Posted on 12/26/2007 6:21:34 AM PST by The Pack Knight
These men were, for the most part, convicted of nonviolent felonies and they have paid their debts to society, yet they are denied one of the most basic rights guaranteed by both the U.S. and North Carolina Constitutions.
Does selling pot in college really warrant a life sentence as a second-class citizen?
The problem is that you don’t know what crimes a felon has committed. All you know is that they’ve committed some.
The same guys who commit burglaries are the ones who commit murder and rape.
I’m a drunk driving felon. You never know when I might go on a shooting spree.
The one who shot and killed his girlfriend doesn’t deserve to have his gun rights reinstated.
No. But a guy blowing away his girlfriend might be a different story.
I wonder how angelic has been Easley over the course of his life.
Sorry, guys. No story here.
“The same guys who commit burglaries are the ones who commit murder and rape.”
and you know this how?
If you rights have been restored to be able to vote, you should be able to use a firearm. Maybe then Democrats would not be so quick to insist on voting rights for ex-felons.
On another note and certainly for the majority of Americans; there but for the Grace of God go we......Americans might be surprised at what constitutes a felony.
I know of a couple of ex cons who went to prison for things like breaking and entering when they were teenagers but have never committed another crime since leaving prison more than 20 years ago. One has held the same job he got the day after walking out of prison.
Perhaps prosecutors are interpreting it that way. If so, it needs to be challenged. In U.S. v Lopez, the supremes held that mere possession was not interstate commerce, so the U.S. had no jurisdiction.
It would be nice if all the court had integrity, instead of only half.
This isn’t an honest story. For some reason, the reporter doesn’t specify what the guy was actually charged with. He said he was “arrested” for marijuana possession. If I’m not mistaken, there are different levels of “possession”. Ie: “under an ounce”, “one ounce to 2 ounces”, “one big giant garbage bag full of dope pre-bagged in carefully measured lids ready for resale to small children”.
I should have said violent felons in my post. Sorry. Did not mean it as a slap at you or anyone with a non-violent record.
So, it would seem from this article that if you ever are convicted of a felony, the rest of your life the 2nd amendment does not cover you.
Do ex-felons get their other rights (1st, 4th, 5th amendments, etc.) taken away from them the rest of their life? No, of course not. Taking away 2nd amendment rights should not be AUTOMATIC with ALL types of felonies.
The implications of this are frightening. For example, what happens when hate crimes as a felony morphs (someday) into hate speech as a felony?
No bow season in NC?
I didn’t take it as a slap. We’re good.
I am irritated that illegal aliens with no “known” record can work in airports and on military installations but I can’t be trusted.
cripplecreek, glad you are able to vote, so am I and it’s time to put to rest the canard that felons cannot vote:
As of May 10, 2007 all 50 states allow felons to vote. Restrictions
apply in some states.
The two most restrictive are Kentucky, where voting rights can be
restored only when the Governor approves an application for an
executive pardon for reinstatement of voting rights from an
individual after completion of his/her sentence.
Mississippi, where An individual, after completion of their sentence,
must go to his or her state representative and convince them to
personally author a bill reenfranchising that individual. Both houses
of the legislature must then pass the bill, and the governor must
sign it. Each year about 10 to 12 people are re-enfranchised in
Mississippi.
25 states allow felons to vote after serving their sentences and
parole or supervised release, 13 states allow felons to vote as soon
as they leave prison, 2 states, (Maine and Vermont) allow
incarcerated felons to vote.
The other 8 states allow felons to vote with less severe restrictions
such as applying to county boards or waiting 2 to 5 years after
completion of sentence.
http://www.felonvotingprocon.org/pop/StateLaws.htm
Frankly, I’d trust a man with a gun long before I’d trust him with a vote. The vote’s the more dangerous of the two.
Think family in Connecticut...Mom and daughters raped then burned to death; father bludgeoned and left for dead in basement.
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