Probably won’t work

Newsday reports:

“Three retired Nassau County correction officers and a retired deputy sheriff claim in a civil suit they’ve been unjustly denied special police-retiree gun permits and licenses by county authorities.  The suit, filed Monday in federal court in Central Islip, claims Nassau Sheriff Michael Sposato and the Nassau County Police Department have denied licenses to the four because of disabilities …”

This probably won’t work given that the 2nd Circuit ruled in the Kachalsky v. Cacace case that licensing agents are not obligated to issue pistol licenses to anyone.

“… “This suit is necessary to change how disabled officers, who served this county well, are being treated by the county when they want the same benefits that other retirees get,” said Frederick Brewington, the Hempstead attorney representing [the plaintiffs]. “None of their disabilities make them ineligible to own, purchase and carry firearms, and there is no good reason for them to have been treated differently.” …”

That’s the thing. They are not being treated any differently.  They’re getting the same screwing Nassau gives to everyone.

2 thoughts on “Probably won’t work

  1. No person howls in torment like a retired LEO that suddenly have imposed on them all those good, ole laws and reg’s we common folks/citizens have lived with for decades.

    I swear if there are two groups in USA believing they are a special class of citizen, it’s blacks and then its LEO’s.

  2. Fred Brewington is a civil rights lawyer, but he’s not Alan Gura who prosecuted the Kachalsky case which the SCROTUS (Supreme Court Radicals of the US) refused to hear. Kachalsky was decided by an ivory tower liberal female judge in Federal Court in Westchester, and then heard by a panel in the heart of Bloombergistan (now ruled by Warren Willhelm a/k/a Bill de Comio) who are a bunch of elite hoplophobic twits who know absolutely zero about guns. The case was essentially decided on “public health” grounds (can you believe that crap?!) And all these judges are protected by ARMED court officers, while all of the masses are denied their constitutional rights to protect themselves and their families.

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