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View Full Version : Grabber alert: DOJ Firearms Deputy AG Alison Merilees worked for Jack Scott...


bwiese
11-21-2005, 09:10 PM
I just Googled Alison Merilees (Deputy AG, DOJ Firearms Div.)

She's a grabber. She worked for Jack Scott's campaign, wrote SB498.

see http://www.4children.org/news/104gse.htm


Grassroots Snapshot

Statewide coalition wins push for safer handgun design

By Meg Hamill

Jane Roth transformed her grief into activism after the 1993 death of her son Mark, killed while playing with guns with a neighbor. Now she is president of the California State Council of the Million Mom March, which works to prevent gun violence.

Last year the California Million Mom March joined with other organizations to successfully lobby for SB 489, requiring semi-automatic handguns to indicate if they are loaded. Coalition members credit their success to a campaign that worked on many levels.

Personal stories. "There are so many of us who are victims," says Roth. "[At first] we don't know what to do or how to do it. I am so fortunate that I have had a good mentor and that I have the ability to get out there and advocate."

"I had no particular interest in guns or gun policy until my son was killed," says Griffin Dix, secretary of the Million Mom March's Alameda Chapter. His son was accidentally shot by a friend who didn't know his father's gun was loaded. After Dix began to share his story, he "met so many other people who were also speaking out. I saw them as heroes."

Coalition strategy. The Million Mom March joined with the Brady Campaign, the Coalition to Stop Gun Violence, and Women Against Gun Violence in conference calls last January to plan the year's legislative strategy. "We talked about what bills we wanted to support. We each have different skills, and bring different things to the table," says Luis Tolley, director of state legislation for the Brady Campaign.

Legislative expertise. The Brady Campaign and the Coalition to Stop Gun Violence, both national organizations, helped draft SB 498 and shepherd it through the legislature. "Both of those groups were pivotal. They went to Assembly members on the fence and said, 'We represent a certain percentage of the voting public and this is how we feel about this issue,'" says Alison Merilees, a consultant for Senator Jack Scott (D, Pasadena). Sen. Scott, who also lost a child to gun violence, was the primary author of the bill.

Email activism. Responding to email action alerts from coalition members, several thousand Californians backed up the lobbying with emails supporting SB 489.

Gathering signatures. Meanwhile, the Million Mom March's Los Angeles chapter gathered signatures in support of SB 489 at local health fairs and school events.

Sacramento lobby day. The high point of the campaign was a Sacramento Lobby Day, May 7, when dozens of grassroots activists presented petitions and met with legislators. Many brought disposable cameras-not to take pictures, but to make a point. Charlie Bleck, who joined the Million Mom March's Orange County chapter after losing his son to gun violence, says they asked legislators: "If this $5 camera can tell us whether it's loaded, then why can't a handgun tell us the same thing?"

SB 489 passed in September 2003 and will take effect in 2006. "Bringing all those tools to bear, we got a really good bill," says Eric Gorovitz, western policy director for the Coalition to Stop Gun Violence.

For more information:
* Brady Campaign, 202-289-7319, www.bradycampaign.org
* Coalition to Stop Gun Violence, 202-408-0061, www.gunfree.org
*Million Mom March, to find a chapter near you, 202-289-7319, www.millionmommarch.org
* Women Against Gun Violence, 310-204-2348, www.wagv.org



Bill Wiese
San Jose

blacklisted
11-21-2005, 09:11 PM
I found this same article when I was looking for info on her for my letter...I thought artherd might have spelled her name wrong. I also found one where she supports some kind of new handgun restriction. I'm not surprised at all.

bwiese
11-21-2005, 09:17 PM
Yes, she's all for 'safe handguns' - she prob actually wrote the legislation for Jack Scott.

She's a political appointee and needed a job, so she jumped over to Lockyer's office. If Lockyer goes somewhere else next election, she might follow.

Now, boys, remember all, when you write to her about various legal issues, etc. you've gotta do it with a straight face and not be insulting, etc. She's not the place to apply pressure, it's useless. Fire her bosses at the ballot box, etc.


Bill Wiese
San Jose

shopkeep
11-21-2005, 11:24 PM
Just one question about that ballot box... last I heard we're playing a rigged game. Just look at how OUTRAGEOUS the voting districts are just to make sure every conservative vote is dilluted to the maximum amount. I'll keep voting until my hands fall off just like the chads that fall of the ballots that keep cronies like Lockyer in office, but I firmly believe that Grass Roots efforts like RKBA are our only voice in this state.

The loss of our 2nd Amendment Freedoms in this state are just the most visible effect for us. Think of it, when was the last time you did ANYTHING in California without first thinking, "CRAP I better make sure that's legal first!" and researching the laws on it. At times it seems the complex web of state regulation and laws have made it possible for people to break at least 5 or 6 laws every day without even being aware of it.

When I came to California in the late 1980s I was convinced it was the greatest state to live in. Sometimes I wonder how guys in San Francisco handle it... it costs $650,000 for a rat infested shack without running water and thugs run the streets free to prey on any resident confident they will have the upperhand. Afterall, how will their victim get their shotgun out of their gun safe, load it with ammo from the ammo safe, and then get the safety lock off before a thug can kick down the door?

