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Fonzy
11-16-2010, 10:00
Does anyone else have any more information? There seems like something is missing here, I don't understand why the Judge would act the way he did.
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Sue Aitken called the police because she was worried about her son, Brian. She now lives with the guilt of knowing that her phone call is the reason Brian spent his 27th birthday in a New Jersey prison last month. If the state gets its way, he will be there for the next seven years.

Aitken was sentenced in August after he was convicted of felony possession of a handgun. Before his arrest, Aitken, an entrepreneur and owner of a media consulting business, had no criminal record, and it appears he made a good-faith effort to comply with New Jersey's stringent gun laws. Even the jurors who convicted him seem to have been looking for a reason to acquit him. But the judge gave them little choice. Aitken's best hope now is executive clemency. He is petitioning New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie for a reprieve this week.

Aitken, born and raised in New Jersey, moved to Colorado several years ago. In Colorado he married his now ex-wife, also originally from New Jersey. The two had a son together. When the marriage dissolved, Atiken's wife and infant son moved back to New Jersey. Aitken eventually decided to move back as well in order to be closer to his son. Beginning in late 2008, he took the first of several trips between the two states, a back-and-forth process that involved selling his house in Colorado, moving his possessions across the country, and finding a job and a new place to live back east. Until he could find a new apartment, he stored his belongings at his parents' home in Burlington County.

In December 2008 Aitken made a final trip back to Colorado to collect the last of his possessions, including the three handguns he had legally purchased in Colorado—transactions that required him to pass a federal background check. Aitken and his friend Michael Torries had found an apartment in Hoboken, and Torries accompanied Aitken to Colorado to help with the last leg of the move. According to testimony Torries later gave at Aitken's trial, before leaving Colorado Aitken researched and printed out New Jersey and federal gun laws to be sure he moved his firearms legally. Richard Gilbert, Aitken's trial attorney, says Aitken also called the New Jersey State Police to get advice on how to legally transport his guns, although Burlington County Superior Court Judge James Morley didn't allow testimony about that phone call at Aitken's trial.

Aitken's legal troubles began in January 2009, when he drove to his parents' house to pick up some of his belongings. He had grown distraught over tensions with his ex-wife, who according to Aitken had been refusing to let him see his son. When Aitken visited his parents' house, his mother, Sue Aitken, grew worried about his mental state. In an interview with a New Jersey radio program last week, she said she works with children who have mental health problems, and she has always been taught to call police as a precaution when someone appears despondent and shows any sign that he might harm himself. Concerned about her son, she called 911 but then thought better of it and hung up the phone. The police responded anyway. When they arrived at her home, Sue Aitken told them her concerns about her son, and the police called Brian Aitken, who was then en route to Hoboken, on his cell phone. They asked him to turn around and come back to his parents' house. He complied.

It was there that the police confronted Aitken. Although they determined he wasn't a threat to himself or anyone else, they searched his car, where they found his handguns. They were locked, unloaded, and stored in the trunk, as federal and New Jersey law require for guns in transport. The police arrested Aitken anyway, charging him with unlawful possession of a weapon.

To buy a gun in New Jersey, you must go through a laborious process to obtain a "purchaser's permit." But that permit doesn't entitle you to possess a gun. A few select groups of people, mostly off-duty police officers and security personnel, can obtain carry permits. But anyone else with a gun is presumed to be violating state law and must defend against the charge of illegal gun possession by claiming one of the state's exemptions.

Evan Nappen, who is representing Aitken in his appeal, likens the process to claiming self-defense in a murder case. "If you kill someone because they're about to kill you first," he says, "you're still guilty of homicide. You have to prove you should be granted the exception for self-defense. It's the same thing for just about all New Jersey gun owners. You're guilty until you prove that you're innocent.”

The exemptions allow New Jersey residents to have guns in their homes, while hunting or at a shooting range, while traveling to or from hunting grounds or a shooting range, and when traveling between residences. Brian Aitken claimed he was moving between residences, and there is pretty strong evidence that he was. Sue Aitken testified that her son was moving his belongings from her house to his. So did Aitken's roommate. One of the police officers at the scene testified that Aitken's car was filled with personal belongings.

