Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast
Results 1 to 10 of 20

Thread: Supreme Court 9-0 against unlawful seizure of guns!

  1. #1

    Supreme Court 9-0 against unlawful seizure of guns!

    #RESIST

  2. #2
    Site Supporter Totem Polar's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2013
    Location
    PacNW
    A reasonably good start to the work week.
    ”But in the end all of these ideas just manufacture new criminals when the problem isn't a lack of criminals.” -JRB

  3. #3
    U.S. Supreme Court limits police power to enter homes with no warrant


    The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday refused to make it easier for police to enter a home without a warrant for reasons of health or public safety, throwing out a lower court's decision to dismiss a lawsuit brought by a Rhode Island man after officers entered his home and confiscated his guns.
    #RESIST

  4. #4
    Member LHS's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2012
    Location
    Behind that cactus
    Outstanding. Would that they'd all treat the 2A like this all of the time...


    Matt Haught
    SYMTAC Consulting LLC
    https://sym-tac.com

  5. #5
    #BestJustice Thomas’s opinion:

    During an argument with his wife, petitioner Edward Caniglia placed a handgun on the dining room table and asked his wife to “shoot [him] and get it over with.” His wife instead left the home and spent the night at a hotel. The next morning, she was unable to reach her husband by phone, so she called the police to request a welfare check. The responding officers accompanied Caniglia’s wife to the home, where they encountered Caniglia on the porch. The officers called an ambulance based on the belief that Caniglia posed a risk to himself or others.

    Caniglia agreed to go to the hospital for a psychiatric evaluation on the condition that the officers not confiscate his firearms. But once Caniglia left, the officers located and seized his weapons. Caniglia sued, claiming that the officers had entered his home and seized him and his firearms without a warrant in violation of the Fourth Amendment. The District Court granted summary judgment to the officers.

    The First Circuit affirmed, extrapolating from the Court’s decision in Cady v. Dombrowski, 413 U. S. 433, a theory that the officers’ removal of Caniglia and his firearms from his home was justified by a “community caretaking exception” to the warrant requirement.

    Held: Neither the holding nor logic of Cady justifies such warrantless searches and seizures in the home. Cady held that a warrantless search of an impounded vehicle for an unsecured firearm did not violate the Fourth Amendment. In reaching this conclusion, the Court noted that the officers who patrol the “public highways” are often called to discharge noncriminal “community caretaking functions,”
    such as responding to disabled vehicles or investigating accidents.

    But searches of vehicles and homes are constitutionally different, as the Cady opinion repeatedly stressed.

    The very core of the Fourth Amendment’s guarantee is the right of a person to retreat into his or her home and “there be free from unreasonable governmental intrusion.” Florida v. Jardines, 569 U. S. 1,
    6. A recognition of the existence of “community caretaking” tasks, like rendering aid to motorists in disabled vehicles, is not an open-ended license to perform them anywhere.

    THOMAS, J., delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court. ROBERTS,
    C. J., filed a concurring opinion, in which BREYER, J., joined. ALITO, J.,
    and KAVANAUGH, J., filed concurring opinions.
    #RESIST

  6. #6
    Member
    Join Date
    Mar 2019
    Location
    NW Arizona
    A little bright spot. Nice!

  7. #7
    Member jtcarm's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2018
    Location
    Texas Cross Timbers
    Quote Originally Posted by LHS View Post
    Outstanding. Would that they'd all treat the 2A like this all of the time...
    Sorry to rain on the parade, but it’s really a 4A case, and the fact that SCOTUS had to get involved in something so obviously unconstitutional is disturbing.

    When SCOTUS rules 9-0 on a case where it does not have original jurisdiction, it means one or more of the lower courts really screwed the pooch.

    I’m glad relief was granted and a dangerous precedent stopped, but the fact that two lower courts were happily to let it slide is a bad sign.

  8. #8
    Member
    Join Date
    Jan 2015
    Location
    OKC
    Quote Originally Posted by jtcarm View Post
    Sorry to rain on the parade, but it’s really a 4A case, and the fact that SCOTUS had to get involved in something so obviously unconstitutional is disturbing.

    When SCOTUS rules 9-0 on a case where it does not have original jurisdiction, it means one or more of the lower courts really screwed the pooch.

    I’m glad relief was granted and a dangerous precedent stopped, but the fact that two lower courts were happily to let it slide is a bad sign.
    The fourth is incredibly important. It suffered under the “war on drugs”.

  9. #9
    Site Supporter ccmdfd's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2011
    Location
    Southeastern NC
    Quote Originally Posted by Eric_L View Post
    The fourth is incredibly important. It suffered under the “war on drugs”.
    As well as under the Patriot Act.

  10. #10
    Revolvers Revolvers 1911s Stephanie B's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2014
    Location
    East 860 by South 413
    A 9-0 ruling should have an opening line to the losing party (and any overturned courts) of: "You dumb shit(s)."
    If we have to march off into the next world, let us walk there on the bodies of our enemies.

User Tag List

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •