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States Considering Firearm Protection Acts

carbinemike

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What every state needs:

Several Wyoming lawmakers are proposing legislation designed to protect gun-owners from any potential federal firearm ban. The “Firearms Protection Act” bill, introduced this week, would make any federal law banning semi-automatic firearms or limiting the size of gun magazines unenforceable within the state’s boundaries.
Anyone trying to enforce a federal gun ban could face felony charges under the proposal. It also includes a provision allowing the Wyoming Attorney General’s office to defend any state resident against any federal firearm ban.


I tried to copy the text of the bill here but it wouldn't let me so...
http://k2radio.com/wyoming-house-bill-no-hb0104-firearm-protection-act/
 
Re: Wyoming Firearm Protection Act

I’m glad that they modified the statute to include “owned” in addition to “manufactured” in the state.
 
Re: Wyoming Firearm Protection Act

In light of the bad news from NY, some good news from Texas.

A Texas lawmaker says he plans to file the Firearms Protection Act, which would make any federal laws that may be passed by Congress or imposed by Presidential order which would ban or restrict ownership of semi-automatic firearms or limit the size of gun magazines illegal in the state, 1200 WOAI news reports.

Republican Rep. Steve Toth says his measure also calls for felony criminal charges to be filed against any federal official who tries to enforce the rule in the state.

"If a federal official comes into the state of Texas to enforce the federal executive order, that person is subject to criminal prosecution," Toth told 1200 WOAI's Joe Pags Tuesday. He says his bill would make attempting to enforce a federal gun ban in Texas punishable by a $50,000 fine and up to five years in prison.

Toth says he will file his measure after speaking with the state's Republican Attorney General, Greg Abbott, who has already vowed to fight any federal measures which call for restrictions on weapons possession.

Toth concedes that he would welcome a legal fight over his proposals.

"At some point there needs to be a showdown between the states and the federal government over the Supremacy Clause," he said.

The Supremacy Clause is the portion of the Constitution which declares that federal laws and statutes are 'the supreme law of the land.'


"It is our responsibility to push back when those laws are infringed by King Obama," Toth said.

Texas is the second state to propose a measure to shield the state from the impact of any gun possession restrictions imposed by Congress or by Presidential order. A similar measure was introduced in Wyoming last week.
 
Re: Wyoming Firearm Protection Act

I think us Texans will stick together on this one. Glad to see Texas and Wyoming are standing strong for what they believe in


They call me Sharpie.....I leave permanent marks baby!!!
 
Re: Wyoming Firearm Protection Act

I am already making plans to head to Texas...
 
Re: Wyoming Firearm Protection Act

Looking into potentially heading south myself. Fell in love with the Corpus Christi area and my marriage certificate is from Bexar County.
 
Re: Wyoming Firearm Protection Act

I'm pretty sure that a similiar WV bill has 10 cosponsors already, and I am hammering my local rep to submit one as well.

And besides me pasting all the pertinent info to him, I even told him that if he didn't/couldn't /wouldn't submit it, then to kindly point me to the person who would.

Sadly, about 2 years ago, KY had a bill, very similiar to the one that TN voted into law, but for some reason, the pressure wasn't on enough to bring it to a vote like I feel that it is now.

But I'm staying on my rep's to do it too.

This info is a little dated, but here's a color coded map chart of which states have one, and which ones have submitted bills.

http://firearmsfreedomact.com/state-by-state/
 
Re: Wyoming Firearm Protection Act

TX Rep. Stockmen threatens impeachment processes if President continues to legislate through executive order and thus sidestepping the proper channels of Congressional process as written in the Constitution.

http://video.foxnews.com/v/2096824748001/
 
Missouri Bill Proposes Jail Time for Feds...

Violating the 2nd Amendment!

Whole article here: http://blog.tenthamendmentcenter.com/20 ... amendment/

Excerpt:

“Any official, agent, or employee of the federal government who enforces or attempts to enforce any act, order, law, statute, rule, or regulation of the federal government upon a personal firearm, a firearm accessory, or ammunition that is owned or manufactured commercially or privately in the state of Missouri and that remains exclusively within the borders of the state of Missouri shall be guilty of a class D felony.”

While a number of states, including Wyoming, South Carolina, Indiana, and others – are looking to go head to head with the feds on specific issues under the 2nd amendment, the Missouri legislation is the strongest introduced anywhere in the country so far.

“When you’ve got people like Feinstein talking about major bans and Biden telling us that all they need is an executive order, you know these folks are willing to go all the way. So, it’s good to see these folks in Missouri go all the way as well, all the way in support the 2nd Amendment without any ifs, ands, or butts. The feds have absolutely zero constitutional authority to make any laws over personal firearms. Period.”

New York will be contested on deeper constitutional issues. Cuomo cut his political throat being a test for the federal attempt!
 
Re: Missouri Bill Proposes Jail Time for Feds...

