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Monday, May 31, 2010

SOURCE: THE INDEPENDENT
Gas Station Shooting Suspect Arrested
Being Held on No Bail for Violating Parole

Friday, May 21, 2010
by CHRIS MEAGHER (CONTACT)

Authorities, acting on an anonymous tip combined with leads from their investigation, arrested 25-year-old Matthew Hamby in connection with the shooting of a gas station cashier Tuesday. He was taken into custody without incident Thursday afternoon after deputies searched multiple locations, including Hamby’s home near Lompoc.

He is currently being held on no bail for violating parole.

According to Sheriff's spokesperson Drew Sugars, a man wearing all black with a beanie and bandana covering his face and head walked into the gas station at Hollister Avenue and Turnpike Roads at 9:20 p.m. and demanded money. When the clerk complied, the robber shot him in the stomach region. The clerk’s injuries were non-life threatening.

Friday, May 28, 2010

Child gun deaths as common in rural as urban areas

Child gun deaths as common in rural as urban areas

Amy Norton, Reuters Published: Tuesday, May 25, 2010

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NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Children and teenagers living in the most-rural parts of the U.S. are as likely to die by gun violence as those in big cities, a new study finds.

The findings, say researchers, counter the common belief that gun violence is mainly an urban problem.

The study found that from 1999 through 2006, 23,649 Americans age 19 or younger died from gunshots. Rates in the most-rural and most-urban counties were nearly the same -- at 4 deaths per 100,000 children and teens, and 4.6 per 100,000, respectively.

There were, however, different patterns when it came to the type of gun violence, the researchers report in the journal Pediatrics.

Children and teens in urban areas were more likely to be a victim of homicide than those in rural areas; but that was counter-balanced by higher rates of gun suicide and accidental shooting deaths among kids in rural counties.

"I think the popular perception is that (gun violence) is an urban problem," said lead researcher Dr. Michael L. Nance, of Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. "But this is something everyone has to worry about."

The findings, he told Reuters Health, could help local policy makers in developing the types of prevention efforts most likely to be useful in their areas: in urban centers, firearm homicide is the biggest threat to kids; in rural areas, it's suicide.

In the most-urban counties -- those with a metropolitan area of at least 1 million people -- there were 3.8 gun homicides per 100,000 children and teens age 19 or younger.

In the most-rural counties -- defined as being either "completely rural" or having an urban population of less than 2,500 and no nearby metropolitan area -- the gun-homicide rate was just under 0.8 per 100,000.

The picture was reversed, however, when it came to gun suicides, with the most-rural areas having a fourfold higher rate than the most-urban ones: 2.75 versus 0.7 suicides per 100,000 kids.

The rate of accidental gun death was 0.5 per 100,000 in the most-rural counties, compared with 0.1 per 100,000 in the most urban.

Nance said that the message for parents is much the same as it is for policy makers: guns are a problem everywhere, though the nature of the threat generally differs between rural and urban areas.

In rural areas, efforts to prevent teen suicide in general and to improve gun safety -- like keeping guns in the home properly locked away and educating kids on the dangers of firearms -- would be most useful. Household guns, Nance and his colleagues note, have also been linked to a heightened risk of suicide.

In highly urban areas, efforts to curb community violence would likely do the most to reduce child and teen gun deaths.

While the current study focused on gun deaths, Nance noted that rates of non-firearm accidental deaths also tended to rise substantially as counties grew progressively rural.

In the most-rural counties, there were roughly 26 accidental non-firearm deaths per 100,000 residents age 19 and younger -- versus 10 per 100,000 in the most-urban counties. NEXT PAGE



Read more: http://www.nationalpost.com/life/health/story.html?id=88633a93-f0c6-4267-9071-32e550c27278#ixzz0pHuNeCN6
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Jimmy's Starbucks Standoff

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Coffee City

Melissa Allison tracks Seattle's — and the world's — caffeine addiction.

Blog Home | E-mail Melissa | RSS feeds Subscribe | Twitter feed

February 9, 2010 at 3:40 PM

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Brady Campaign circulates petition to keep guns out of Starbucks

Posted by Melissa Allison

The Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence is asking people to sign a petition telling Starbucks to keep guns out of its shops, because they say they can't get a straight answer out of the Seattle company about its gun policy. The petition has more than 15,000 signatures.

"Our California activists are responding to the activities of Open Carry activists in the Bay Area, who noticed Open Carry demonstrations at Peet's, California Pizza Kitchen and Starbucks," said Doug Pennington, a spokesman for the Brady Campaign.

OpenCarry.org describes itself as "a pro-gun Internet community focused on the right to openly carry properly holstered handguns in daily American life." They sometimes meet in public places to exercise their right to carry unconcealed guns.

When the Brady Campaign asked each company for its gun policies, Peet's Coffee and California Pizza Kitchen promptly issued notices that guns are not allowed -- either at all or on display -- in their shops unless you're a police officer.

Starbucks hasn't done that. "So far, Starbucks hasn't said what seems to be an obvious kind of policy, that 'no guns are allowed in our stores unless you're a police officer,'" Pennington said.

In a written statement, the company said, "For Starbucks, the safety of our customers and partners is our paramount concern. We have existing security protocols in place to handle situations related to safety in our stores. We will continue to adhere closely to local, state and federal laws and the counsel of law enforcement regarding this issue."