Yet Judge Morley wouldn't allow Aitken to claim the exemption for transporting guns between residences. He wouldn't even let the jury know about it. During deliberations, the jurors asked three times about exceptions to the law, which suggests they weren't comfortable convicting Aitken. Morley refused to answer them all three times. Gilbert and Nappen, Aitken's lawyers, say he also should have been protected by a federal law that forbids states from prosecuting gun owners who are transporting guns between residences. Morley would not let Aitken cite that provision either.

In response to a query about why Aitken wasn't granted the moving exception, the Burlington County Prosecutor's Office replied via email, "There was no evidence produced at the trial by the defendant that warranted such a defense." Gilbert says that isn't true. "We put on plenty of evidence that Brian was moving," he says, "including testimony from his mother, his roommate, even the police officer who arrested him."

In a telephone interview, Morley (who lost his job when Gov. Christie declined to reappoint him in June because of rulings in unrelated cases) says he didn't allow the jury to consider the moving exception because "it wasn't relevant." Echoing the prosecutor's office, Morley says: "There was no evidence that Mr. Aitken was moving. He was trying to argue that the law should give him this broad window extending over several weeks to justify driving around with guns in his car. There was also some evidence that Mr. Aitken wasn't moving at all when he was arrested, but had stored the guns in his car because his roommate was throwing a party, and he didn't want the guns in the apartment while guests were there drinking."

Gilbert and Nappen say the story about the party came not from Aitken, his parents, or his roommate but from a faulty police report. In any case, Nappen adds, it was not Morley's job to decide whether Aitken was moving. "That's a question of fact, not law, and questions of fact are supposed to be determined by the jury," he says. "The judge is supposed to instruct the jury on the law, and in this case he refused to let them even hear it. But besides that, for him to say there was no evidence presented that Brian was moving just isn't true."

Without the exception, the jury's job was easy. In New Jersey, possession of a firearm without a permit is a felony, punishable by a mandatory minimum sentence of five years in prison and a maximum of 10. Aitken was convicted and sentenced to seven.

"New Jersey gun laws are insane," Nappen says. "It makes a criminal of every gun owner and forces him to prove his innocence." Worse, in 2008 the New Jersey legislature and then-Gov. John Corzine changed the law to make the penalty for possessing a gun the same as the penalty for using it to commit a separate crime. That means someone like Aitken gets the same punishment as someone who assaults another person with a gun. In November 2008, New Jersey Attorney General Anne Milgram issued a directive (PDF) urging the state's prosecutors to apply the new law "vigorously," "strictly," and "uniformly."
Even with Milgram's directive and the state's draconian gun laws, prosecutors have some discretion. They could have decided that Aitken plausibly thought he qualified for the moving exception or that, even without the exception, it wouldn't be in the interest of justice to charge him with a felony punishable by five to 10 years in prison. There is no evidence that Aitken threatened anyone with his guns or intended to use them for any nefarious purpose. Even the version of events least favorable to Aitken—that he put the guns in his trunk to keep them away from party guests who might have been drinking—shows him to be a responsible and conscientious gun owner. Even Morley acknowledges as much. "I can see the point that taking the guns away from the party might have been the responsible thing to do," he says. But he adds that acting responsibly did not entitle Aitken to the moving exception.

Putting Brian Aitken in prison isn't going to make New Jersey any safer. It might, however, make some of the state's residents think twice before calling the police, particularly if they own guns. It might even make some New Jersey gun owners wonder if they have more to fear from the state's ridiculous laws and overly aggressive cops and prosecutors than they do from criminals. Given what happened to Aitken, those fears wouldn't be unfounded.

http://reason.com/archives/2010/11/15/brian-aitkens-mistake/

1stindoor
11-16-2010, 10:05
Does anyone else have any more information? There seems like something is missing here, I don't understand why the Judge would act the way he did.
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http://reason.com/archives/2010/11/15/brian-aitkens-mistake/

Most likely, the judge in question has a serious left leaning agenda and was making an example of someone in order to further show the "evils" and "consequences" of gun ownership.

rubberneck
11-16-2010, 10:58
He broke the law. If he had extensively researched the NJ gun laws he would have known he needed to get a NJ Firearms ID and that you are not allowed to transport firearms except in certain instances. He has a defense when it comes to the moving part but it was sheer stupidity for him to not apply for the ID. Having a gun in your possession without one is a felony even if you bought the gun legally. If he had he wouldn't be in this situation.

