African Safari for Sale

African Safari for Sale

        Several months ago, we purchased an African Safari for 4 people – 2 hunters and 2 tourists – at a Friends of NRA Banquet.  The trip is all-inclusive – food, accomodations, guides, permits, tags, and trophy fees for several types of game, almost everything except airfare.  Now it is apparent that the trip is simply not going to be possible for any of us, so we’ve decided to auction it off to the highest bidder.  All proceeds will go directly to The Firearms Coalition.  The trip is valued at $11,000, but we’re accepting reserve bids starting at $4195.  We encourage you to make an offer, as we’d rather have it go to one of our regular supporters.  So, who’ll start the bidding?  Learn more about the trip by clicking here and then clicking on the image to make it larger.  It might take a moment for the images to load.

Olofson Sentenced

Olofson Sentenced to Thirty Months

 

David Olofson, the Army Reservist who loaned a twenty-year old AR15 rifle to a prospective buyer and was charged with illegally transferring a machinegun, was sentenced to thirty months in prison by a Federal Judge in Wisconsin.  Olofson, his attorneys, and many legal observers were surprised by the sentence.  The long delay in sentencing was interpreted as an indication that the judge was uncomfortable with certain irregularities in the prosecution.  They speculated that he was delaying sentencing with the intention of quietly setting the conviction aside, or at least ordering a new trial.  Instead he went right in line with the prosecution’s requests and dismissed defense complaints about improperly suppressed evidence.

The case, aside from being a travesty of justice and senselessly destroying David Olofson’s life, has dire implications for anyone who owns any semi-automatic firearm.  Under the standards of this case, any gun that malfunctions and fires a multiple round burst is a machinegun and the owner is at risk of prosecution.

At this point Olofson is appealing the conviction based on suppression of evidence. There were two documents that Olofson asked for in discovery and which the ATF refused to provide. They claimed that the documents contained privileged tax information and could not be released; this even though Olofson had copies of both documents from public sources. Since those sources were not "official" the copies Olofson had were inadmissible and since ATF claimed their copies were protected, the judge accepted their word on that and refused to demand the documents be produced.

The first document was a letter sent by ATF to manufacturers of AR-15's back in the mid'80's warning them that the parts they were using were prone to hammer-follow malfunctions and suggesting that they should institute a recall to replace the offending parts. The makers of Olofson's rifle were included in that letter and Olofson's rifles was manufactured during that time period.

The second document was a letter from the ATF to the owner of a rifle that was legally registered as a machinegun. It informed him that his gun was being removed from the National Firearms Transfer Registry because ATF testing showed that it was not really a machinegun, but just an AR-15 with some M-16 parts in it (just like Olofson's) that were causing it to malfunction with hammer-follow (just like Olofson's.)  They basically told him that his $20,000 M-16 was really a malfunctioning $1,500 AR-15 and that he should get it fixed. The test and evaluation was signed by the same ATF firearms expert who concluded that Olofson's rifle was not a machinegun and then retested and concluded that the gun was a machinegun.  Both of these rifles were tested by the same examiner within a matter of just a few weeks of each other.

Olofson has found an ATF memo which specifically declares that the warning letter from ATF to manufacturers did not contain privileged information and is not subject to any disclosure restrictions.  He has also connected with the guy whose rifle was reclassified and gotten certified copies of those letters and test results.

It seems pretty clear that the judge was misled by ATF and the Federal Prosecutor and that all of the information relating to these letters should have been provided to the court, entered into evidence, and shown to the jury.  Based on this fact, the Court of Appeals should, at a minimum, grant Olofson a new trial and actually should simply vacate the whole case.  There is just no telling what a court will do though.  The more I study some of these court cases, the more I am convinced that our “Justice” System is seriously broken.  I am hopeful that NRA or someone else with some experience and money to pay good lawyers will jump into this case now that it is becoming more prominent.

            Several months ago, while Olofson’s trial was just getting started, I provided him with information on how to formally request assistance from the NRA Civil Rights Defense Fund.  I don’t know if his lawyers ever followed through with such a request.  I also brought the case directly to the attention of members of the NRA Board of Directors and NRA staff, encouraging them to take a closer look at the case and provide some assistance or support.  Just a short article in NRA magazines might have been very helpful.  When a reporter from CNN’s “Lou Dobbs” show contacted NRA after Olofson’s sentencing, he reported that they said they had been watching the case closely and were considering offering assistance.

