Should have to be specifically in the sentence "2 years in prison and no guns for 10 after that" or something.
Conviction after a trial can strip any rights you are sentenced to lose. Up and including the right to live.if you are out of Jail .. you can be trusted ... then you have all your Rights ..
hell when you are in Jail you still have your 1st and and a few others
can't do that .. no such thing in 1791
back then you were hung or shot if your really really bad person ..
no guns for blacks , and other races ... laws are null n void to use for the Govt .. didn't have them back in day
The 2A says the People ..
it does not say only the People that are not felons or a special class can not have guns .
Precisely. People agree to forfeit rights all the time in exchange for laughter sentencing or reduced jail time.Conviction after a trial can strip any rights you are sentenced to lose. Up and including the right to live.
If you can be sentenced to die, be locked in a cage for 10 years, be forbidden from living in certain areas, be stripped of property, etc... then gun rights are just one more on the list.
People are regularly stripped of 1A rights after conviction. But it has to be done specifically as part of the sentence for that crime.
4th and 5th ammendment are gone for a time (parole, you can be searched anytime, for any reason basically. Refuse to answer questions ?
parole revoked, etc...).
The basic mechanism is "we're going to send you to prison for 10 years, but if you agree to these limits we'll let you out in 2". If they can tell you no social media they can tell you no guns.
But, the limit is that it *must* be part of the specific sentence you are handed after a due process conviction.
Been saying this over and over... in NYS you are a felon if you don't have the permission slip for a hand gun. Because of that, you are now banned in all 50 states from owning a gun.My problem with laws that strip away a person rights can vary from state to state. That is not how it should be. Laws that ban an individual right need to be for the most violent of crimes only. Other than that, once time is served you are made whole.
States are allowed to be more restrictive than Federal law, but not less. Example... Feds pass a law saying no mags over 30 rounds. States can pass a law saying 20, but can't pass a law saying 40.My problem with laws that strip away a person rights can vary from state to state. That is not how it should be. Laws that ban an individual right need to be for the most violent of crimes only. Other than that, once time is served you are made whole.
Not really. The Supremacy Clause states:States are allowed to be more restrictive than Federal law, but not less. Example... Feds pass a law saying no mags over 30 rounds. States can pass a law saying 20, but can't pass a law saying 40.
States should have some autonomy in being able to govern themselves, but the BOR should be plain as day and apply across the board. Sadly thats not the case currently from state to state.
Serving time *is* stripping rights.My problem with laws that strip away a person rights can vary from state to state. That is not how it should be. Laws that ban an individual right need to be for the most violent of crimes only. Other than that, once time is served you are made whole.