Via GunMag.com by Dave Workman
The Second Amendment Foundation has filed aย federal lawsuitย against Boston Police Commissioner Michael Cox, alleging โsubstantial and untenable delays in the police department's processing of firearms license applications.โ
It is a complaint that many gun owners have made in other jurisdictions over the years, alleging foot-dragging by gun permit issuing agencies which amounts to delaying the exercise of a constitutionally protected fundamental right to bear arms.
SAF is joined by the Firearms Policy Coalition, Commonwealth Second Amendment and four private citizens, Leslie Good, Kenley Exume, Robert Cox and Rudolph White. They are represented by attorneys David Jensen, Jensen & Associates in Beacon, N.Y., and Jason A. Guida at Principe & Strasnick in Saugus, Mass. The case was filed in U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts. It is known asย White v. Cox.
Theย 13-page complaintย details the problems plaintiffs allegedly have experienced in getting gun permits from the Boston Police. In the aftermath ofย New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruenย last year, officials in some states have doubled down on their efforts to discourage citizens from applying for or obtaining carry permits.
The lawsuit alleges the Boston Police Department's licensing unit makes gun license applicants โwait for many months before it provides them with appointmentsโ to be fingerprinted in order to complete their applications. The average delay appears to be in excess of six months, which directly delays the commencement of the background check process.
According to the lawsuit, at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic in March 2020, the Licensing unit stopped processing or accepting applications for Firearm Identification (FID) cards or Licenses to Carry (LTC). When operations were finally resumed, there was a huge backlog of applicants who were placed on a waiting list, which quickly grew into the thousands. This process took months, and only then could they begin the licensing procedure, for which state law allows a maximum of 40 days.
For example, the lawsuit details the problem encountered by Good:
โPlaintiff Leslie Good submitted an application for a LTC to the Licensing Unit on February 6, 2023,โย the document states, โusing an online portal on the Police Department's website. She submitted a completed application form, as well as documentation of the required training and copies of her identification. She paid the $100 application fee.
โMs. Good contacted the Licensing Unit by email about two weeks later, on February 16, 2023,โ the complaint continues. โAn employee told her that it would take โa few months' for an officer to contact her to set up an appointment to submit fingerprints because they were โvery backed up.'
โOn June 15, 2023, Ms. Good had not heard anything further, so she again contacted the Licensing Unit by email to ask about the status of her application,โ according to the narrative. โShe received no response. Ms. Good contacted the Licensing Unit twice more, on June 23, 2023 and July 10, 2023, but again received no response.
โMs. Good has received no further communications from the Licensing Unit,โ the lawsuit says. โPertinently, the Licensing Unit still has not contacted her to schedule the taking of fingerprints or an interview. As of the date of this Complaint, it has been 206 days since Ms. Good submitted her application, but Defendant has not started the state background check process, which the state will then have 30 days to complete. Ms. Good has no idea when she will be able to obtain a LTC.โ
โIn 2021 we sued over the delay and the case was ultimately settled at mediation,โ recalled SAF founder and Executive Vice President Alan Gottlieb. โThe wait list was to be eliminated by Oct. 31, 2021. However, this year the Licensing Unit is back to its same old foot dragging, making people wait for months to begin the application process. As a result, we're back in court to make the department comply with the law.โ
โThere is no plausible explanation for these delays,โ said SAF Executive Director Adam Kraut. โWe can only conclude the commissioner has adopted a policy or instituted a practice of delaying applications for many months, which amounts to deprivation of rights under color of law. We're hoping the court provides a quick resolution to this practice and stops it cold.โ
Read the full article at Gunmag.com.
2 Comments
Citizens of Boston who want a legal firearm should move to another state where defense of self and family is an enforced constitutional right. More than half the states in our nation have enacted laws that guarantee the right to keep and bear firearms. The alternatives to ceding that right is to vote for conservative candidates or declare war on your oppressors.
This would be a geat time for “people of color” to sue for racial descrimination. That always gets the attention of the “justice” dept.