I should also point out my own failure to help as much as I could have.  When a major national magazine asked me to write a comprehensive article on the case, I agreed, but due to my regular workload and some other mitigating circumstances, I never was able to fulfill that agreement.  Perhaps a bit more publicity earlier on could have forced ATF’s hand.  We’ll never know.  What we do know is that if the Appeals Court functions with the same skill and professionalism displayed by the original trial judge, David Olofson, husband, father, and Army veteran, is going to spend years in prison with murderers and rapists simply because he loaned a 20-year old rifle to a kid who managed to cause it to fire a couple of short multiple shot bursts.

If the ATF can succeed at putting David Olofson away, none of us are safe.  I attended a friendly side-by-side shotgun shoot recently where guys described occasions when their Parker, Purdy, or Fox had fired both barrels with a single trigger pull.  Under the standard demonstrated in the Olofson case, those 100+ year old shotguns are machineguns and their owners are dangerous felons.

This needs to be fixed in the courts and fixed in the congress.  There is no excuse for this type of vindictive prosecution.

Read my original story here. 

You Can’t

The Knox Report

From the Firearms Coalition

 

You Can’t Do That

 

By Jeff Knox

            (May 13, 2008) Everyone knows that you can’t legally purchase a handgun from a dealer in another state, and most folks know that it is a crime to purchase a gun on behalf of someone else or to sell a gun to someone knowing that it is intended for someone else, but there are other deals that many people seem to be confused about.

Ask ten gunowners what the rules are regarding sales by private individuals to other private individuals and you are likely to get at least 12 different answers.  There are also questions about transporting weapons, and of course about carrying concealed or open, carrying in cars, and carrying guns in the woods.

Some of the questions can be easily answered while others can get complicated.  Here are a few items I have run across recently that are in need of illumination.  In all of these cases I am talking about regular folks and regular guns, not FFL holders or C&R items:

Continue reading You Can’t

UVA-UnWise

The Knox Report

From the Firearms Coalition

 

The Pen is Mightier…

 

 and More Dangerous

 

By Jeff Knox

(May 6, 2008) When Steven Barber turned in his midterm creative writing assignment at the University of Virginia’s College at Wise (UVA-Wise), he was hoping for a good grade to complement his 3.9 grade point average.  Instead, Barber was expelled from school, locked in a mental institution for three days, and had his concealed carry permit revoked. 

 Barber’s fictional story was a first person narrative of a troubled college student consumed by depression, paranoia, drug addiction, and alcoholism as he struggles with one of tragedy’s recurrent themes, “To be or not to be.”  The character progresses through fear, anger, and despair; sleeping with a gun under his pillow after the Virginia Tech massacre, contemplating the murder of an unpleasant professor, and finally deciding on suicide.  The entire story is just contemplation – no characters, real or fictional were harmed in the telling of the story – and Barber himself is nothing like the character he described.

Continue reading UVA-UnWise

Obama’s Bitter Pill

The Knox Report

From the Firearms Coalition

 

Obama: Another bitter pill

 

By Chris Knox

(April 28, 2008) The topic of guns came up unexpectedly in the Hila-Bama Follies with Obama expressing the opinion that blue-collar voters are a tough sell for the Democrats because many have been left behind in the economic expansion and they are the first to feel economic contraction. “They get bitter,” Obama intoned, slipping a foot deeply into his mouth. “They cling to guns or religion or antipathy to people who aren’t like them or anti-immigrant sentiment or antitrade sentiment as a way to explain their frustrations.”

Obama’s “bitter” blooper was just another description of the “Angry White Males” whom the Democrats learned to fear in 1994. That, of course, was the year that GunVoters turned out in droves to punish the 103rd Congress for the Clinton gun ban, changing ownership of the House for the first time in decades, and turning out a sitting Speaker, the first time that had happened in a century and a half.

Continue reading Obama’s Bitter Pill

Lawsuit, Parks, and more…

In this Alert: 

1. Court Shoots Down Bloomberg!

2. National Parks Ending Gun Ban?

3. The National Anthem 

 

Bloomberg

            A 3 judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit has dismissed a lawsuit by the city of New York attempting to hold firearms manufacturers responsible for the costs of “gun crime” in the city.  The court ruled that the suit should have been dismissed under the Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act passed by the congress in 2005.  The 2-1 decision affirmed the constitutionality of that law and criticized Federal Judge Jack Weinstein for failing to abide by the Lawful Commerce Act when it first passed.

           We can doubtless expect Mayor Bloomberg to try to find some other way to blame gunowners, dealers, and manufacturers for New York's crime problems.

 

Parks

The Department of the Interior has released its long awaited regulatory reform proposals for National Parks and National Wildlife Refuges.  The proposed regulations will be open for public comment for the next 60 days.  It is critical that gunowners let their voices be heard on this regulation change.

Continue reading Lawsuit, Parks, and more…