WOW :eek: !!! That has to be one of my most cynnical posts. I'm scaring myself here folks. Just had to vent that's all.

artherd
11-21-2005, 11:40 PM
I'm even more astonished at the letter I finally got out of her office. Wow.

shopkeep
11-22-2005, 01:50 AM
No kidding, when you read about how committed she is to banning all firearms it easily elevates you to the level of Paul Revere and other heros :D ! Your JP Rifles ctr-2 is a clear showing of the middle finger to them. You played their game by your rules and beat them at it. Score one for the man in the Tux with the JP rifle!

gobabygo
11-23-2005, 08:19 AM
Also got this hit while doing a search with Alison Merrilees:

http://www.gunlockinfo.com/Pages/GUN%20LOCKS,%20LAWS-TESTING-PRESS%20RELEASE%20(D)/GUN%20LOCK%20NEWS%20RELEASE.htm

ryang
11-28-2005, 12:09 PM
There's a big difference between personal opinions and following directives your boss lays out. I don't claim to know Alison's personal views on gun control. What you've cited doesn't indicate that either.

RRangel
11-28-2005, 01:15 PM
There's a big difference between personal opinions and following directives your boss lays out. I don't claim to know Alison's personal views on gun control. What you've cited doesn't indicate that either.

I highly doubt this persons personal opinion is far from that of her bosses. Someone with that level of education doesn't have to put themselves in position were they are just "following directives your boss lays out".

bwiese
11-28-2005, 01:22 PM
There's a big difference between personal opinions and following directives your boss lays out. I don't claim to know Alison's personal views on gun control. What you've cited doesn't indicate that either


Ryang,

That's quite a bit of political naivete.

Remember, she was a paid POLTICAL CONSULTANT of hyper-antigun Sen Jack Scott (D). [Background: he was chancellor of a SoCal college, his kid was killed - shot at some party, I believe; someone pointed a loaded shotgun at him. I am not sure if drugs/alcohol were involved, either.]

Legislators' staffers and consultants have the kinda jobs in which one can't "fake"/hide opinions: you're hired and take those jobs because you're pretty close to a true believer and think like they do. These are not mere office administration/secretarial jobs. State Senators and Assemblymen really don't write their own legislation - that's what their staff is for, for all the legwork and intricacies. It'd be difficult to do this for anything but the shortest term if your mentality was not similar/identical to your boss'.

I am sure Alison Merilees actually wrote much of recent SB489 gun 'safety' law (LCIs and mag disco safeties) and figured out the legal side of the intricacies. She probably roped in a few CHP types for technical gun advice.

(In a similar fashion, my local state senator, Rebecca Cohn, has a ex-CHiPpie/lawyer working for her for crime/public safety matters - he was working on AB98.)

There's also an overpopulation of lawyers in CA, so being a Deputy AG (there's LOTS of them) may be a decent job w/favorable hours. This is esp helpful since it's a political job where one mixes it up with others to get needed political contacts for possible future runs for office...

In any case, her opinions are probably identical to Bill Lockyer's.


I highly doubt this persons personal opinion is far from that of her bosses. Someone with that level of education doesn't have to put themselves in position were they are just "following directives your boss lays out".

Yup, you got it.

delloro
11-28-2005, 01:31 PM
Well, there's an overpopulation of lawyers in CA....

you all are welcome to thin our ranks by starving us to death any time you want.

when the number of lawyers outsrtips the client base, there will be a change. until then, don't blame us for meeting a market demand.

bwiese
11-28-2005, 01:40 PM
Delloro...

you all are welcome to thin our ranks by starving us to death any time you want.

when the number of lawyers outsrtips the client base, there will be a change. until then, don't blame us for meeting a market demand.

I wasn't attacking lawyers actually, I didn't make my point clear... Our perceptions of market demand differ....

I was just stating that, from what I've seen even in SF Bay Area, very very very few new starting lawyers get the great jobs at even near-white-shoe law firms. (That is, $115K+ salary, etc.) There's not that many jobs at those firms as percentage of market anyway. Appears 'fresh meat' is a lot of risk at smaller firms. Unemployment for young lawyers is reasonably high in legal profession, apparently.

I am sure this varies by competence, attitudes, luck, etc. too. - like any field.

But apparently many non-star new fresh lawyers have difficulty finding regular legal practice, and end up going into semiadministrative positions in gov't bureacracies. Newspaper articles abound about graduating new lawyers into a fairly filled field (excepting governmental growth). For example, some of the DOJ positions that require a JD pay only $45K to$50K-ish! Even with COLAs over time, that ain't too hot. Imagine living and paying off law school student loans on that.

ryang
11-28-2005, 06:17 PM
That's quite a bit of political naivete.Maybe yes, maybe no. Simply because you work on a politico's staff does not necessarily mean you agree with all of their directives.

In any case, her opinions are probably identical to Bill Lockyer's.Probable? Perhaps. Proven based on those two citations? I don't think so.