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CGF Lawsuit: OOIDA v. Lindley - AB-962 Unconstitutional

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  • hasserl
    Veteran Member
    • Apr 2010
    • 2876

    Originally posted by OleCuss
    OK, I got the impression that Krause may not be the favored child and they didn't want to stick anyone else with this loss.

    Since there is some obligation for the AG to defend the passed laws there should be some effort in this matter so Krause is stuck. While there were a lot of citations I still got the feeling that this was almost a boilerplate response.

    To me it looks like a relatively amateur defense put on because they have to - and that the author didn't get a whole lot of support or oversight.

    It must suck to be the red-headed child of the AG's office.

    If I'm getting this wrong I hope y'all will correct me.
    They have to? You mean how they had to defend prop 8?

    Comment

    • hasserl
      Veteran Member
      • Apr 2010
      • 2876

      Originally posted by BigDogatPlay
      No, the argument is not useless until it's ruled upon in a court of appropriate authority. Prop 8 was not unconstitutional until it was ruled to be. And because there seems to be no interest (stomach) on the part of the state to defend it's laws and constitution on appeal, the ruling of a single lower level judge will stand without further review. Same thing happened in the matter of Prop 187.

      The process worked to a point, even though the state did not participate in defending it's laws and constitution which is what I, personally, find offensive as a tax paying citizen.

      In both matters the state tacitly, but completely, abrogated it's responsibility to defend the state constitution as lawfully amended by ballot initiative. Last time I checked there is not only a sworn duty incumbent upon an executive officer of the state to defend the laws of the state, but as an attorney admitted before the bar the Attorney General, and his professional staff, have an ethical obligation to represent the interest of their client... the people of the State of California. They do not, IMO, get the luxury of picking and choosing what they feel like defending.... particularly when it concerns initiative constitutional amendments passed by majorities of voters. Those, above all else, command a full and complete examination and argument if challenged.

      When the rule of law is subjected to the twists and turns of partisan political wind, our society gets a little closer to it's end.
      Nicely put, the mental gymnastics at play refuting this are illogical at best and leaning towards base and desperate.

      Comment

      • OleCuss
        Calguns Addict
        • Jun 2009
        • 7800

        Originally posted by hasserl
        They have to? You mean how they had to defend prop 8?
        I'd accept your edit, but I think it was Gray who was pointing out some of the finer points about what can or must be defended and needn't be.

        I'm not sure I agree with Gray's statement. Not that I believe that he is wrong in his logic or knowledge of the relevant cases.

        My thing is that I think the courts have done a lot of twisting of the obvious over time and it has stymied freedom rather than furthering it. We have come very close to devolving into a krytocracy and that is a pretty nasty development.
        CGN's token life-long teetotaling vegetarian. Don't consider anything I post as advice or as anything more than opinion (if even that).

        Comment

        • Gray Peterson
          Calguns Addict
          • Jan 2005
          • 5817

          Originally posted by OleCuss
          I'd accept your edit, but I think it was Gray who was pointing out some of the finer points about what can or must be defended and needn't be.
          I'm pointing out the legal facts.

          Originally posted by OleCuss
          I'm not sure I agree with Gray's statement. Not that I believe that he is wrong in his logic or knowledge of the relevant cases.
          Jerry Brown's office defended the State of California in the In Re Marriage Cases case against Prop 22 and the 1977 statute prohibiting same gender couples from marrying.

          Proposition 8 triggered a situation very similar to Romer v. Evans and US Department of Agriculture v. Moreno. Just because it involves marriage issues rather than being able to get the same kinds of protections offered based on race and religion doesn't make it any less applicable.

          Also, California Proposition 14 (1963). Reitman v. Mulkey. Pat Brown (Jerry's dad) lost his re-election for supporting the constitutional challenge to that initiative statute. Doing the right thing sometimes has political costs.

          Originally posted by OleCuss
          My thing is that I think the courts have done a lot of twisting of the obvious over time and it has stymied freedom rather than furthering it. We have come very close to devolving into a krytocracy and that is a pretty nasty development.
          I'm sure the southern segregationists agreed with your sentiments circa 1955.
          Last edited by Gray Peterson; 09-20-2010, 3:53 PM.

          Comment

          • Window_Seat
            Veteran Member
            • Apr 2008
            • 3533

            Heads up gags/gals!

            CRPA FOUNDATION: Parker Case Update / Injunction Sought to Stop AB 962 (as started by CDMichel).

            Another 2 weeks!

            Erik.

            Comment

            • BigDogatPlay
              Calguns Addict
              • Jun 2007
              • 7362

              Originally posted by Gray Peterson
              Your underlined comment shows an ignorance, that laws are constitutional until proven otherwise by a court.
              I'll take on faith that your use of ignorance is merely a statement of opinion and not a self righteous pejorative.

              The state is under no obligation to defend unconstitutional laws in court.

