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WV: Parolee arrested for gun shop burglary
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West Virginia Citizens Defense League, Inc.
Website: http://www.wvcdl.org/
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The Wayne County Sheriff's Office, with the help of the Huntington Police Department, arrested Jonathon Luke Ross, 22, in connection with the robbery of Sam's Gun & Pawn along W.Va. 152, north of Wayne.
The theft happened about 2:40 a.m. Wednesday. Sheriff David Pennington said Ross was found Thursday at an apartment in the 1200 block of 4th Avenue. He is charged with breaking and entering and grand larceny. Pennington said Ross was on parole for a prior felony conviction. |
NY: It�s not all about being top gun
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New York State Rifle & Pistol Association
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When Jimmie Perrin is looking to impress a girl, he�ll point to his black Subaru. �I�ll tell �em I race autocross,� Perrin said. �Everyone wants to be a race car driver, right?� The 28-year-old from Kenmore stays away from mentioning his other hobby. �That I shoot a gun is a hard hurdle to overcome,� Perrin said. �I don�t really tell people right away because I don�t want to scare anybody. If you�ve never been around it, you�re scared.� |
NY: Nassau System Will Pinpoint Gunfire Sites
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New York State Rifle & Pistol Association
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Nassau County police officers responding to a call of shots fired in Roosevelt in June discovered a 21-year-old man dead on the pavement. Potential witnesses would not talk to the police, and it took almost a month for them to track down a suspect in the shooting. Police officials hope that in the near future, a new gunshot-detection system will make such investigations easier. The technology, which the county plans to introduce soon, allows the police to respond to gunshot calls quicker and, they hope, obtain more information before witnesses leave. |
NY: New anti-gun initiative: Enough is Enough
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New York State Rifle & Pistol Association
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The message was loud and clear with this crowd in Albany's West Hill neighborhood: "enough" of the guns that kill. It's a new initiative by the Albany County District Attorney to urge families and victims of gun violence - to stop the bloodshed. "You can disarm voluntarily. You can call Pastor Charlie Muller and make arrangements to turn in your handgun," said Soares. The DA is partnering with Pastor Charlie of the Victory Christian Church, who's already had success getting 47 guns off the streets. By giving out a $150 gift cards for Crossgates Mall in exchange for a fire arm. |
NY: Police attempt to broaden bullet casing database
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New York State Rifle & Pistol Association
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Sgt. Dennis Lyons hunched over the computer as images of two different handgun shell casings appeared on a monitor. He pointed out the similarities in the rounded outer edge and center as he discussed how he was able to match a casing from a gun on file to one found at a crime scene. He placed part of one image atop the other, showing how he concluded police needed to track down the gun whose shell casing matched the one from the Utica case. Lyons was using a computerized gun casing database run by the federal government known as NIBIN, short for National Integrated Ballistics Information Network. It's one of two ballistics networks New York police officers use. The other is the Combined Ballistics Information System, called CoBIS. |
PA: Jones Co. shooting team aims for national title
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New York State Rifle & Pistol Association
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There will be a national youth shooting competition beginning Monday in Mansfield, Pa. High school-age students numbering 300 to 400 will be there. And this year, a team of five Jones County youngsters will join them at the National Rifle Association's Youth Hunter Education Challenge. "Teams from all over the nation will be there," Coach Mike Sutton said. "Even some from Canada. I think we're the only one this side of (Interstate) 95 who will be there. "It's very challenging." |
NJ: Gun control bill gets booster in NJ Senate
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New York State Rifle & Pistol Association
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New Jersey's Assembly has twice-approved legislation limiting people to buying one handgun per month, but the Senate has never followed suit. Now a state senator and urban mayors are vowing to push hard to get final approval for the legislation. "Handgun violence is on the rise, but taking guns off the streets will help to stop the senseless slaughter of our citizens," said Sen. Sandra Bolden Cunningham, D-Hudson. "It's common sense." New Jersey would join Virginia, Maryland and California as states that restrict people to buying one handgun per month. |
Gun backers wary of Obama, lukewarm on McCain
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New York State Rifle & Pistol Association
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The National Rifle Association is selling a yard sign plastered with the slogan: "I'm a bitter gun owner and I vote." The dig at Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama � who once suggested working-class people are bitter about their economic circumstances and "cling to guns and religion" � is part of a planned $40 million NRA push to defeat Obama in a number of swing states with large numbers of hunters, including Ohio, Michigan and Pennsylvania. Political analyst Stuart Rothenberg said the gun lobby's ability to spend huge sums of money could boost turnout for GOP contender John McCain, who has yet to generate enthusiasm among many conservatives. |
IL: Battle over gun rights moves into workplace
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Mark A. Taff
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Winning, as Richard Nixon once demonstrated, makes some people resentful.
