Senate Bags Out On “Stand Your Ground”
By Mitch Berg
The GOP leadership in the State Senate, as of today, decided not to have a floor vote on Senate File 1357, the “Stand Your Ground” bill.
Here’s my letter:
sen.amy.koch@senate.mn; sen.geoff.michel@senate.mn; sen.doug.magnus@senate.mn; sen.david.senjem@senate.mn; sen.dave.thompson@senate.mn; sen.chris.gerlach@senate.mn; sen.michelle.fischbach@senate.mn; sen.gen.olson@senate.mn
Subject: Please Vote On SF1357
Senators,
I’m Mitch Berg. I know, and have interviewed, not a few of you. I’m a constituent of Mary Jo McGuire, so I don’t expect a lot of sanity from my own “representation”.
But having heard that the Senate has refused to vote on SF1357, I have to say I expected better from a GOP-led Senate.
I ask you to please reconsider this, and bring the bill to the floor and send it to the Governor. As he ran as a “Second-Amendment-Friendly” gubernatorial candidate.
Sincerely,
Mitch Berg
Saint Paul
If you’re a Second Amendment supporter, it’s go-time – again. Call your Senator. Email the whole list above. Be polite, but let them know – we gun owners have long memories, and when it comes to having our votes taken for granted, we did our time back in the nineties.
No more.
UPDATE: Rob Doar is equally unamused.





May 22nd, 2011 at 9:27 pm
With all due respect Mitch, the time to be polite is over. We need to be firm, and upfront that if the bill is not heard, we will hold every member of leadership responsible.
It’s a bi-partisan bill, with bi-partisan support. Civil rights is not a partisan issue.
We don’t have to be rude, but we need to put the pressure on. No vote, is the same things as a “no” vote.
May 23rd, 2011 at 2:29 am
And yet, the right claims to be pro-law enforcement, and law enforcement overwhelmingly came out against this. I agree with law enforcement.
There have been absolutely ZERO instances of anyone needing this legislation; NO CASES WHATSOEVER of anyone facing prosecution for shooting someone who was threatening anywhere in MN.
What we have works. This legislation was badly drafted and crafted, and creates tremendous possibility for abuse in the guise of self-defense.
It is more and bigger government to enact legislation that is unnecessary. This makes a mockery of right wing claims to seeking smaller and less intrusive government by promoting additional laws where no need for them exists.
You know – just like your voter fraud laws that make a hash of voting without any demonstrable cases of anything other than miniscule instances of accidental voter fraud. Kind of like this case of apparent REPUBLICAN voter fraud by the aide to the legislator who drafter the voter ID legislation in WI:
http://penigma.blogspot.com/2011/05/possible-wi-voter-fraud-by-gop-aide-to.html
Slightly off topic, but I mention it here because I mention you by name Mitch, along with your Mitchketeers.
May 23rd, 2011 at 5:20 am
This is false… Metro Bureaucrats, and the Dem-leaning associations opposed the bill, just like they have with any bill that involves civilian self defense. (See Permit to Carry, Tasers, batons, etc.) The Police associations themselves admitted that they are divided.
Also not true.. it is true that no one has been CONVICTED, but plenty of people have faced prosecution, been arrested, had charges dropped, or plead out on misdemeanor charges. How long should you have to sit in jail before someone recognizes that you were never supposed top be there in the first place? (Take a look at Erik Pakiseer’s testimony in the House Public Safety committee hearing)
This bill codifies existing jury rules, and case law, and requires the LEO have probable cause that a crime was committed before they can arbitrarily arrest.
Sure, it works, unless you have to use your gun in self defense… then you pray that you are in the right county, with the right cops responding, with the right county attorney, and the right judge. That’s a lot of variables… Me, I’d rather have the standards clearly in the law.
Hasn’t been true in the 20 other states that have it… no reason to think the sky will fall here.
This bill limits what government can do when you defend yourself. It’s sad that you think protecting people’s rights equals bigger government… it should be one of the few sole functions of government.
May 23rd, 2011 at 5:21 am
MN Police support for stand your ground….
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ea_v-lWWbkc
May 23rd, 2011 at 6:39 am
DG,
Rob – who knows this issue every bit as well as I do, probably better – pretty well flensed your comment.
But I don’t mind piling on.
And yet, the right claims to be pro-law enforcement, and law enforcement overwhelmingly came out against this. I agree with law enforcement.
You’re operating from a chanting point here. Metro police chiefs serve at the pleasure of their mayors, who are DFLers. They are not at liberty to differ from the DFL party line. Ditto the Police Union.
I know not a few metro cops – actual street cops, not politicians in uniform – who disagree with their administration on this issue.,
There have been absolutely ZERO instances of anyone needing this legislation; NO CASES WHATSOEVER of anyone facing prosecution for shooting someone who was threatening anywhere in MN.
