shanneba
Professional
A federal judge has ruled that a Long Island couple's Second Amendment rights were violated after the Nassau County Police Department's Pistol License Section revoked their permits and ordered them to turn over their firearms after their daughter had expressed thoughts of depression and harming herself with a rope. Even after multiple physicians determined the child wasn't in danger of harming herself, the police refused to reinstate Dennis and Lisa Wysocki's licenses, and more than three years after their guns were surrendered the Wysocki's have yet to get them back.
On Tuesday, U.S. District Judge Sanket Bulsara granted the couple's request for summary judgment based on a violation of their Second Amendment rights, writing that the police department "present zero evidence that the PLS's actions are consistent with the Nation's historical tradition of firearm regulation," instead relying on the Rahimi decision to justify their actions.
bearingarms.com
On Tuesday, U.S. District Judge Sanket Bulsara granted the couple's request for summary judgment based on a violation of their Second Amendment rights, writing that the police department "present zero evidence that the PLS's actions are consistent with the Nation's historical tradition of firearm regulation," instead relying on the Rahimi decision to justify their actions.
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