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The Range
Law & Order
Confiscation Has Started!
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<blockquote data-quote="Ace_on_the_Turn" data-source="post: 2136127" data-attributes="member: 27417"><p>The article was about Lynette Phillips of Upland, Calif. The first linked article from TheBlaze had this: Phillips said the nurse had recorded that she was involuntarily admitted and indicated she might be a suicide risk. Phillips claims the nurse had put words into her mouth..</p><p>The second linked article from Bloomberg had this: In an interview as agents inventoried the guns, Lynette Phillips said that while she’d been held involuntarily in a mental hospital in December, the nurse who admitted her had exaggerated the magnitude of her condition...She didn’t blame the attorney general’s agents for taking the guns based on the information they had, she said. </p><p></p><p>Notice the word involuntarily there, in both articles. So, yeah, according to the law in California, they had the right to take the guns as long as she lived in the house. When a judge rules she's not a danger to herself or others they will get their firearms back. If the husband moves out, he can have his firearms back immediately. They just can't be in the house with her.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Ace_on_the_Turn, post: 2136127, member: 27417"] The article was about Lynette Phillips of Upland, Calif. The first linked article from TheBlaze had this: Phillips said the nurse had recorded that she was involuntarily admitted and indicated she might be a suicide risk. Phillips claims the nurse had put words into her mouth.. The second linked article from Bloomberg had this: In an interview as agents inventoried the guns, Lynette Phillips said that while she’d been held involuntarily in a mental hospital in December, the nurse who admitted her had exaggerated the magnitude of her condition...She didn’t blame the attorney general’s agents for taking the guns based on the information they had, she said. Notice the word involuntarily there, in both articles. So, yeah, according to the law in California, they had the right to take the guns as long as she lived in the house. When a judge rules she's not a danger to herself or others they will get their firearms back. If the husband moves out, he can have his firearms back immediately. They just can't be in the house with her. [/QUOTE]
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