No sooner is such a person victorious than he's looking, not to celebrate, but to audit the tax returns of the loser and all of the loser's friends.
The National Rifle Assn. seems like that kind of winner.
The NRA won big last month with the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling in District of Columbia vs. Heller. In a 5-4 decision, the court found for the first time in its history that the Second Amendment confers an individual's right to own firearms. It tossed out D.C.'s 1976 ban on handgun ownership, but said that some restrictions on gun possession may be permitted. |
Fibbies
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mike vanderboegh
Website: http://chris-horton.blogspot.com/
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Busy with other things, I let slide commenting upon the 100th anniversary of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. That is not to say I didn't give some careful thought as to the appropriate words I should use when I finally did set my thoughts to Internet ether. I have had occasion to meet many FBI agents, SACs and ASAC's over the past 15 years. Some, a few, were patriotic Americans who did their best to balance their principles against the demands of an agency the Founders would have found abhorrent to individual liberty. For their troubles, they were transferred to out of the way field offices, harrassed and forced to retire early. Frederick Whitehurst comes first to mind. |
D.C. City Council tries again
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Mark A. Taff
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Thoughtful analysts suggested that a U.S. Supreme Court ruling on the Second Amendment last month was not the "last word" on Americans' right to keep and bear arms. This week, Washington, D.C. officials proved them correct.
High Court justices, ruling in a case from Washington, D.C., decided that Americans have reasonably broad rights under the Second Amendment. Specifically, they said that Washington's ban on ownership of handguns was unconstitutional.
That was good news. It appeared to be an effective curb on local and state government efforts to virtually eliminate private ownership of firearms. |
PA: Hidden militias dragged into light
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Morgan Jones once built a tank out of scrap metal and drove it to church.
During annual potluck parties at his backwoods Clarion County home, he often wowed guests with his homemade flamethrower.
And sometimes, just for fun, he'd entertain friends by shooting an electrical charge through his body to light a bulb.
His wife, Donna, says he's a little eccentric. "I never thought it was illegal to be eccentric," she said. "He's a good man. He's not a terrorist or a domestic threat." Agents from the federal Joint Terrorism Task Force thought otherwise when they arrested Jones last month as he left Sunday Mass in the sleepy hamlet of Lucinda.
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LA: Man dies after being tased 9 times
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Larry
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A police officer shocked a handcuffed Baron "Scooter" Pikes nine times with a Taser after arresting him on a cocaine charge.
Baron Pikes, 21, was Tasered nine times by a police officer in January in Winnfield, Louisiana. Baron Pikes, 21, was Tasered nine times by a police officer in January in Winnfield, Louisiana.
He stopped twitching after seven, according to a coroner's report. Soon afterward, Pikes was dead. Now the officer, since fired, could end up facing criminal charges in Pikes' January death after medical examiners ruled it a homicide. |
OH:�Self defense� says Ohio man who killed black bear
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R.S.G.
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BAKERSVILLE, Ohio (AP) � An eastern Ohio man says he killed a black bear in self defense because the animal charged at him � but he�s been charged with shooting an endangered animal.
John Tanksley says his dog tried to chase the bear away from his property at Newcomerstown in Coshocton (kuh-SHAHK�-tuhn) County but the animal kept coming back.
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VT: Shooting range workshop slated
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New York State Rifle & Pistol Association
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In another new initiative to enhance the future of hunting and strengthen firearm range opportunities in Vermont, the Fish & Wildlife Department is hosting a special workshop on operating and managing shooting ranges on Sept. 6, at the Lamoille Valley County Fish & Game Club in Morrisville. The State, Vermont lawmakers and several sporting organizations have been working together to enhance shooting opportunities for hunters and sporting organizations throughout Vermont. |
NC: Self-defense methods in high demand
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Mark A. Taff
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Weapons instructor Geary Chlebus used to teach a self-defense class at Jim's Pawn Shop once a month, but he said now it's in much higher demand.
"Today I had a full class,” he said Saturday. “I've had to turn people away. We are now contemplating having classes twice a week – Saturdays and Sundays."
And he said half of the students he teaches are women.
But these women are doing more than just learning self-defense. They're also buying more guns. |
IL: Campus safety begins with everyone
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Mark A. Taff
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An uneasy summer in Champaign grew grimmer this weekend when police released information about yet another violent crime against a University student. Since the end of the spring semester, local police have released information about four crimes involving sexual assault and one armed robbery near campus.
The latest crime sounds all too familiar. A female walking alone in Campustown was attacked by single male at 2:30 in the morning. Had it not been for a good samaritan in the area, the attacker may have done much worse. |
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