-
Advisory Panel
(Deceased Feb 2023)
The last thing NJ needs right now is another business departure.
NJ is happy to ruin any gun business. I know the owner very well and this is not the first time the state has tried to destroy his business. Each time somebody else caused the problem, yet the state police and the legal system went after the business, not the guilty party.
-
-
02-15-2011 10:05 PM
# ADS
Friends and Sponsors
-
It sounds like modern day witch hunts there.
-
-
-
Legacy Member
I beleive I read that the new N.J. gov pardoned a gentleman convicted of gun crimes (I.E.) moving his unloaded lock cased firearms into his new home even though he called local authorities before the move. I beleive the crime was not having the proper licences.
Maybe there is hope for Joisey. The Gov also allowed a bear season of which I understand there is a healthy population that was beginning to be a problem.
Seems to be a problem with large dangerous animals that when they lose their fear of man. I beleive that California is experiencing that with large felines encroaching on the suburbs looking for an easy meal. Liberals you gotta love them (?)
-
-
Legacy Member
Something like 10 years back California bannned mountain lion hunts. It has resulted in a mountain lion population explosion. Understand now, a healthy mountain lion will eat 1-2 deer a week. Needless to say the deer population is nearly gone in California. The Fish and Game folks have urged mountain lion hunts for the past several years. But the initial ban was done via a state wide proposition and it can be overturned only by anoither proposition. This is called a "Can of Worms".
-
-
Advisory Panel
(Deceased Feb 2023)
I beleive the crime was not having the proper licences.
Not so. Actually the judge refused to inform the jury that the law allowed him to move into NJ with unloaded firearms. He needed no license to move into the state with legal unloaded firearms in the trunk.
The judge was not re-appointed by the governor. This is just one example of the system convicting an individual on a gun charge, when he did nothing wrong.'
Another example was a guy spent over 6 months in jail, only to be released once Evan Nappen took over his case. He was convicted of possessing hollow point .22 caliber ammunition in his home. One big problem. The law made possession of hollow point ammunition illegal, but excluding one's home from the law. Having it in one's house was perfectly legal. Unfortunately the prosecutor and judge, who knew the law, were protected against a lawsuit. The original defense attorney may have been sued, I am not sure.
Another guy, from Utah, was arrested and spent thousands of legal defense dollars for a pistol that was being transported legally according to Federal Laws within Newark Airport. It is a long story, too long to go into. Eventually he was released, but it took Evan Nappen, several court hearings, and communication from Federal Prosecutors to eventually get him free. He spent over a week in a filthy county prison before being released on bail. It cost him a fortune and several trips across the country to the NJ court system.
The mission by the NJ State Police, the Legal System, and the liberal legislators is to convict as many law abiding citizens as possible with gun laws. With all those convictions they can claim that gun violations are increasing, therefore stricter laws are required. One has to understand NJ and its attitude toward gun owners.
NJ should rot in he11.
-