Tag Archive for the 'prison' Tag

H.R. 45 - the Blair Holt Firearm Licensing & Record of Sale Act of 2009

Posted by Donna on August 27, 2009 at 5:13 pm

By now, the controversial H.R. 45 Bill has been a topic of discussion across nearly ever dinner table in the country.  It’s also entirely possible these discussions have morphed into heated debates too.  This is an

.

.

incredibly important bill that if passed, will affect the Constitution and will change the relationship Americans have had with their firearms ever since the framers of the Constitution hammered it out.  A few of the proposed guidelines are listed below; however, if you wish to view this extensive bill in its entirety, click here.

First, it’s important to know who Blair Holt is.  In May of 2007, a boy who attended Julian High School in Chicago, used his body to shield a girl who was about to get shot on a school bus.  She lived, but Blair Holt died as a result of his heroic efforts.

H.R. 45 outlines significant changes in the way we purchase, sell, store, use and move any firearms we are in possession of.  The repercussions if this law (provided, of course, it passes) is broken are incredible.  The changes will be drastic.  Before anyone will receive a firearm license, he will be required by law to provide to the Attorney General:

  • A current passport-size photo
  • Signed statement that authorizes the Attorney General to gather medical and mental health records
  • The applicant’s place of birth
  • Satisfactory completion of a written examination that is designed to promote gun safety and the applicant’s understanding of how to handle firearms, the risks of using a firearm and a thorough understanding of local, state and federal gun laws; and
  • “Any other subjects as the Attorney General determines to be appropriate”

If the license is granted, the owner must renew his license every sixty months by undergoing the same procedures and paying a $25 renewal fee.

Other guidelines include failure to report a stolen or lost firearm within 72 hours of discovering its absence will be a crime.  If you relocate, either within the same state or elsewhere, failure to submit a fee and notification to the Attorney General will be a crime.  Suggested punishments include hefty fines, prison sentences (some of which would be felonies - which means, of course, those convicted would no longer be allowed to ever possess a firearm) or combinations of both prison sentences and fines.

Gun owners will be required to claim all firearms on his annual income tax returns.

These are just a few of the highlights of the proposed changes.  Understandably, this is an incredibly charged topic and the lines have been drawn in the sand.  These proposed changes will affect each of us on varying levels and will change the way our children and their children will see gun ownership.  Hopefully, the right solution can be found that won’t include such invasive laws; that said, those solutions need to be found now since many are pushing to have this bill passed in short time.


The Cold Hard Headlines

Posted by Donna on September 20, 2008 at 2:16 pm

As usual this time of day, I start searching for my next post. Usually, something jumps out at me within a few minutes and I’m suddenly presented with my next subject. Tonight, however, there were more than a couple references to what’s now just become this post. This is one of those posts that leave me staring at the blank Word document wondering how I can pull this off without going off on some tangent filled with pure anger and a degree of hatred. Here are the three headlines:

WOMAN GETS LIFE SENTENCE FOR SEX WITH 5-YEAR-OLD

Woman Gets Prison for Secondhand Crack Smoke That Sickens Two Year Old

North Carolina Police Find 3-Week-Old Baby Living in Active Meth Lab

I can remember thinking when my son was born of how incredible his life would be and how he could affect every person he ever met. My goal, I decided, was to ensure his presence in someone’s life would be better because of him. It never once occurred to me that there would be so much misery and disbelief that exists in today’s society. I look at him and am just amazed at the incredible human he’s become. He’s chasing his dreams, he’s pursuing his education and he has a family that would kill over him…and we’d probably hurt one another trying to be the first to get to source who has jeopardized him in any way.

What adult could allow such evil to happen? At what point does someone decide that it’s OK to rape a 5 year old because her husband made her do it? And with all of the horror stories associated with meth labs and the destruction left behind, including risking entire neighborhoods, innocent people who might be walking past a meth lab disguised as a home and the kids who have no choice but to breathe it in, is an addiction so powerful that the human spirit can justify the repercussions? What stories were told when these people were caught and arrested? What stories did they tell their lawyers? Were they so far gone that they had no interest in even assisting their lawyers? In a world where criminal attorneys have learned to expect anything and to prepare themselves for the dark sides of human nature, along with the psychologists who are asked to provide a disturbing snapshot of their mental health and the teams who must go in and detox entire buildings, you’re left feeling defeated and with no confidence in people in general. And then you realize that this one perfection you’ve managed in this life is finding his own way and it’s then you realize you wish he’d never had to grow up. As a little one, you can protect him and he’s actually SUPPOSED to have his family running interference for him and fighting his battles, but once he’s grown and pursuing his own passions and dreams, the best we can hope for is he’s not ever one of those innocent people taking a walk in front of a cleverly disguised meth lab as it explodes.

Life in prison for these folks? The imperfect human in me hopes that it’s a miserable existence.

Recent Criminal Cases

Recent Family Cases

Recent Personal Injury Cases



© Copyright 2008. | All Rights reserved with Lawyerahead Inc.