Yep, it seriously would. Cheaper, too. |
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This is totally on the state of Maryland. I am a Democrat who took a gun class to learn about the subject and gain insight into this topic. While I would not buy a gun for myself, I learned about the requirements the state has in place for gun ownership. The State Police has all the information and controls the whole process, the gun stores have to wait for the approval from the police to release any guns to the purchaser. The State police granted this guy a collectors license to purchase multiple guns in a short period, so the stores were following the law. While I feel that gun stores bother people, most are small business people that operate in one of the most regulated industries and state oversight.
Why have a state database and check system in place if no one is monitoring the purchases. |
What “class” was this? Who was teaching it? What expertise in matters of the law did the instructor(s) have? I’ve spent my entire adult life in academia and I’ve never heard of such a class. Was it taught at some community college? |
If there’s three closest pharmacies are selling giant amounts of opiates to one customer over and over, perhaps they should be closed down. |
Smart guns exist but the gun lobby hates them. |
If Brown still had aspirations of higher office he would have run for governor in 2022 or Senate in 2024. |
Why the swipe at community college? How distasteful. I'm sure it was the HQL class, required to purchase a handgun in Maryland. |
All things being equal, I'm going to assume that the Maryland and DC Attorneys General know more about the law than someone who took a class. |
A “class” for buying a gun. The NRA thinks of everything, huh?
Idiocy. |
| I took the class at Northern Virginia Community college that was sponsored by the local sheriffs department. It has to do with gun safety and local laws in the DC area. It was not a qualification for license course. |
+1 Great! We don't need straw purchases by bad actors making our families less safe. My applause to the MD AG. |
| I’m confused. Were they following the law and if so, why are they getting charged? Or does the states attorney not like how the law was followed? |
The fact that these attorneys general, who do in fact know more about the law than the average person, chose to bring a civil suit rather than seek a criminal indictment and criminal trial, tells me they had serious doubts about their ability to make a case that the stores violated any law whatsoever. They chose instead to bring suit in civil court, where the burden of proof is far lower, and more subjective. But I would argue that a civil judgement isn’t even the REAL intent here, but rather to force these small businesses in question into bankruptcy because they can’t afford the crushing burden of the legal defense needed to defend their case against a state government with virtually unlimited taxpayer funded resources. This is a David vs Goliath situation, in terms of cash reserves and resources. The AG’s know they don’t have a criminal case, and probably not a civil one either, so the goal is just to drive the store out of business with legal fees trying to defend themselves. It’s simply lawfare. The process itself is the punishment. |
Called it! yes hon, you took a “class” at an institution that also teaches plumbing. That’s why we’re laughing at you.
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The fact that none of the stores were charged criminally is a good indicator that none of them violated any state or federal laws. Indictments are generally easily for prosecutors to get. The Grand Jury process is heavily weighted in favor of the state. If there was even a possibility of a viable criminal charge coming from the actions of the stores, these AG’s would’ve put it in front of a Grand Jury, and gotten an indictment for applicable criminal charges. But they didn’t even attempt to go that route. |