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Law & Order
Reciprocity is Currently Banned Under Federal Law (Very Important Please Read)
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<blockquote data-quote="mons meg" data-source="post: 500412" data-attributes="member: 90"><p>I understand the principle, but since there's something close to a zero chance that the current Congress will move to amend this, we'd have to relay on a court case. </p><p></p><p>Tell me if my reasoning is sound, here. A (good) court case would require a scenario in which an out of state permit holder got pulled over for a simple traffic violation and the local LEO decided to arrest based on a Federal law unrelated to the traffic violation at hand.</p><p></p><p>Then the permit holder appeals based on a 2A argument, etc etc and the SCOTUS has to tell Congress yet again that the revised GFSZA is *still* unconstitutional, just like in <em>Lopez.</em> I tend to think "we" would easily win that case, but it's highly unlikely it'd ever come to that.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="mons meg, post: 500412, member: 90"] I understand the principle, but since there's something close to a zero chance that the current Congress will move to amend this, we'd have to relay on a court case. Tell me if my reasoning is sound, here. A (good) court case would require a scenario in which an out of state permit holder got pulled over for a simple traffic violation and the local LEO decided to arrest based on a Federal law unrelated to the traffic violation at hand. Then the permit holder appeals based on a 2A argument, etc etc and the SCOTUS has to tell Congress yet again that the revised GFSZA is *still* unconstitutional, just like in [I]Lopez.[/I] I tend to think "we" would easily win that case, but it's highly unlikely it'd ever come to that. [/QUOTE]
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Reciprocity is Currently Banned Under Federal Law (Very Important Please Read)
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