Author Topic: Man Convicted for Transporting Guns While Moving  (Read 3128 times)

Offline yankee2500

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Man Convicted for Transporting Guns While Moving
« on: December 03, 2010, 08:25:17 PM »
I'm sure many of you have received this from the NRA. This is some scary stuff, glad I don't live in NJ or even close.

Convicted for Transporting Guns While Moving, N.J. Gun Owner Seeks Justice
 
Friday, December 03, 2010
 
In a case that has drawn national attention, a New Jersey gun owner has been sentenced to seven years in prison for having two unloaded, cased handguns in his car trunk while moving to a new home.

In January 2009, Brian Aitken had recently returned to New Jersey after living in Colorado, and was in the middle of moving from one residence in New Jersey to another, when a concerned family member called police in response to a comment he’d made about his personal life.  A search of Aitken’s car by the police revealed two handguns.  The handguns—legally purchased in Colorado—were unloaded and contained in a locked box inside a duffel bag. (Aitken was being careful during his move; in fact, he’d contacted the New Jersey State Police to learn about the state’s requirements.)

Despite his care, Aitken was arrested and prosecuted under New Jersey gun laws, which are highly restrictive and even more highly confusing.  In New Jersey, it is generally illegal to possess a handgun without a “permit to carry,” but there are many exceptions to the requirement, such as possession in the home.  One of the exceptions allows transportation of an unloaded and cased firearm “between one place of business or residence and another when moving.”

Unfortunately for Aitken—who refused to accept a plea bargain because he believed he had done nothing wrong—the judge in the case refused to instruct the jury about the exceptions, despite repeated requests from Aitken’s attorney and even from the jury itself.  Lacking that information, the jury convicted Aitken and he received a harsh prison sentence.

Aitken’s attorney, Evan Nappen, called the case a “perfect storm of injustice.”  (The NRA Civil Rights Defense Fund supported Aitken’s defense at trial.)  At press time, Aitken is serving his sentence while his appeal is pending.  He is also seeking a pardon or commuted sentence from Gov. Chris Christie.  In a letter to the governor supporting Aiken’s clemency request, pro-gun Assemblyman Michael Patrick Carroll rightly noted that even if Aitken had committed “wholly technical violations [of] wholly problematic laws,” “not every violation of the law warrants an indictment, let alone incarceration.”

We can only hope this case will wake up more New Jersey lawmakers to the impact of their posturing on honest citizens.


 John
"THE KING OF BATTLE"


"Cha togar m' fhearg gun dìoladh"

"The beauty of the second amendment is that it will not be needed until they try to take it."
Thomas Jefferson

Offline tracker

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Re: Man Convicted for Transporting Guns While Movi
« Reply #1 on: December 03, 2010, 08:43:02 PM »

This should stoke APC's embers. I hope there is more to the story than this but if not he needs a good appellate attorney.

Offline kjtrains

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Re: Man Convicted for Transporting Guns While Movi
« Reply #2 on: December 03, 2010, 08:49:10 PM »
That is scary.  Sure hope the last statement in the article happens and NJ lawmakers make something good come about especially in this case and cases to come.
« Last Edit: December 03, 2010, 09:33:02 PM by kjtrains »
Let us have faith that right makes might, and in that faith, let us, to the end, dare to do our duty as we understand it.  Abraham Lincoln

Offline Richard S

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Re: Man Convicted for Transporting Guns While Movi
« Reply #3 on: December 04, 2010, 08:45:18 AM »
That is one disturbing scenario! Unless there is more to the story, it has to be reversed on appeal. Otherwise, the famous words of Mr. Bumble would appear to be applicable:

[size=10]“If the law supposes that,” said Mr. Bumble,… “the law is a ass—a idiot. If that’s the eye of the law, the law is a bachelor; and the worst I wish the law is that his eye may be opened by experience—by experience.” [/size]

[size=10]CHARLES DICKENS, Oliver Twist, chapter 51, p. 489 (1970). First published serially 1837–1839. [/size]
(1963-1967) "GO ARMY!"

Offline yankee2500

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Re: Man Convicted for Transporting Guns While Movi
« Reply #4 on: December 04, 2010, 09:47:27 AM »
"THE KING OF BATTLE"


"Cha togar m' fhearg gun dìoladh"

"The beauty of the second amendment is that it will not be needed until they try to take it."
Thomas Jefferson

Offline kjtrains

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Re: Man Convicted for Transporting Guns While Movi
« Reply #5 on: December 04, 2010, 12:14:52 PM »
What a mother's love can do!  Most times, that's a good thing.
Let us have faith that right makes might, and in that faith, let us, to the end, dare to do our duty as we understand it.  Abraham Lincoln

Offline yankee2500

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Re: Man Convicted for Transporting Guns While Movi
« Reply #6 on: December 06, 2010, 08:26:19 PM »
A little more info about the NJ fiasco.  :o


August 27, 2010 Brian was wrongfully sentenced to 7 years in prison…help us free him.