Having said all that his sentence is a complete and total joke. As a recent refugee from that state I will not cross back over the border with a firearm even though I have a non-resident FID. I catch a lot of hell from old friends wanting to know why I no longer shoot IDPA matches, but It just isn't worth the risk as Evan Nappen points out the state presumes your guilt when it comes to gun laws.

As much as this sucks for him hopefully a guy like Alan Gura can get involved and make his case the next step in a series of Supreme Court cases that restore our Second Amendment rights.

tonyz
11-16-2010, 11:43
Experience suggests that there is often more to a story - but with respect to the 2A rights issue - I fear that the author's observation that NJ's practice (as illustrated by this article) may create a chilling effect on many lawful (or potentially lawful) gun owners - may be prophetic.

Personally, I avoid (or minimize) my travel to NJ for that reason. I doubt that criminals have the same concern.

Black's Law Dictionary - (the most widely used legal dictionary in the US - and good for a quick and dirty definition) basically defines the chilling effect doctrine as any law or practice which has the effect of seriously discouraging the exercise of a constitutional right.

99meters
11-16-2010, 12:10
When I visit my in-laws in NJ I leave my guns in Texas. I am allowed nation-wide carry, but that shit is not worth it.

greenberetTFS
11-16-2010, 15:56
New Jersey,the state that God forgot!...........:mad:

Big Teddy :munchin

dr. mabuse
11-16-2010, 16:05
Is it true the mosquitoes are bigger in NJ than Texas??? :munchin

Kyobanim
11-16-2010, 17:42
Is it true the mosquitoes are bigger in NJ than Texas??? :munchin

I think you're confused, it's the bullshit that's bigger in NJ

99meters
11-16-2010, 20:02
Is it true the mosquitoes are bigger in NJ than Texas??? :munchin

No! Texas has the biggest of everything. NY may have bigger rats, but thats because they are supplied a steady diet of pizza crust.
Speaking of NY, the last time I was there an off duty cop was shot and killed while chasing a guy (cop had gun in hand) who broke into his car. The day before I took that trip, I called my high school buddy who is a detective in NY and asked him should I bring my gun? he told me to also bring my vest so I will be able to explain I am a cop after I used the gun (it turned out he was not being funny).
It seems like NJ and NY are not places you want to be found with a gun unless all your shit is lined up, and even then you still may get effed.

afchic
11-21-2010, 18:39
From someone who has had to deal with the Burlington County Court, I can tell you they are all left leaning, and no matter what evidence is presented to them, if it goes against their liberal agenda, you are wrong pure and simple. My husband and I have been paying for it for 8 years, and have 12 years left in our "sentence".

The day I moved out of New Jersey was one of the happiest of my life.

Penn
11-21-2010, 20:35
NJ gun laws he would have known he needed to get a NJ Firearms ID and that you are not allowed to transport firearms except in certain instances

Are stating then, that the 4 FA I own could intern me in a State Institution because I do not have a NJ ID?

rubberneck
11-22-2010, 09:56
Are stating then, that the 4 FA I own could intern me in a State Institution because I do not have a NJ ID?

I assume that those 4 FA were grandfathered before the state made them illegal to own. I have spoken with Evan Nappen in the past about issues relating to a major IDPA match we held a couple years ago. The issue relating to the firearms ID is a grey area as are most of the NJ gun laws. From what I understand this gentleman didn't bother to get one which led to the situation he has found himself in. I'm not defending the state but everyone with half a brain knows the NJ is horrible when it comes to it's gun laws. If you want to own a gun in that state or drive around with one in your trunk for two weeks then you had better dot your i's and cross your t's because it's going to hurt if you don't.

