dajowi said:
...Oregon has mandated that medical marijuana users cannot be denied an Oregon State concealed handgun license based on that fact and licenses are indeed issued to people within the OMMP. So at least the state of Oregon has determined that an individual can safely use marijuana and possess firearms used for self defense...
That's not really an accurate description of what happened in Oregon.
The Oregon Supreme Court, in
Willis v. Winters, 253 P.3d 1058 (Or., 2011), ruled that Michael Winters, as Sheriff of Jackson County, was required
under Oregon law to issue a concealed handgun license to Cynthia Willis even though she was a medical marijuana user. The Court concluded that Ms. Willis had satisfied the statutory requirements under Oregon's "shall issue" conceal handgun license (CHL) law, notwithstanding that the use of marijuana violated federal law. So the Oregon sheriff was obliged under the applicable Oregon statute to issue a CHL to Ms. Willis.
The case did not substantively address the federal law issue. In fact, the Oregon Supreme Court specifically noted (at pp. 1065 - 1066, emphasis added):
...Neither is the statute [the Oregon CHL law] an obstacle to Congress's purposes in the sense that it interferes with the ability of the federal government to enforce the policy that the Gun Control Act expresses. A marijuana user's possession of a CHL may exempt him or her from prosecution or arrest under ORS 166.250(1)(a) and (b), but it does not in any way preclude full enforcement of the federal law by federal law enforcement officials...
And thus the Oregon Supreme Court specifically acknowledged that while Ms. Willis would not be arrested by Oregon LEOs or prosecuted under Oregon law for carrying a concealed handgun, she could still be arrested by federal LEOs, prosecuted under federal law and sent to federal prison for being a prohibited person in possession of a gun in violation of 18 USC 922(g)(3).
JimDandy said:
Frank Ettin said:
The second choice exposes you to no legal liability, except for potential liability for being a prohibited person attempting to purchase a gun.
And that sort of thing has been struck down in the past-
William ALBERTSON and Roscoe Quincy Proctor, Petitioners, v. SUBVERSIVE ACTIVITIES CONTROL BOARD. 382 US 70 - And
Timothy F. LEARY, Petitioner, v. UNITED STATES.
395 U.S. 6 ....
Sigh!
Again you are wrong.
The cases you cite are cases in which the person's sole choices are, essentially, to commit a crime by failing to register or file something or admit a crime by registering or filing something.
But if you don't have a gun and can't lawfully possess one, not having a gun is not a crime. So you have the legal choice to go without a gun.
I've tried explaining to you several ways why requiring someone to truthfully complete the 4473 and prosecuting him if he doesn't answer truthfully does not violate one's right against self incrimination. You apparently can not or will not understand what I've been explaining to you and why the 4473 issue is different from the registration or tax filing cases.
The bottom line is that I have not found a case in which a federal court has let someone charged with violating 18 USC 922(a)(6), making a false statement on a 4473, based on a defense that requiring a truthful answer would violate one's privilege against self-incrimination. Can you cite such a case?
And on the contrary, a quick search found more than 50 appeals from convictions for violation of 18 USC 922(a)(6). In not a single one did the defendant even raise an objection to the conviction on the grounds that requiring a truthful answer violated his right not to incriminate himself.