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The Range
Law & Order
Federal appeals court rules that drug users can not be barred from owning guns.
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<blockquote data-quote="Chuckie" data-source="post: 4091736" data-attributes="member: 42584"><p>- Every state has as law, a maximum amount of alcohol 'allowable' for activities like driving or firearm carrying/use. This level is measured as the Blood Alcohol Content (currently 0.08). </p><p>- No state law currently exists that establishes the maximum amount of THC 'allowable' for activities like driving or firearm carrying/use, nor is there even an acceptable method of measuring THC levels outside the laboratory, thus leaving the determination about the level of impairment for driving or firearm carrying/use while using Marijuana completely up to the discretion of the individual law enforcement officer.</p><p>- The law excerpt cited above is, at best, ambiguous in that it fails to adequately define "<strong>abnormal behavior</strong>" as the result of being under the influence, which again the determination being purely up to the discretion of law enforcement at the time you were questioned.</p><p>- Toke a doobie the size of a broom handle OR simply have the smell of Marijuana on your clothing from someone else using, and if are carrying, you could find yourself convicted and facing fines and jail time, all at the discretion of a law enforcement officer whom may or may not be having a good day.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Chuckie, post: 4091736, member: 42584"] - Every state has as law, a maximum amount of alcohol 'allowable' for activities like driving or firearm carrying/use. This level is measured as the Blood Alcohol Content (currently 0.08). - No state law currently exists that establishes the maximum amount of THC 'allowable' for activities like driving or firearm carrying/use, nor is there even an acceptable method of measuring THC levels outside the laboratory, thus leaving the determination about the level of impairment for driving or firearm carrying/use while using Marijuana completely up to the discretion of the individual law enforcement officer. - The law excerpt cited above is, at best, ambiguous in that it fails to adequately define "[B]abnormal behavior[/B]" as the result of being under the influence, which again the determination being purely up to the discretion of law enforcement at the time you were questioned. - Toke a doobie the size of a broom handle OR simply have the smell of Marijuana on your clothing from someone else using, and if are carrying, you could find yourself convicted and facing fines and jail time, all at the discretion of a law enforcement officer whom may or may not be having a good day. [/QUOTE]
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The Range
Law & Order
Federal appeals court rules that drug users can not be barred from owning guns.
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