If I were you I'd move heaven and earth to get one ASAP. You could call Evan Nappen and ask him for his professional advice but IMHO you're playing with fire.

rubberneck
11-22-2010, 10:10
Did he break NJ law? Yes. Did he do anything morally wrong? No. IMHO the law violates a couple of civil rights as well as the commerce law IMHO not just the 2nd amendment. Granted my opinion and five dollars will get you a cup of coffee at starbucks buy hey. He had no criminal intent therefore they are enforcing the letter of the law and not the spirit of the law. At least NJ is a crime free state with all their restrictions. (note sarcasim in last sentence)

Sadly you don't need criminal intent to find yourself screwed when it comes to NJ gun laws. I have friend who used to be a prosecutor before going to private practice. He told me a story once that illustrates just how screwed up the state is when it comes to it's gun laws. Under the NJ assault ban one of the guns named explicitly as being a banned item is the M1 Carbine. Anyone that owned a rifle that met the definition of an assault weapon had a fixed window in which the gun had to be registered with the state before it's possession became a crime. Some time after the window expired a sheriff's deputy arrested a WWII veteran for possession of an assault weapon. He was tried, convicted sentenced to probation and fined for breaking the law. You see the vet had become infirm and his family hired a live in nurse to look after him. The nurse was stealing from the guy left and right and he told her that if she didn't return everything she stole he was going to have her arrested. So this low life calls the sheriff and files a compliant saying the old man threatened to kill her. They show up to find out what is going on and see the M1 hanging proudly on his wall in a display case. They ask him if it is real and if it was registered and arrested him on the spot when they find out it wasn't. He had no clue that his reminder of his service was considered an assault weapon and that he had to have it registered with the state. They later arrested the woman as well but the damage had been done at that point. My friend at the time was not involved in the case but it was one of the reasons why he left the prosecutors office.

tonyz
12-21-2010, 17:16
New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie Commutes Sentence of Man Sent to Jail for Owning Guns Legally


Excerpt:

"A man given seven years in prison after being found with two guns he purchased legally in Colorado has had his sentence commuted, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie announced Monday.

The case of Brian Aitken, 27, had become a cause célèbre among gun-rights advocates. On Jan. 2, 2009, Aitken, an entrepreneur and media consultant with no prior criminal record, muttered to his mother that life wasn't worth living after a planned visit with son was abruptly canceled at the last minute. Aitken then left his mother's home in Mount Laurel as she called police, who later found two locked and unloaded handguns in the trunk of his car."


Published December 21, 2010

| FoxNews.com


Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2010/12/21/christie-commutes-sentence-man-sent-jail-owning-guns-legally/#ixzz18n6LmTzw


http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2010/12/21/christie-commutes-sentence-man-sent-jail-owning-guns-legally/commutes/

kgoerz
12-21-2010, 20:44
You have to be careful in those left leaning states. Guy on another Forum was sentenced to six months for being caught with an AR in CA. Charges were for the high capacity of the AR. Got pulled over for speeding. Cop saw a 30 round Mag and gun case on the floor. Searched the vehicle and busted him. PC was seeing the Mag.

ApacheIP
12-21-2010, 21:01
Glad for the outcome for the guy, but this is as surreal a case as I have ever seen with respect to firearms.

Don
12-22-2010, 06:30
New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie Commutes Sentence of Man Sent to Jail for Owning Guns Legally

Excerpt:

"A man given seven years in prison after being found with two guns he purchased legally in Colorado has had his sentence commuted, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie announced Monday.

Awesome outcome.

I wonder how you can square the 2nd Amendment with the 10th Amendment in cases where the states enact gun control laws. At face value - "shall not be infringed" - has a specific connotation.

Amendment II

A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.

Definition of infringe- Act so as to limit or undermine (something); encroach on: "infringe on his privacy". Got that from Merriam-Webster...but maybe legislators use another dictionary.

Amendment X
The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.

