by TacticaLogic » Sun Mar 14, 2010 2:07 pm
James, I agree with you... If he has to take a psych eval, we are all going to be put through the mill. I guess if it comes down to that, I'll end up an outlaw. I also agree that it isn't against the law to be an idiot in Tennessee... I would hope that the DoS knows that as well. Part of what I have tried to convey in posts above is that (even though some of the bureaucrats can come across as idiots sometimes) hopefully someone at the DoS had enough common sense to recognize the name, and to make sure that they had "dotted the I's and crossed the T's" before they took such action. The guy has had too much publicity proving that he is out to test the limits of law... If the DoS messed up and did this "willy-nilly" then those responsible should be fired.
I believe in this case, that the state has come up with something they feel justifies their actions. I don't know what that might be, but I think they must have something. From the WSMV report: "There was a material likelihood that I was a risk to the public," Embody said of the letter. "Material likelihood"... I don't know what that means as far as what the state "has" on Embody. I am not sure how they define "material likelihood".
My whole point (that I have probably not been very clear on in previous posts to this thread) is that we do not really know that much about the reasoning that the DoS has behind their actions. It is because of that that I have not jumped all over the DoS and their actions. Nor will I side with Embody just because the DoS has revoked his permit. There are too many unknowns at this point concerning the entire situation. I don't believe there is enough information to say that this is "retaliatory action" on the part of any agency. I don't believe we know enough to say that Embody's actions were all within the law - we only know about the actions that have made the news, and those actions were (regardless of the lack of common sense) legal. If the only reason the DoS can give is because of his little walks in the park or his stroll through Belle Meade, then they are wrong and have violated his right to permitted carry.
On the other hand, if they have legally obtained evidence that shows Embody is a risk to the public (for example: some actual proof of a threat of violence or retaliation against some party) then they have a duty to revoke his permit. If he has (just as they teach in HCP class) the ability, intent, and proximity to cause harm, and has made threats of any illegal action, they need to revoke his HCP. The old phrase "What did they know, and when did they know it?" would come into play if he did something bad with a handgun and still held a permit. Every news agency in the state would be ripping the DoS a new one because they hadn't revoked the permit of the shooter when there had been so much publicity about him. The last thing we would want to happen is for him to "go off" and cause injury to innocent bystanders - especially if he still held a HCP. What is it I have seen on this forum so many times when someone gets arrested for a gun crime? Someone always says something like "Please don't let them be a permit holder..."
While I am as "anti-government intrusion" as they come, government does (or at least, is supposed to) serve a purpose. I have gone on many an "anti-big government/anti-bureaucrat" rant in my time. I am, according to several surveys I have taken, a "Constitutionalist, Gun-toting, Libertarian". However someone wants to classify me, I do believe that the Constitution is second only to the Bible, that God intended for me to defend and provide for my family and myself, and that I (not the government) am responsible for my own well being. "So where does government fit in, Mike?" you might ask. I believe the government's job is to perform the tasks that can't or shouldn't be undertaken by private industry. (Things like keeping insane people from running amok, raising a standing army, and working to insure that drugs manufactured by private industry don't produce harmful side effects like growing a third ear out of the top of your head. In many instances, I am still not opposed to the government sub-contracting these tasks either, so long as there is proper oversight.) So please folks, don't take me as an apologist for any bureaucracy abuses.
In this case, I have seen enough of Embody's antics to cause me to reserve judgement until more information is available... That is the reason I said "We need to make sure we don't let our fear of an overstepping government jump in front of our common sense that this guy really might be 'more than half a bubble off center'."
Mike
For training beyond the carry permit: