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Culture War Roundup for the week of June 19, 2023

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Interested in hearing what our resident lawyers have to say about the likelihood of conviction on these charges. How hard would it be to actually prove he was high in the two weeks he had the gun?

I am not a lawyer and this isn't legal advice, but the law isn't about owning a firearm as a drug user, but lying on this form, which asks:

Are you an unlawful user of, or addicted to, marijuana or any depressant, stimulant, narcotic drug, or any other controlled substance?

The ATF's older published rule is that :

Moreover, under the proposed definition, a person must be a current user of a controlled substance to be prohibited by the GCA from acquiring or possessing firearms. Although there is no statutory definition of current use, applicable case law indicates that a person need not have been using drugs at the precise moment that he or she acquired or possessed a firearm to be under firearms disabilities with respect to acquiring or possessing a firearm as an unlawful user of a controlled substance...

The proposed definition is also consistent with the definition of ‘‘current drug user’’ applied by the Department of Labor in its administration of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), 42 U.S.C. §§ 12101–12213. Regulations issued pursuant to the ADA indicate that the term ‘‘current user’’ is not intended to be limited to the use of drugs on a particular day, or within a matter of days or weeks before, but rather that the unlawful use occurred recently enough to indicate that the individual is actively engaged in such conduct.

Similarly, the definition of ‘‘addicted to any controlled substance’’ is based on Federal law, 21 U.S.C. § 802, and defines an ‘‘addict’’ as an individual who uses any narcotic drug and who has lost the power of self- control with respect to the use of the narcotic drug.

More recent guidance is even more explicit:

If there is evidence that an individual admits, within the past 12 months, to using or possessing a controlled substance, the federal drug prohibition 922(g)(3) would apply. Admission of use/possession of a controlled substance may often be found within the narrative of a criminal incident report. An admission of drug use/possession does not have to result in a drug arrest to be disqualifying.

Individuals admitting to illegal use/possession of a controlled substance are prohibited from the receipt/possession of a firearm for one year from the date of admission. It should be noted this must be a self-admission. If a second party states the controlled substance belongs to another subject, either would be disqualified based solely on that statement.

Hunter bought the gun Oct. 12, 2018, and Hallie threw it in the trash Oct. 23, 2018. Hunter's book details on-and-off cocaine use from at least his dismissal from the Navy Reserve until early 2019, but particularly emphasizes 2018 as "I was smoking crack every 15 minutes" after falling off the wagon in spring of that year.

It's not quite a signed confession, but there's few easier cases to prove than when someone literally writes a book about it followed by an interview tour.

Sorry, I realized that it was about lying on the form rather than use. My thought was that he had a plausible defense of being on the wagon during, say, that month. Thank you for pointing me to the one-year limit.

It does in fact sound like this should have been open-and-shut.

which is what he is getting anyway.

As a small nitpick, the firearm charge is being put through a pretrial diversion program.

The probation is for the tax charges.

I am not licensed to practice law, but my discussions with a few lawyers seem to suggest that pretrial diversion for a federal firearms charge is fairly rare, compared to probation or other penalties.

He's getting probation for other, unrelated crimes that he unquestionably committed. The guidelines for multiple counts in the same sentencing are a mess, but I think it'd end up adding two or four offense levels, depending on how you do the math.

Just these three matters alone get him to Zone B, where the sentencing guidelines hold that "the court may impose probation only if it imposes a condition or combination of conditions requiring a period of community confinement, home detention, or intermittent confinement sufficient to satisfy the minimum term of imprisonment specified in the guideline range."

And then there's the other gun we have photographic evidence that he possessed illegally, that possessing the firearm and lying on the form are different violations of law, the piles of cocaine, the potential FARA violations, so on.