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Feds investigate NOPD four years after Katrina; gun seizures should play into case
Examiner.com ^ | September 8, 2009 | Dave Workman

Posted on 09/09/2009 8:34:16 PM PDT by neverdem

 

   Four years after Hurricane Katrina wreaked havoc on the City of New Orleans, leaving anarchy in its wake, the Department of Justice is reportedly putting on a full court press investigation of the police in that city, with the main focus being on two shooting incidents that left three people dead.
   Let’s be up front about this: Since the Second Amendment Foundation and National Rifle Association (and nobody else!) stepped to file a landmark federal lawsuit to stop authorities in New Orleans from illegally seizing firearms in the hurricane’s aftermath, nobody has been held accountable for that treachery. Now would be a good time for Barack Obama and Eric Holder to demonstrate beyond a reasonable doubt that they respect the Second Amendment by ordering the FBI to find out who issued the confiscation order, and bring them to justice, along with the individual officers who behaved like goons. Their tactics reflected on the thousands of good and decent police officers and sheriff’s deputies all over the country who would never dream of acting without warrant and abusing their authority, no matter what the emergency, and it created a distrust of law enforcement at times of emergency that lingers today.
 
Privately, officers have groused that the feds are using strong-arm tactics, not offering professional courtesy usually extended to fellow law enforcement agencies.
 
   Specifically, we are talking about the cops, apparently from New York who seized, at gunpoint, two rifles from brothers Buell and Rodney Teel on the waters of Lake Pontchartrain, and the Highway Patrolmen, apparently from California, who body-slammed frail Patricia Konie in her own home just to take away from her the vintage Colt revolver she showed them to prove she could take care of herself. She was hurt so badly by that physical assault that she required surgery.
   Right now, NOPD officers are in the crosshairs of this federal probe, and some have complained to the New Orleans Times-Picayune about the "strong-arm tactics" being used by the feds. Well, nobody is forcing them to testify at gunpoint, nor has anyone been physically assaulted. A whine like that is going to fall on deaf ears among New Orleans citizens who were forcibly stripped of their private property.
 
  Mary Howell, a New Orleans attorney representing (one victim's) family in a civil rights suit against city officials, said Monday she understands the Justice Department is investigating several incidents involving the Police Department in the days after Katrina, including the bridge shooting.
  
 
   Ever since then-Police Superintendent Eddie Compass announced to reporters that nobody but police would have guns, Second Amendment activists have wanted to know who issued that unconstitutional order. A few years ago when I was debating the travesty on a New Orleans talk show with Compass’ successor, Supt. Warren Riley, he dodged the direct question when I told him on-air that I wanted to know who issued the order. To him, it wasn’t important. To millions of outraged American gun owners, it is of critical importance. As my press colleagues are so fond of stating, the public has a right to know.
   Simply because there is a natural or man-made disaster, one does not suspend the constitution, or state statute. We’re not talking about just the Second Amendment, but also the Fourth.
   More than 1,000 firearms were illegally seized by the police and National Guard troopers, without warrant or probable cause, and with no legal authority under existing statute.
 
 
   Ginny Simone, a gutsy news anchor for NRA News, put together a video report that today ought to be required viewing for any public official who thinks that in an emergency, he or she becomes a reigning monarch. It is a segment that fully explains the outrage gun owners feel toward the Ray Nagin administration and why, even today, millions of Americans continue their boycott of the Crescent City. They will not travel there, buy goods from there or suggest to anyone else to visit the city.
   If Nagin thinks that is unfair, too bad. His administration ignored, stonewalled and outright lied about the gun confiscations until attorneys representing SAF and NRA headed to court with a contempt citation. The city obfuscated for more than a year about those guns, by which time they were in such disrepair that they were worthless. Even after the case was finally settled, New Orleans authorities seemed to drag their feet. Upon investigation, many of the guns were found to have been deliberately damaged.
   The FBI is understandably mum on where this investigation may lead; the agency does not discuss on-going cases. The fear is that this civil rights probe will stop with the two fatal shooting incidents, and that those responsible for what authors Gordon Hutchinson and Todd Masson called The Great New Orleans Gun Grab will escape accountability.
   In the wake of the Katrina debacle, which SAF founder Alan Gottlieb called a “Constitutional outrage,” several state legislatures adopted laws that specifically prohibit the kind of gun confiscations that occurred. Over the past four years, I’ve heard from various street cops and even a couple of county sheriffs who would, they promise, ignore such orders if they were ever given.
   What happened in New Orleans must never again be allowed to happen on American soil.
   As NRA’s Wayne LaPierre is quick to remind people when asked what they should do in case of another disaster, “Remember New Orleans.”


