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-Short Attention Span Theater-
Supremes Reject Oregon Sheriffs Effort To Deny Legal Guns To Medical Marijuana Users
2012-01-12
Anti-gun rights Sheriffs in Washington and Jackson County, Oregon, in their infinite wisdom, denied Concealed Handgun Permits to their county residents who possessed state medical marijuana cards.

These residents had complied with all of the legal requirements for a permit, but admitted to being regular users of medical marijuana. When the people who were denied permits sued the Sheriffs, the determined Sheriffs answered that the state’s concealed permit laws were preempted by federal law against possession of firearms by people who are “unlawful” users of controlled substances.

The Sheriffs believed that the Federal Gun Control Act of 1968 applied in this circumstance and that Oregon law was preempted by the Federal Gun Control Statute. The state courts, including the Oregon Supreme Court ruled that the Sheriffs got it wrong, and that permits should have been issued. But the anti-firearms rights sheriffs took their case to the United States Supreme Court, hoping that the countryÂ’s highest court would overturn the Oregon CourtsÂ’ decisions.

After a long legal battle went through 3 different levels of OregonÂ’s state courts, each a successively higher Court, the anti-gun rights Sheriffs lost. The Oregon Supreme Court used "common sense" that Anti -Gun rights groups often refer to in shutting down the Sheriffs' arguments against gun rights.

It ruled that the Gun Control Act of 1968 specifically renounced any intent of Congress to preempt state law unless the law is in “direct and positive” conflict with the Act. The GCA of 1968 makes it illegal for anyone who is an unlawful user of or addicted to any controlled substance to possess a firearm received in interstate commerce. However, Oregon's highest Court said that Federal Gun Control law does not apply the issuance of permits to medical marijuana users.

The Oregon State CourtsÂ’ reasoning was since the Sheriffs wanted to enforce the Federal policy of keeping guns out of the hands of users of medical marijuana by using the state licensing system, that they had problems they could not overcome.

First, up to this time, there is the fact that Congress has not enacted any law that requires denial of a Concealed Pistol Permit as a way to enforce federal policy underlying the GCA of 1968.

And, secondly, under the Oregon law, the state concealed permit statute itself shows an underlying policy of not using the stateÂ’s Concealed Handgun Permit licensing mechanism to keep firearms out of the hands of medical marijuana users.

However, in the end the Sheriffs lost because the United States Supreme Court refused to hear the SheriffsÂ’ appeal. That has the effect of agreeing that the Oregon Courts got it right, and that the Sheriffs should have issued the carry permits. All Oregon Sheriffs now have to either issue or renew permits to all who comply with legal concealed carry requirements in Oregon.
Posted by:Anonymoose

#6  I suspect that if the State wanted to really support the Sheriff's then they would modify the CCW law for the State of Oregon.
Posted by: tipover   2012-01-12 22:47  

#5  The exception being Jamaican posses, who consume copious amounts of marijuana, but can be insanely ultraviolent in really graphic ways.
Posted by: Anonymoose   2012-01-12 20:58  

#4  I gotta believe the last thing your average pot smoker wants is a gun fight. That'd tend to harsh his mellow, y'know what I mean? A real bummer, man.
Posted by: Ebbang Uluque6305   2012-01-12 18:56  

#3  There must be such an thing, carrying a gun equivalent to DUI.

?
Posted by: Bright Pebbles   2012-01-12 16:20  

#2  Is it illegal to own a gun if you are legally able to buy a bottle of Jack Daniels? Nope. Is it illegal to own a gun if you are being treated for cancer? Nope.

If you are going to make pot legal, you have to deal with stuff like this, like it or not.
Posted by: Secret Master   2012-01-12 15:58  

#1  I'm not particularly afraid of a marijuana user with a gun. What worries me is a steroid user with a gun. You could encounter one of those any time you encounter law enforcement in this land...
Posted by: M. Murcek   2012-01-12 13:35  

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