              See Article III Section 3.5:

              SEC. 3.5. An administrative agency, including an administrative
              agency created by the Constitution or an initiative statute, has no
              power:
              (a) To declare a statute unenforceable, or refuse to enforce a
              statute, on the basis of it being unconstitutional unless an
              appellate court has made a determination that such statute is
              unconstitutional;
              (b) To declare a statute unconstitutional;
              (c) To declare a statute unenforceable, or to refuse to enforce a
              statute on the basis that federal law or federal regulations prohibit
              the enforcement of such statute unless an appellate court has made a
              determination that the enforcement of such statute is prohibited by
              federal law or federal regulations.
              So then your position is that an executive officer / agency of the state can pretty much whistle dixie if they like since they are not an administrative agency? Please show me where, as an executive officer, the Attorney General or the Governor can declare a law or constitutional amendment unconstitutional by fiat... as they did here through their words and actions. And your extract says that the agency may not declare. I don't see anything in that passage that says the may or may not defend.

              Also, it wasn't enacted by the people of the state of California. It was enacted by the voters who bothered to show up to vote in 2008. Subjecting fundamental rights and equal protection that is owned by every person alive in the state to the whims of those who bother to show up is anathema. Gun owners in this state have been subject to the tyrrany of the voting majority.
              Well, unfortunately, there is still that pesky concept of majority rules in an election even as hard as some seem so bent to prove otherwise. It's simple math, really...they who win elections get to make the rules. If only five people show up to vote in a state of 35 million, and when the count is done it's three to two in favor of whatever it is, then they win.

              But then that is why we have courts isn't it? So elections don't really mean what they say.

              Having said that, gun owners in this state have been subjected to a systematic tyranny of a Legislature lawfully elected by a majority of voters who actually show up. Because of that we get the kind of government we deserve. I would submit that the gay community suffered no such governmental tyranny and trying to frame this as a civil rights nexus is, IMO, comparing apples to oranges and just a wee bit narrow on the vision thing. After all, RKBA has been held to be a fundamental right specifically protected under the Constitution of the United States. At that level, perhaps you could point me to the appropriate passage in that document which enumerates a fundamental right to marry?

              They are under no obligation to defend a statute, ethical or otherwise, or to appeal a negative decision. Jerry Brown made the right call here, not just because it's the right thing to do, but more important to fiscal conservatives, to save the state millions of dollars attorney fees for something it could not win. Now, the Defendant-Intervenors are on the hook rather than the state. Now that is being thrifty with funds.
              And I, respectfully, disagree with that conclusion and I believe that it is something that at it's core is fundamentally wrong with the entire exercise. Not just gays wanting to marry, either. Jerry Brown made the right call politically. End of story.

              While it may surprise you that I actually was against Prop 8, just as I was for 187. I am not arguing from the point of Prop 8 being a good thing. I am merely pointing out in both cases the people of the State of California... those pesky few who actually show and vote anyway took it up the duke without benefit of representation before the bar because it didn't suit someone's political agenda.

              That is the real tyranny...
              Last edited by BigDogatPlay; 09-20-2010, 4:31 PM.
              -- Rifle, Pistol, Shotgun

              Not a lawyer, just a former LEO proud to have served.

              Americans have the right and advantage of being armed - unlike the citizens of other countries whose governments are afraid to trust the people with arms. -- James Madison

              Comment

              • Purple K
                CGN/CGSSA Contributor
                CGN ContributorCGN Contributor - Lifetime
                • Dec 2008
                • 3101

                Two Weeks???
                sigpic

                Comment

                • Window_Seat
                  Veteran Member
                  • Apr 2008
                  • 3533

                  Originally posted by Purple K
                  Two Weeks???
                  Go eat a sandwich and take a nap...

                  Erik.

                  Comment

                  • hoffmang
                    I need a LIFE!!
                    • Apr 2006
                    • 18448

                    Our opposition to the motion to dismiss was filed today. It has one very interesting tidbit in it that I will be creating a separate thread about.

                    -Gene
                    Gene Hoffman
                    Chairman, California Gun Rights Foundation

                    DONATE NOW
                    to support the rights of California gun owners. Follow @cgfgunrights on Twitter.
                    Opinions posted in this account are my own and not the approved position of any organization.
                    I read PMs. But, if you need a response, include an email address or email me directly!


                    "The problem with being a gun rights supporter is that the left hates guns and the right hates rights." -Anon

                    Comment

                    • 383green
                      Veteran Member
                      • Jan 2006
                      • 4328

                      Originally posted by hoffmang
                      They don't care about your stupid guns! --Mitch
                      Mark J. Blair, NF6X

                      Comment

                      • HowardW56
                        Calguns Addict
                        • Aug 2003
                        • 5901

                        Originally posted by hoffmang
                        Our opposition to the motion to dismiss was filed today. It has one very interesting tidbit in it that I will be creating a separate thread about.

                        -Gene

                        Adobe is telling me that the file is damaged
                        sigpic

                        Comment

                        • hoffmang
                          I need a LIFE!!
                          • Apr 2006
                          • 18448

                          RECAP is misbehaving somehow. Here is an alternate link until RECAP cleans up.

                          -Gene
                          Gene Hoffman
                          Chairman, California Gun Rights Foundation

                          DONATE NOW
                          to support the rights of California gun owners. Follow @cgfgunrights on Twitter.
                          Opinions posted in this account are my own and not the approved position of any organization.
                          I read PMs. But, if you need a response, include an email address or email me directly!


                          "The problem with being a gun rights supporter is that the left hates guns and the right hates rights." -Anon

                          Comment

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