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Crime/Corruption; Editorial; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: banglist; donutwatch; katrina; nopd

1 posted on 09/09/2009 8:34:16 PM PDT by neverdem
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To: neverdem
"In the wake of the Katrina debacle, which SAF founder Alan Gottlieb called a “Constitutional outrage,” several state legislatures adopted laws that specifically prohibit the kind of gun confiscations that occurred"

Several states including Louisiana adopted these laws!! Why is this not mentioned! Louisianans where just as outraged by what happened and saw to it that a law was past so that it would never happen again. Remember this before you trash Louisiana. And don't forget, Bobby Jindal gets an A+ from the NRA. And Kathleen Babineaux Blanco,a democrat, signed the afore mentioned law preventing gun confiscations into law.

2 posted on 09/09/2009 9:13:54 PM PDT by BBell
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To: neverdem

Moral to story, NEVER Trust a Lying Commie Demonrat.

They all hate freedom.

They all fear armed citizens.

And they all Lie.

Commies All Lie!


3 posted on 09/09/2009 9:16:11 PM PDT by Texas Fossil (Texas has yet to learn submission to any oppression, come from what source it may. -Sam Houston)
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To: BBell
U.S. House votes to ban gun confiscation in disasters
4 posted on 09/09/2009 9:19:24 PM PDT by BBell
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To: neverdem

They’ll just blame one of the suicided New Orleans cops, or one of the untraceable ghost employee cops for it, and shove this under a carpet.

It’s the Democrat Way, doncha know.


5 posted on 09/09/2009 9:28:16 PM PDT by tcrlaf ("Hope" is the most Evil of all Evils"-Neitzsche)
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To: rrstar96

ping


6 posted on 09/09/2009 9:30:43 PM PDT by BBell
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To: BBell

Gee, it might have something to do with the fact the citizens still didn’t get their guns back even after the lawsuit and the law was passed.

It also might have something to do with the fact even if they had their guns back, months of storage in a damp storage container led to complete destruction of some of the firearms.

The democrat machine did everything they could not to comply with the judge’s decision and the law.

Let me know when that racist nutcase of a mayor gets tossed.


7 posted on 09/10/2009 5:33:48 AM PDT by Shooter 2.5 (NRA /Patron - TSRA- IDPA)
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To: neverdem
Let’s be up front about this: Since the Second Amendment Foundation and National Rifle Association (and nobody else!)

Stop right there. That's one of the statements that led me to dislike the goa as much as I do. The goa has never done a single thing on their own and the members blame the size of their organization. That sorry excuse doesn't stop the SAF when they want to help their members.

If anyone doesn't like the NRA for some reason, they should join the SAF. goa = AWOL

8 posted on 09/10/2009 5:38:45 AM PDT by Shooter 2.5 (NRA /Patron - TSRA- IDPA)
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To: BBell
saw to it that a law was past so that it would never happen again

LOL... the confiscations were *already* illegal. Why would anybody think that another statute would be any more effective, or would ever be enforced?

9 posted on 09/10/2009 6:02:53 AM PDT by Sloth (Ted Kennedy's brain tumor has killed more people than my gun.)
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To: Shooter 2.5

We got it. You don’t like the GOA.

Get over it!


10 posted on 09/10/2009 7:21:03 AM PDT by Red in Blue PA (If guns cause crime, then all of mine are defective!)
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To: lsucat; Roux; Pikachu_Dad; WFTR; chemicalman; abb; Liberty911; CajunConservative; LSUfan; ...

Pelican State ping


11 posted on 09/10/2009 7:30:28 AM PDT by Ebenezer (Strength and Honor!)
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To: rrstar96

Bump!


12 posted on 09/10/2009 8:13:59 AM PDT by bayouranger (The 1st victim of islam is the person who practices the lie.)
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To: rrstar96

In the T-P this morning.

http://blog.nola.com/editorials/2009/09/new_orleans_police_must_review.html

New Orleans police must review its recruiting and training procedures
Posted by The Times-Picayune editorial page staff September 10, 2009 12:33AM

Former NOPD officer Desmond Shorty, accused of stealing a luxury watch during a police investigation. News of yet another rogue officer in the New Orleans Police Department is a troubling development — one police officials shouldn’t treat as an isolated incident.

At least officer Desmond Shorty is not waiting around to be fired. He resigned last week, when he was arrested and charged with stealing a luxury watch from a couple while he was investigating an incident at their residence last month.

snip


13 posted on 09/10/2009 8:46:48 AM PDT by abb ("What ISN'T in the news is often more important than what IS." Ed Biersmith, 1942 -)
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