Posted on 02/23/2006 8:27:40 AM PST by LouAvul
A 16-year-old boy was arrested Wednesday after postings on the popular Web site MySpace.com allegedly showed him holding handguns, authorities said.
The teen was being held at a juvenile detention center facing three misdemeanor charges of juvenile possession of a handgun, said district attorney spokeswoman Pam Russell. He is due in court Feb. 27.
Police searched the boy's home after receiving a tip from Evergreen High School on Feb. 10, the same day he was suspended, officials said.
School spokesman Rick Kaufman said parents were calling with concerns and some kept their children home after photographs posted on the boy's profile on MySpace.com, a social networking Web site, began circulating through the community.
One photo allegedly showed him lying on a floor surrounded by nine rifles with the caption, "Angel o' death on wings o' lead."
(Excerpt) Read more at cbsnews.com ...
Man, no where in the 2nd do I see an age requirement.
This one has your name written all over it!
Just because WE know it's wrong doesn't mean KIDS know it.
Plus, you've got the immaturity factor. Kids inherently don't have good judgment. That's what maturation accomplishes.
When your son's friend came to pick him up today, your son had three (toy) shotguns sticking out of his backpack, a (toy) M-16 with grenade launcher in his hand and a (toy) pistol in a holster on his hip.
I realize these guns aren't real, but it begs the question if perhaps he is in need of appropriate disciplinary action ...
How is he breaking the law?
After seven paragraphs, I am then able to figure out what state this is in.
Of all the stuff going on at Myspace.com this is the least offensive.
Well obviously what he needs is a better way to transport his weapons!
More holsters?
Being photographed with some guns in your own private home is a crime?!?! I'm scratching Colorado off my list of possible vacation destinations.
Yeah, I had the same reaction. The story is badly written.
"Kids inherently don't have good judgment. That's what maturation accomplishes."
Except in liberals, demokkkRATs and other assorted criminals.
All I can see for sure that he did is to pose, somewhere, with some guns, and put the photos on the internet. No threat whatsoever to the school or any other soul.
So he should be found Not Guilty on the three misdemeanor possession charges, and then he should sue the bejeebers out of everybody.
IMO, all laws should have a sunset of not more than twenty years. That's the only way I can think of to keep the byers mucked out sufficiently.
In Oregon minors may not "possess" guns. 18 for longguns and 21 for handguns is the law. There are exceptions for when used with the supervision of a qualified adult.
Well if it's illegal to post pics of yourself with guns on MySpace, I'll be waiting for BATFE to come knocking any minute now...
...any minute...
...now?...
how about...
...now?
Suspended and possibly expelled from school for having taken pictures of himself with guns at home? How can the school do that?
I am talking about toys, I was responding to a post to me, and truthfully, I never read the story.
I was thinking a nice canvas bag he could unroll to reveal custom pockets for specific guns and ammo. Something he could pack in a hurry and wear with a shoulder strap.
Oh, wait. That's what I want.
Ain't it the truth!
LOL!
I realize that, but what state or county law did he break? How do they know they're real guns? How do they know, if the guns are real, that his father isn't standing off to the side out of sight?
Before you flame me, I am just bein devils advocate here.
It goes beyond that - he is being charged with misdemeanor handgun possession by a minor. I used to live in the Evergreen area. I never knew there was such a law in Colorado. But I imagine it was passed after Columbine.
what about, Privacy. doesn't anybody realize that people can do what they want, when they want when they are at home. That is so dumb. my cousin has many pictures of her with guns everywhere. Nobody can arrest her unless she does something illegal!
Do they know that he owned the gun for sure?!
Me shooting a full auto 9mm AR I had just gotten done helping to fix an extractor pin on.
Guess that makes me some kind of criminal now in some jurisdictions. Even though I'm 36, the gun was fully registered, and being shot on a fully licensed and insured range.
One of the other photos I've got on my profile is me holding my varmint gun. At home.
(sarcasm)Oh the humanity! He has black rifle disease!!!(/sacarsm)
The death of common sense in our schools and legal system continues apace...
The kid was in his own home posing with guns wich is not a violation of any law on the books.In almost every state in the nation children can go hunting starting at 10 years old and younger.There were some storys on freerepublic about 8 year old girls bagging deer and bears are we goingot bust out the child model handcuffs and send in the swat team to lead them away to barbies malibu bighouse?.
You are expecting logic and reason. What do either have to do with todays legal morass?
How Strict are U.S., Colorado, and Local Gun Control Laws?
