CCW classes offered in California for Utah and Florida

Posted on August 13th, 2006 in General, Guns by tavaresforby || 1 Comment

I mentioned about the Conceal Carry Weapon (CCW) for both Utah and Florida a while back. You can now take a class to obtain your CCW for Utah and Florida here in California. Here is the site:

http://www.ccwusa.com/site/

Here is a glimpse of what this permit has to offer:

Get your Multi-State, Non-Resident CCW Permit Now!
Utah and Florida Multi-State, Non-Resident Concealed Firearm Permits have no State residency requirement and may be obtained by any legal resident of the United States. These are the most valuable Multi-State CCW Permits available, based on recognition from other States and total cost. A Utah Permit is only $59.00 for five years! Your Utah Concealed Firearm Permit is valid in 28 States! With a Utah and Florida Non-Resident Concealed Carry Permit you may legally carry in the following 30 States:

Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Kentucky, Louisiana, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, New Mexico, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, and Wyoming.

*Additional State regulatory licenses and/or professional permits may be required from individual States while working as an Investigator, Bail Enforcement Agent, or Executive Protection Professional.

$125 Course Fee Includes Both Utah and Florida*

*Florida CCW Permit applications require proof of prior training or experience, or live-fire range qualification. There is an additional charge of $25.00 for range qualification if needed. Individual State application fees not included.

Utah & Florida Concealed Carry Permits do NOT allow you to carry a concealed firearm in the State of California.

Updating BlackPundit

Posted on August 12th, 2006 in General by tavaresforby || 7 Comments

Hello All,

I am updating BlackPundit to Word Press version 2.0.4 and changing the theme for this site. Please feel free to comment BlackPundit on its new look.

Florida set’s lead in expanding right to shoot in self-defense

Posted on August 9th, 2006 in General, Guns by tavaresforby || 1 Comment

In October, Florida expanded a law that a person have the right to use deadly force against intruders entering their home or vehicle by intruding unlawfully and forcefully. The addition to this is law is that if a person is attacked in public, that person no longer has to retreat. They now have a right to stand on their own. Here are some excerpts of the article:

In the past year, 15 states have enacted laws that expand the right of self-defense, allowing crime victims to use deadly force in situations that might formerly have subjected them to prosecution for murder.

Supporters call them “stand your ground” laws. Opponents call them “shoot first” laws.

Thanks to this sort of law, a prostitute in Port Richey, Fla., who killed her 72-year-old client with his own gun, rather than flee when he threatened to kill her, was not charged last month. Similarly, the police in Clearwater, Fla., did not arrest a man who shot a neighbor in early June after a shouting match over putting out garbage, though authorities say they are still reviewing the evidence.

The Florida law, which served as a model for other states, gives people the right to use deadly force against intruders entering their homes. They no longer need to prove that they feared for their safety, only that the person they killed intruded unlawfully and forcefully. The law also extends this principle to vehicles.

In addition, the law does away with an earlier requirement that a person attacked in a public place must retreat if possible. Now, that person, in the law’s words, “has no duty to retreat and has the right to stand his or her ground and meet force with force, including deadly force.”

The law also forbids the arrest, detention or prosecution of the people covered by the law, and it prohibits civil suits against them.

The central innovation in the Florida law, said Anthony Sebok, a professor at Brooklyn Law School, is not its elimination of the duty to retreat, which has been eroding nationally through judicial decisions, but in expanding the right to shoot intruders who pose no threat to the occupant’s safety.

Jason Rosenbloom, the man shot by his neighbor in Clearwater, said his case illustrated the flaws in the Florida law. “Had it been a year and a half ago, he could have been arrested for attempted murder,” Rosenbloom said of his neighbor, Kenneth Allen.

“I was in T-shirt and shorts,” Rosenbloom said, recalling the day he knocked on Allen’s door. Allen, a retired Virginia police officer, had lodged a complaint with the local authorities, taking Rosenbloom to task for putting out eight bags of garbage, though local ordinances allow only six.

California shares this law that you can shoot someone without questions if that person unlawfully and forcefully break into your home, with an exception of a relative or a person who lives in that household. But California does not extend this law to a vehicle. I think California should consider that as an expansion. This will reduce car jacking significantly.

I believe the example of Jason and his neighbor is not within the domains of this law. Jason’s neighbor should have been arrested. Florida’s expansion of this law says to meet force with force. Shooting someone over shouting is NOT meeting force with force.

Blackpundit under attack! Bloggers, Help!

Posted on August 4th, 2006 in General by tavaresforby || 1 Comment

Please, can anyone give me suggestions on how to battle all this spamming on blackpundit! I tried un-checking the “Allow link notifications from other Weblogs (pingbacks and trackbacks.)” but I still get a lot of spam trackbacks. Any suggestions?