Brian Aitken was a finance student at NYU, an economic scholar at the Foundation of Economic Education, a father, an entrepreneur, mountain climber, and so many other things. One of the things that he was not, however, was a criminal. No one, not the judge, jury, or prosecutor disputes the fact that there were no victims in Brian Aitken’s case. Regardless, he’s currently serving 7 years in state prison for a crime that thousands of people maintain he didn’t commit.

On January 2, 2009 Brian was arrested for illegal possession of firearms while moving from one residence from another. All of the firearms were legally owned—Brian passed three different FBI background checks to purchase and had even cleared an FBI screening for employment as a data researcher handling confidential information for a banking security software firm. His integrity, character, and right to own was not in question…so what was?

New Jersey statutes make it illegal for anyone without a concealed carry permit to possess a firearm even if it’s otherwise lawfully owned. The only way to lawfully possess firearms in New Jersey is through exemptions to the law like driving to and from a shooting range or moving residences. However, as they are exemptions from the law they must be raised during trial therefore removing the presumption of innocence for the charge of possession.

Brian had just brought his firearms from CO to NJ a week prior to his arrest–in fact, TSA cleared him to fly with them….the same TSA that terrifies five year olds girls and breaks a bladder cancer survivor’s urostomy bag. He had just moved back to an apartment in Hoboken that he had moved out of a month earlier and closed on the sale of his Colorado home 11 days after his arrest.

Several witnesses, including the arresting officer, testified that not only did Brian have multiple residences but that his car was packed with his personal belongings–so much so that it took the police 2 hours and 39 minutes before they found Brian’s guns locked and unloaded in the trunk of his car, exactly as NJ law dictates. Brian knew this because only days earlier he had found out through the NJ state police how to legally transport his firearms in NJ. The officers, believing Brian had done nothing wrong, then offered to leave the firearms at his parents’ house, but when they wouldn’t fit in his father’s safe the supervising officer decided to arrest him instead.

During the next 18 months the prosecutor approached Brian and his attorney with plea offer after plea offer. If Brian pled guilty he’d spend one mandatory year in prison and spend the rest of his life a convicted felon for a crime he didn’t commit….otherwise the prosecutor was seeking the maximum sentence of 10 years. Brian, knowing not only that he had done nothing wrong but knowing that the law didn’t exist to punish innocent people, chose to take his case in front of the jury.

During the trial it became clear to everyone in the courtroom that Brian fit the exemptions of the law for moving between residences. However, the judge withheld the law from the jury, thereby ensuring a guilty verdict. Regardless, the jury returned from deliberation three times specifically requesting to be read the exemptions of the law. One can only assume that this was so they could find Brian not guilty. The judge and the prosecutor made it clear that they had no intention of allowing Brian to walk out an innocent man. They were more interested in a guilty verdict than truth and justice.

Six days later Governor Christie decided  not to reappoint Judge James Morley for his misconduct in 2 other cases where Judge Morley sympathized with an off duty police officer who molested farm animals.

Brian was sentenced to 7 years in state prison even though there was no victim, no violence, and no crime. He was sentenced by Judge Haas, whose only knowledge of the case was provided by the prosecutor. Judge Haas did not preside over the case or have access to transcripts of the trial.

Gun owners and non-gun owners alike have banded together, not because this is an obvious Second Amendment issue, but because the judge so blatantly and with complete immunity withheld Brian’s right to a fair trial.
"THE KING OF BATTLE"


"Cha togar m' fhearg gun dìoladh"

"The beauty of the second amendment is that it will not be needed until they try to take it."
Thomas Jefferson

Offline kjtrains

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Re: Man Convicted for Transporting Guns While Movi
« Reply #7 on: December 06, 2010, 09:11:05 PM »
Surely, this will be reversed somehow, someway, by someone,  or more!
Let us have faith that right makes might, and in that faith, let us, to the end, dare to do our duty as we understand it.  Abraham Lincoln

Offline tracker

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Re: Man Convicted for Transporting Guns While Movi
« Reply #8 on: December 06, 2010, 09:15:38 PM »

The bottom line: do not move to New Jersey, the Garden State.

Offline kjtrains

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Re: Man Convicted for Transporting Guns While Movi
« Reply #9 on: December 06, 2010, 09:23:52 PM »
I'm still thinking and hoping somehow this wrong will be set right.
Let us have faith that right makes might, and in that faith, let us, to the end, dare to do our duty as we understand it.  Abraham Lincoln