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Magazine Repair Kit Co. Sets up GoFundMe to Defend Against San Francisco Lawsuit
ammoland ^
| 9 March, 2017
| Dean Weingarten
Posted on 03/13/2017 5:19:13 AM PDT by marktwain
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Using government resources to file civil suits against private parties is a form of lawfare that we are seeing more of. Government prosecutors have the deep pockets of the state; they are not spending their own money. In addition, prosecutors have an extremely high level of immunity. It is nearly impossible to use the legal system to go after them. The Supreme Court has ruled that they can lie, conspire with witnesses to give fraudulent evidence, fie repeated punishing and false prosecutions; and they are immune from counter suit, as long as they stop short of actual court trials.
1
posted on
03/13/2017 5:19:14 AM PDT
by
marktwain
To: marktwain
Would seem that this law would violate the commerce act.
To: marktwain
I thought this was going yo be about how to reassemble Time snd Newsweek...
3
posted on
03/13/2017 5:41:49 AM PDT
by
Paladin2
(No spellcheck. It's too much work to undo the auto wrong word substitution on mobile devices.)
To: marktwain
Didn’t SCOTUS rule that cops can make up and enforce law on the spot?
4
posted on
03/13/2017 5:44:18 AM PDT
by
Paladin2
(No spellcheck. It's too much work to undo the auto wrong word substitution on mobile devices.)
To: marktwain
What happens if these out-of-state companies just tell California to pound sand? Will CA send the California Highway Patrol to pick up the errant company owners?
5
posted on
03/13/2017 5:48:52 AM PDT
by
moovova
To: moovova
This is what happens the sue them and try and bankrupt them.
To: marktwain
There’s a certain gun shop getting around Colorado’s ridiculous magazine capacity limits via a clever trick. I’m reluctant to say more here in case some lib lurker gets her panties in a bundle and decides to make an issue of it. But it looks like it would take a one-time investment of 0$ and less than 2 min per mag to get back to normal...
7
posted on
03/13/2017 6:00:36 AM PDT
by
ThunderSleeps
(Doing my part to help make America great again!)
To: Paladin2
Some things are too broke to fix.
8
posted on
03/13/2017 6:09:26 AM PDT
by
Pecos
(What we obtain too cheap, we esteem too lightly.)
To: marktwain
Counter sue for a freakin Billion!
9
posted on
03/13/2017 6:13:32 AM PDT
by
The Toll
To: marktwain
Don’t they have to show damages?
10
posted on
03/13/2017 6:15:02 AM PDT
by
dila813
(Voting for Trump to Punish Trumpets!)
To: ThunderSleeps
“Theres a certain gun shop getting around Colorados ridiculous magazine capacity limits....”
Colorado has been a destination for out of state hunters for years, but that’s all been turned upside down. Colorado would rather make money from taxes on the marijuana industry. Bring a bong to Colorado, but leave your standard rifle magazines at home.
To: dila813
--
Don't they have to show damages? --
They are claiming fraud, and from the excerpt, the claim exists by statute, not by a common-law tort.
Legislatures make plenty of civil-penalty laws that lack the component of actual money damages.
12
posted on
03/13/2017 6:29:00 AM PDT
by
Cboldt
To: riverrunner
Would seem that this law would violate the commerce act.Federal law be damned!
We have an AGENDA!
13
posted on
03/13/2017 6:32:44 AM PDT
by
null and void
(Drain the swamp! Get rid of the mosque-itoes!)
To: Cboldt
I just can’t understand, I would think they would have to say that they purchased it and it was something other than what they thought it was.
14
posted on
03/13/2017 6:36:54 AM PDT
by
dila813
(Voting for Trump to Punish Trumpets!)
To: marktwain
Oh noze,,, my 10/30 mag is actually a 30/30 ??
15
posted on
03/13/2017 6:42:54 AM PDT
by
ßuddaßudd
(>> M A G A << "What the hell kind of country is this if I can only hate a man if he's white?")
To: dila813
--
I would think they would have to say that they purchased it and it was something other than what they thought it was. --
The statute invoked appears to allow the state to make a civil claim against actors the state alleges are perpetrating fraud. The state doesn't have to be defrauded, itself.
People v. Badger Mountain Supply, Inc., at al - San Francisco Superior Court, Case No. CGC 17-557010 : note this is a 13Mb pdf file
16
posted on
03/13/2017 6:44:37 AM PDT
by
Cboldt
To: Cboldt
Wow, they can really abuse this
17
posted on
03/13/2017 6:51:03 AM PDT
by
dila813
(Voting for Trump to Punish Trumpets!)
To: marktwain
Did he file a suit against the estate of the San Bernadino shooters, or their mosque?
18
posted on
03/13/2017 7:52:30 AM PDT
by
Darteaus94025
(Can't have a Liberal without a Lie)
To: marktwain
Issue out-of-state arrest warrents for Herera. Find a Sherrif and DA somewhere like Idaho or Wyoming. Charge Huerera and his office under racketeering laws, wrongful prosecution under color of authority, violation of the Wyoming State Constitution, attempting to deprive citizens of the civil rights and anything else you can think of to throw at him.
Then bring civil suites in similar jurisdictions.
19
posted on
03/13/2017 9:05:04 AM PDT
by
Jack Black
(Dispossession is an obliteration of memory, of place, and of identity)
To: marktwain
These gun shops are too worried about making money, when they should be standing up and shooting back at anyone who suggests they have any right whatsoever to arrest, confiscate or otherwise interfere with the proper administration of the 2nd Amendment. Because they would rather comply with an un-Constitutional mandate in order to continue making money, I hope they get the snot sued out of them and it ultimately destroys them.
20
posted on
03/13/2017 10:00:48 AM PDT
by
dware
(I love waking up in a world with President Trump!)
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