So, apparently in the legal world, definitions of words are different. So, I suppose you can say this idea that you have the right to own a firearm...but only in certain circumstances...and that you can have said firearm "on you/with you" only in the certain circumstances, does not mean your right to keep and bear arms is infringed. :confused:

I dunno…can anyone square that whole idea?

tonyz
12-22-2010, 08:01
Law Professor, Eugene Volokh, has invested much of his academic life addressing the Second Amendment and other inquiries regarding the Constitution. This is a good start - there are others.


http://www.law.ucla.edu/volokh/#GUNCONTROL

http://www.law.ucla.edu/volokh/#CONSTITUTIONALLAW


We ceded our rights under the Second Amendment - long ago.

Hopefully, we will wake up, and our current hodge-podge of regulations will be repealed.

For a variety of reasons I am not holding my breath for anything other than incremental change, at this time. This will be a long and hard fight.

rubberneck
12-22-2010, 09:13
Awesome outcome.

I wonder how you can square the 2nd Amendment with the 10th Amendment in cases where the states enact gun control laws. At face value - "shall not be infringed" - has a specific connotation.

Amendment II

A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.

Definition of infringe- Act so as to limit or undermine (something); encroach on: "infringe on his privacy". Got that from Merriam-Webster...but maybe legislators use another dictionary.

Amendment X
The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.

So, apparently in the legal world, definitions of words are different. So, I suppose you can say this idea that you have the right to own a firearm...but only in certain circumstances...and that you can have said firearm "on you/with you" only in the certain circumstances, does not mean your right to keep and bear arms is infringed. :confused:

I dunno…can anyone square that whole idea?

One of the intentions of the 14th amendment was to force the states to honor the bill or rights. Over the years the courts have selectively decided which rights in the bill of rights actually were incorporated to the states under the 14th amendment. The McDonald case was the first time the Supreme Court actually ruled that the 2nd amendment does apply to the states. The grey area here is what latitude do the individual states have in regulating the second amendment. I suppose this case and a bunch of others will one day make it's way to the SCOTUS for the court to decide how much latitude the individual states have. It sucks to be him but I suppose behind every one of these types of cases is a US Citizen who has been deprived of his/her rights under the constitution.

DJ Urbanovsky
12-22-2010, 11:36
Way to rat out family. Thanks, mom!

Of COURSE he was distraught... divorces tend to suck.

Personally, I try my best to stay away from places that don't respect my 2nd Amendment rights.

Don
12-22-2010, 12:17
Way to rat out family. Thanks, mom!


No good deed goes unpunished.

mark46th
12-23-2010, 10:02
The left has realized, for the most part that the Constitution is not something they can change at their whim, so, they are resorting to Judicial Activism. Let's hope and pray that no more Supreme Court justices retire or die while Obama is in office. Elena Kagan will be a disaster. She's young, gay and somewhere left of Karl Marx. She will be a threat to the Constitution for the next 50 years...

steel71
12-23-2010, 10:57
I'm sure those people were ignorant of "jury nullification", thanks to the judge. You don't have to convict someone of a crime if you feel the law is unjust.

tonyz
12-23-2010, 13:03
The left has realized, for the most part that the Constitution is not something they can change at their whim, so, they are resorting to Judicial Activism. Let's hope and pray that no more Supreme Court justices retire or die while Obama is in office. Elena Kagan will be a disaster. She's young, gay and somewhere left of Karl Marx. She will be a threat to the Constitution for the next 50 years...

Totally agree with above - also - as I have suggested before we might benefit from watching/participating in the promulgation of administrative rules and regulations.

In addition to the problem of judicial activism we have administrative agencies (staffed by career bureaucrats) promulgating an enormous number of rules and regulations having the force and effect of law. In some respects, the administrative agencies operate as an informal 4th "branch" with little day-to-day oversight. The recent thread on proposed BATF regulations comes to mind...some of the stories regarding the FCC, EPA, IRS, what we can and can't eat, serve, purchase, possess, smoke, drink, drive, shoot, etc., etc.,

...sometimes, I wonder if the intent is to turn the entire populace into "criminals" by all these damn regulations - or is it merely job security for those creating all those rules and regs. ;)