on that date you may have been in possession of that firearm. In
the meantime, you could have disposed of it (you could have thrown it away in your trash),
you might have dismantled it, thrown it in a lake, taken it out of state, etc., etc.
If you have not advertised to anyone your possession of your "illegal"
firearms, it is highly unlikely that the government will have sufficient evidence that
probable cause exists that you are in possession of illegal contraband (that is, that you
are in possession of an "illegal" firearm). Thus, you must ask yourself whether
you are able to take the small risk that you are wrong.
Even if the government agent has obtained a search warrant, after complying with the
search, you may challenge the legal sufficiency of the search warrant. The government will
have to sustain its burden of proof that the required showing of probable cause was
actually based on credible, recent evidence. This will be a heavy burden, because in every
case the eyewitness claiming that you were in possession of the "illegal"
firearm would have to make a showing that your possession was close in time to the
issuance of the warrant and that the eyewitness was in a position to "particularly
describ[e] the place to be searched and the persons and things to be seized"
according to the dictates of the Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution and
section 13 of the Declaration of Rights of the California Constitution. In every case, the
government will only have reason to suspect that you are in possession of the
"illegal" firearm based upon some information they received many months ago. It
is just as likely that you are no longer in possession of the "illegal" firearm
as it is that it is still in your possession; therefore, without more, there is no
probable cause to believe you are currently violating the law. Since you may not be
required to answer any of the government's questions about whether you are in possession
of an "illegal" firearm, the government has no way of finding out whether its
suspicions are correct.
If you really want to have some fun, and burn up some of the government agents' time
(taking away time they might otherwise use to try to trick other citizens of their
firearms), you may want to do the following:
When they identify themselves outside your door, slide a Public Servant Questionnaire
under the door to each of them, and tell them you'd be happy to talk to them if they will
answer each of the questions set forth on the form. You may get a copy of the Public
Servant Questionnaire at http://www.GunTruths.com
(click on the cartridge above "I Believe In Self Defense" and then scroll down
to the "Get Involved" heading). If you do this, it is doubtful they will
continue to talk to you. Probably, they will have been told not to waste their time on
citizens who seem to understand their rights and they will leave and go to the next name
and address on their list.
Assuming they do fill out the form completely, you may want to then ask them whether
they are armed with loaded firearms. If they say yes, you should tell them that you will
let them into your house to talk with them only if they will return without their
firearms. Then you should also tell them that you'd like to first obtain some witnesses to
eyewitness the meeting in your home, and further explain that you'd like to have them sit
in front of your pre-positioned video camera and near your tape recorder. If they tell you
that you don't have the right to audiotape and videotape them, they will be lying.
Remember, these are your public servants. Then let them come into your house, unarmed, to
ask your permission to answer some questions. Let them ask whatever questions they choose.
In response to each, simply say, "I choose not to answer that question." Or you
might ask them, in response to every question they ask, whether you are required to answer
the question. Again, you'll have this all on audio tape and videotape and have at least
one witness. When they are finished, politely show them the door.
Use your imagination.
Another Right We Have At Our Disposal That The Government
Fears
Under Article VI of the United States Constitution, and Sections 15 and 16 of the
Declaration of Rights in the California Constitution, all defendants in criminal
prosecutions shall enjoy the right to a speedy trial, by an impartial jury of twelve
jurors. The AG does not want to be faced with overcoming the foregoing hurdles, plus
having to convince all twelve jurors on a jury that you ought to go to jail just because
you were in possession of what just a few months earlier had been perfectly legal to own.
The AG fears fully informed jurors who know that they have the power to judge both the law
and the facts, and who will be willing to acquit you of the victimless crime of possessing
an "illegal" firearm that was formerly perfectly legal to own. You should learn
more about the Fully Informed Jury Association (FIJA), which is on the Links page at The
Lawyer's Second Amendment Society, Inc. web site, http://www.thelsas.org.
The Bill of Rights of the United States Constitution is short, to the point and written
in English. The Fourth Amendment is easy to understand. The Attorney General hopes you
don't understand any of your rights. Don't let them trick you. If the first one hundred
attempts at trickery fail, the government will give up. Don't be fooled. Learn your rights
and exercise them!
Disclaimer: The foregoing is not legal advice but is for informational purposes only.
You should use your own judgment or consult an attorney before deciding what to do.
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