Ashcroft and NRA Provide
Second Amendment Gun Defense for Accused American Taliban Terrorist John
Walker Lindh
Washington, DC�One
week after the Ashcroft Justice Department formally adopted the National
Rifle Association (NRA) view that the Second Amendment guarantees a broad
individual right to keep and bear arms, the defense team for accused American
Taliban terrorist John Walker Lindh has used the government's arguments
made to the U.S. Supreme Court to urge dismissal of the gun charge filed
against him.
The Justice Department
position, announced last week in briefs filed with the U.S. Supreme Court,
is contrary to both Supreme Court precedent and long-standing and consistent
bipartisan Justice Department policy that the Second Amendment protects
a militia-based�not an expansive individual�right to bear arms.
VPC Litigation Director
and Legislative Counsel Mathew Nosanchuk states, "We warned of this inevitable
result and it has not taken long for our fears to come true. The Ashcroft
Justice Department has betrayed its law enforcement responsibilities by
strengthening the legal position of those charged with committing serious
crimes. These are the real-life consequences of a cynical, politically
motivated action. Now defendants charged with a gun crime will argue the
NRA-endorsed, Ashcroft- implemented, American Taliban defense. The tough-on-crime
rhetoric of President Bush, Attorney General Ashcroft, and the NRA means
little now that they have given accused gun criminals a new Justice Department-endorsed
defense."
The Violence Policy
Center warned of the clear threat to public health and safety posed by
the Justice Department shift in a May 2 letter sent to Solicitor General
Ted Olson by former Deputy Solicitor General Andrew Frey on behalf of
the VPC before the briefs were filed. The letter stated: "Prosecuting
gun crimes would also be made more difficult in the wake of a policy change
by the government....A person accused of violating one or more of these
statutes will have the opportunity to make the argument that he was merely
exercising his Second Amendment right at the time of his arrest, and that
any statute purporting to impose criminal penalties for that conduct is
unconstitutional....The ability of the United States to perform its task
of defending the laws enacted by the Congress will be needlessly, and
perhaps seriously, compromised by a filing of the sort we here urge you
to avoid."
The Violence Policy Center is a
national non-profit educational foundation that conducts research on violence
in America and works to develop violence-reduction policies and proposals.
The Center examines the role of firearms in America, conducts research
on firearms violence, and explores new ways to decrease firearm-related
death and injury.
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For Release:
Thursday, May 16, 2002
Contact:
Naomi Seligman
Violence Policy Center
(202) 822-8200 x105
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