There seems to be many states enacting laws and bills that would imprison Federal Employees or Fine them in excess of $250,000 if they try to enforce various things the Gov't wants to. I think it is an awesome show of the power that the states actually have and want to maintain. If they want us to remain in the states and defend them with our 2a rights they need to defend us!
 
Re: Missouri Bill Proposes Jail Time for Feds...

So far MO is the big gorilla (a super gun state!) - if a few other swing states like FL and OH would do the same the message would, possibly, be undeniable!
 
PA has joined the states trying to enact firearm protection laws! I have been in contact with my rep, and he is one of the sponsors. No idea where it will go but I'm glad they are trying to defend us.

Three state representatives from Lancaster County have signed onto a bill that would try to block any new federal gun-control laws in Pennsylvania.

Co-sponsors of the Right to Bear Arms Protection Act include Bryan Cutler, Gordon Denlinger and Dave Hickernell. The chief sponsor is Rep. Daryl Metcalfe of Butler County.

They join 49 other Republicans and two Democrats in the state House in pushing the bill, referred to the Judiciary Committee.

The bill would render unenforceable any federal law, regulation or order that "attempts to register, restrict or ban the ownership or purchase of a firearm, magazine of a firearm, firearm accessory or ammunition."

The bill would make it a felony for any federal employee to attempt to register, ban or restrict the purchase or ownership of guns or gun accessories that currently are legal in Pennsylvania.

The bill also instructs the Pennsylvania attorney general to defend any state resident prosecuted by the federal government.
 
And on the other side, some states legislators (WA) want house to house 'inspections'. The cat is out of the bag. The true agenda is revealed.

One of the major gun-control efforts in Olympia this session calls for the sheriff to inspect the homes of assault-weapon owners. The bill’s backers say that was a mistake.

Forget police drones flying over your house. How about police coming inside, once a year, to have a look around?

As Orwellian as that sounds, it isn’t hypothetical. The notion of police home inspections was introduced in a bill last week in Olympia.

That it’s part of one of the major gun-control efforts pains me. It seemed in recent weeks lawmakers might be headed toward some common-sense regulation of gun sales. But then last week they went too far. By mistake, they claim. But still too far.

“They always say, we’ll never go house to house to take your guns away. But then you see this, and you have to wonder.”

That’s no gun-rights absolutist talking, but Lance Palmer, a Seattle trial lawyer and self-described liberal who brought the troubling Senate Bill 5737 to my attention. It’s the long-awaited assault-weapons ban, introduced last week by three Seattle Democrats.

Responding to the Newtown school massacre, the bill would ban the sale of semi-automatic weapons that use detachable ammunition magazines. Clips that contain more than 10 rounds would be illegal.

But then, with respect to the thousands of weapons like that already owned by Washington residents, the bill says this:

“In order to continue to possess an assault weapon that was legally possessed on the effective date of this section, the person possessing shall ... safely and securely store the assault weapon. The sheriff of the county may, no more than once per year, conduct an inspection to ensure compliance with this subsection.”

In other words, come into homes without a warrant to poke around. Failure to comply could get you up to a year in jail.

“I’m a liberal Democrat — I’ve voted for only one Republican in my life,” Palmer told me. “But now I understand why my right-wing opponents worry about having to fight a government takeover.”

He added: “It’s exactly this sort of thing that drives people into the arms of the NRA.”

I have been blasting the NRA for its paranoia in the gun-control debate. But Palmer is right — you can’t fully blame them, when cops going door-to-door shows up in legislation.

I spoke to two of the sponsors. One, Sen. Adam Kline, D-Seattle, a lawyer who typically is hyper-attuned to civil-liberties issues, said he did not know the bill authorized police searches because he had not read it closely before signing on.

“I made a mistake,” Kline said. “I frankly should have vetted this more closely.”

That lawmakers sponsor bills they haven’t read is common. Still, it’s disappointing on one of this political magnitude. Not counting a long table, it’s only an eight-page bill.

The prime sponsor, Sen. Ed Murray, D-Seattle, also condemned the search provision in his own bill, after I asked him about it. He said Palmer is right that it’s probably unconstitutional.

“I have to admit that shouldn’t be in there,” Murray said.

He said he came to realize that an assault-weapons ban has little chance of passing this year anyway. So he put in this bill more as “a general statement, as a guiding light of where we need to go.” Without sweating all the details.

Later, a Senate Democratic spokesman blamed unnamed staff and said a new bill will be introduced.

Murray had alluded at a gun-control rally in January that progress on guns could take years.

“We will only win if we reach out and continue to change the hearts and minds of Washingtonians,” Murray said. “We can attack them, or start a dialogue.”

Good plan, very bad start. What’s worse, the case for the perfectly reasonable gun-control bills in Olympia just got tougher.

More: http://seattletimes.com/html/localnews/ ... 17xml.html
 
Far as I know, according to the 4th AND 5th amendment, even if they are at your door, you do not have to answer it, nor do you have to speak to or answer them.

I'd make them get a search warrant every time they wanted to do a compliance check and search the home.
 
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