Above and beyond what Rob said – so what? It’s happened in other states. Why shouldn’t we learn from others’ mistakes?
What we have works. This legislation was badly drafted and crafted, and creates tremendous possibility for abuse in the guise of self-defense.
And that, DG, is a pure chanting point.
It’s been pointed out that you’re not big on defending your claims – but if you’d be so kind, please get specific.
May 23rd, 2011 at 6:39 am
Doggy;
Every time that I think you have posted to dumbest thing ever, you post again!
Let’s hope that your home isn’t invaded in the middle of the night by some junkie needing a fix and IF you are coherent enough to call 9-1-1 the second that you realizewhat’s going on, then have to rely on the police to get there before you or one of your loved ones are either hurt or killed.
As someone that speaks from experience and benefitted from a similar bill being in force in TX, I can tell you that you should shut up while you’re behind!
May 23rd, 2011 at 8:31 am
And please drop the “Mitchketeers” slur, Dog. That was angryclown’s schtick, and he could pull it off because he never expected anyone to take him seriously. From you it’s just more ugly, liberal hate speech.
May 23rd, 2011 at 9:39 am
“accidental…fraud”
…is an oxymoron.
You, DG, are just a moron.
May 23rd, 2011 at 10:36 am
“What we have works. This legislation was badly drafted and crafted, and creates tremendous possibility for abuse in the guise of self-defense.”
Yes, Doggy. Since we know how “morally correct and tolerant that 99% of you libturds are, it would most likely be one of you that would be the abuser.
May 23rd, 2011 at 12:15 pm
That, of course, turns out not to be the case. The Treptow and McCuiston cases leap to mind. McCuiston, in particular — not only did he (no ifs, ands, or buts) “face prosecution”, but he was prosecuted, and (originally) convicted. The case turned on “defense of dwelling” — McCuiston shot Fontaine as Fontaine was breaking in his front door. (The judge refused to give a “defense of dwelling” instruction, arguing, in effect, that because Fontaine was on the porch as he was trying to break in the front door, it wasn’t necessary. The Court of Appeals disagreed, and sent the case back for retrial, which — after McCuiston had spent all that time in prison — didn’t happen.)
From the Appeals Court decision (and, again, emphasis added):
And the court dealt with some of the objections that were raised by the opponents of reform during the last legislative session:
Under the present law, if McCuiston had shot Fontaine while Fontaine was just a few feet further out, the conviction would have stood.
May 23rd, 2011 at 12:42 pm
That, of course, turns out not to be the case.
Because Dog Gone never really FACT CHECKS the crap she posts. She just parrots DFL chanting points and then runs away like a little girl.
Mitch should seriously consider curbing this dog.
May 23rd, 2011 at 1:52 pm
To be fair, it’s not quite accurate to say that they’re DFL chanting points; they’re anti-self-defense/anti-gun chanting points. We wouldn’t have had carry reform passed in 2003 and/or repassed in 2005 without the votes of several (more in 2005 than 2003) non-Metrocrat DFLers (in the Senate, although there were House DFLers voting for it, too), and while I’m not going to repeat myself, here and now, about the other parts of SF 1357 (my face is already blue enough at the moment), it’s vanishingly unlikely that any sort of reform will pass, in my lifetime, without some level of whole-hearted bipartisan support. (Can anyone remember when both houses of the lege and the governor’s office were in Republican hands? It certainly hasn’t been the case in forty years, at least.)
This particular chanting point, btw, seems to have emanated from Heather Martens, of the lately-rebranded Citizens for a “Safer” Minnesota, who made just that claim at (at least) two of the hearings this year.
And, in perhaps excessive fairness to DG: there’s no governmental body or organization charged with (or effectively keeping) records of incidents of self-defense, with or without firearms. As Gary Kleck’s studies (plural) show pretty clearly, that’s an impossible task: most DGUs go entirely unreported, and those that do get reported are reported anecdotally — see the NRA’s Armed Citizens column, or Clayton Cramer’s self-defense blog. The authorities are not even charged with determining if a reported incident is self-defense (which would require huge resources, anyway), but with determining if it should be referred for possible prosecution. The incident of the 60-year-old guy who engaged in what clearly was a self-defense shooting in Uptown a couple of weeks ago won’t be reported in any governmental records as having been in a DGU; at best (which is what it looks like) he’ll simply not have been charged, and if and when the Stand Your Ground bill comes up again, it will only, at most, be mentioned anecdotally — and even if Heather does mention it the next time she testifies (unlikely), she’ll simply argue that it shows that the system is “working”, as that guy, in that situation, (likely) won’t be prosecuted.