3. Handgun Possession by Minors
It is illegal for a minor to possess a handgun, with certain exceptions. It is illegal for an adult to transfer a handgun to a minor:
18 U.S.C. 922(x):
"(x)(1) It shall be unlawful for a person to sell, deliver, or otherwise transfer to a person who the transferor knows or has reasonable cause to believe is a juvenile...
(A) a handgun;...
(2) It shall be unlawful for any person who is a juvenile to knowingly possess...
(A) a handgun;..."
There are some exceptions allowing juveniles to possess handguns while ranching or farming, or engaged in lawful target shooting or hunting. But even then, current federal law demands that the juvenile have prior written permission from her parents, and must carry that permission at all times with her while in possession of the handgun.
It would be a mistake to think that teenagers helping on their parents' ranches and farms are actually complying with this silly statute. On the ranch, they do not carry around prior written permission. Off the ranch, they may carry a handgun in their pickup truck for protection while driving on isolated rural roads at night, as people in their family have for many generations. It is doubtful that most farmers and ranchers even know of the federal statute--or have much interest in studying it.
For a lot of people, federal gun laws have become like the Internal Revenue Code: it exists, but the populace dislikes it, evades it, and does not want to waste energy trying to understand it. The Tax Code and the gun laws and regulations are frustrating, arcane laws which are genuinely understood by only a small group of specialists. We have seen how the citizenry feels about the Tax Code and the IRS. It would be naïve in the extreme to believe that firearms owners do not have the same opinions of the gun laws and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms.
Current proposals in Congress would make the juvenile gun ban even worse. Senate Bill 254 (which is currently in a conference committee), would a mandatory one year minimum sentence on any adult who transfers a handgun to a juvenile, regardless of the circumstances. A father who gives a family heirloom in a locked glass case to a son on the sons seventeenth birthday would spend a mandatory year in prison. Mandatory sentences may make good sound bites, but they are cruel and thoughtless when applied in the real world.
Senate Bill 254 would also extend the juvenile handgun ban to possession of so-called "assault weapons" and to ammunition clips holding more than 10 rounds. Magazines holding more than 10 rounds for rifles or handguns are commonly used for target shooting, for predator control, for self-defense, and for other lawful and enjoyable purposes, such as plinking at tin cans. If a 17-year-old can be trusted with a rifle and a 10-round magazine, it does not make sense to turn him and his parents into criminals just for using a 15 round magazine instead of a 10 round magazine.
As for "semiautomatic assault weapons," the very name is an oxymoron. One semiautomatic rifle (e.g., a Marlin Camp Carbine) functions just like any other (e.g., a Colt AR-15A2). The federal "assault weapon" ban applies to some but not all semiautomatics, and classifies guns on the basis of petty cosmetic characteristics--such as whether the gun has a bayonet lug, or whether the magazine protrudes "conspicuously" from the rest of the gun. So-called "assault weapons" do not fire faster, or fire larger bullets, than other firearms. There is no reasonable basis for sending parents and children to prison because a childs lawfully-used rifle has a bayonet lug or some other cosmetically incorrect feature.
LOL ... Looks like fun. Why is the guy with you hiding behind a helmet?
Libertarian ping.To be added or removed from my ping list freepmail me or post a message here
Super nice guy. Brought a 1000 rnds of 9mm just to share with the rest of us.
See my post #32
This crap is why the Founders didn't give the FedGov this kind of power. They knew that they'd wrtie assinine crap just like this. That the Feds are doing it anyway is a breach of "contract".
According to the article, it's unlawful possession of a firearm by someone under the age of 16.
Probably a state or local law.
It's a thought crime, comrade.
Great link. I enjoyed his article and photos on shooting locks. Very interesting results.
daddy must have yelled at him at some point in time
mean, mean daddy, all his fault
On what grounds can the school suspend the student? If he didn't take guns to school and there was no direct threat, I don't understand how they can justify suspending him!
LOL! I love the helmet cam videos!
LOL. Well, Google reveals that there are at least three Evergreen High Schools, in Washington, Colorado, and Ohio. Probably more, but those are the first three :)
I'm thinking that people who care about their guns and privacy should not posting pics of them on the internet.
for later reading....
They'd have a stroke if they saw the "Sportsman's Messenger," which regularly features kids holding the guns they used to win shooting competitions.
That is the truth. These teen blog sites have much shocking content. A relative of mine had a Xanga site. All sorts of teens and preteens talking about drunkenness, drugs, teen sex, petty crime, etc., etc. Posting their real names, parents' names, addresses.
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