Based on that, it's hard to know whether Starbucks allows guns in shops or not. But if it's going strictly by the law, then in many states including Washington, it does allow unconcealed firearms.

Update 2/10/2010: Politics aside, this submission in the comment string is hilarious: "Clint Eastwood voice: I know what your thinkin'. Did I have six shots of espresso or only 5? Well, being that I'm really wired up now and have a nervous itchy trigger finger, just ask yourself one question. Do I feel lucky?.......Well do you punk?"

Update 2/11/2010: The petition now has more than 25,000 signatures, and check out the Los Angeles Times' editorial cartoon about the issue.

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Monday, May 24, 2010

Daily Sound — Authorities track down suspected gas station gunman

Daily Sound — Authorities track down suspected gas station gunman

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Obama Gun Boom Comes to an Official End

Posted: May 20, 2010 11:36 AM'

More proof that the great Obama gun-buying boom is coming to an end.

The Freedom Group, a "family" of gun companies cobbled together by Cerberus Capital Management (the former owners of Chrysler, among many other things), has just filed new documents with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) in anticipation of a long-threatened stock IPO (Initial Public Offering). And the picture isn't pretty.

2010-05-19-freedomgroupcompanies.png

Freedom Group companies run the gamut from sporting arms to assault weapons. In addition to Bushmaster and DPMS (two leading manufacturers of AR-15 type assault rifles), companies and brands that comprise Freedom Group include: Remington, Marlin, Harrington & Richardson, New England Firearms, L.C. Smith, Dakota Arms, Advanced Armament Corporation, and Barnes Bullets. Freedom Group states that it has the number one U.S. market position in shotguns (31 percent), ammunition (33 percent), traditional rifles (37 percent), and "modern sporting rifles" (48 percent). And, of course, a really kick-ass name. The chart below detailing their market share and position is taken from Freedom Group's SEC filing.

2010-05-19-freedomgroup3.GIF

What's that you say? You've never heard of "modern sporting rifles"? Well, actually you have--except you probably know them as assault rifles. "Modern sporting rifle" is just the gun industry'slatest rebranding effort by the National Shooting Sports Foundation (NSSF) for lethal, high-capacity, military-bred firearms like the AR-15 and AK-47. A prior industry-wide effort to rechristen assault weapons "black guns" never took hold. So they're now "modern sporting rifles." At this churn rate, the NSSF (the "official" trade association for the gun industry, albeit always capably abetted by the industry's "unofficial" trade association, the National Rifle Association) will soon be down to calling them "Freedom Sticks." (This week the Violence Policy Center posted avideo on YouTube on the NSSF's "modern sporting rifle" rebranding campaign.)

In the SEC documents, Freedom Group details how the gun market has "softened," especially the market for "modern sporting rifles":

Our industry also experienced an increase in certain firearms demand between late 2008 and mid 2009. In the first quarter of 2010, sales in our firearms segment have softened from the levels experienced during that period. Demand for higher end centerfire rifles has softened and sales have transitioned to more moderately priced firearms, which has resulted in an overall sales decrease of 21.7% in our firearms segment during the three months ended March 31, 2010 versus the three months ended March 31, 2009...


Net sales for the three months ended March 31, 2010 were $94.7 million, a decrease of $26.3 million, or 21.7%, as compared to the three months ended March 31, 2009. Centerfire rifle sales decreased by $24.2 million, or 27.8%, as compared to the prior-year period, primarily due to reduced sales demand for modern sporting products
[assault rifles]. Shotgun sales decreased by $1.2 million, or 4.9%, as compared to the prior-year period. Rimfire rifle sales decreased by $1.0 million, or 14.4%, as compared to the prior-year period.

When the self-declared top assault-weapon cartel--with, let's remember here, nearly half the U.S. market--reports a nearly 28 percent drop in centerfire rifle sales "due to reduced sales demand for modern sporting products," it's fair to say that the assault rifle boom in general, and the AR-15 rifle boom in particular, is over.

In March, I wrote a blog about the first cracks appearing in the gun industry's post-Obama boom. One manufacturer talked about the "collapse" of the assault rifle--specifically AR-15--market, noting that panic-buying as the result of President Obama's election had come to an end. "The consumer just stopped buying," the manufacturer stated, the "sales blitz lasted about eight months."

The blog resulted in a bevy of counter-arguments from the NRA and NSSF, the most recent being an article in the June edition of the NRA's America's 1st Freedom magazine, ironically citing Freedom Group's Bushmaster as one proof of the AR-15's manifest destiny as "the standard center-fire rifle platform for all applications."

And that's because the industry views assault weapon sales as key to their future. As the industry publication The New Firearms Business noted in November 2008:

the sole bright spot in the industry right now is the tactical end of the market, where AR and AK pattern rifles and high-tech designs, such as FNH USA's PS90 carbine [sic], are in incredibly high demand right now.

In a market that continues to shrink over the long term, assault weapons are the "sole bright spot" with sales potential. Especially if they can be rebranded as "modern sporting rifles" for "all applications" to traditional sportsmen. That's the legal side. On the illegal side, regardless of this year's warmer and fuzzier label du jour, assault weapons have a proven appeal to criminals--from mass shooters and cop-killers in the U.S. to narco-terrorists in Mexico (where, according to U.S. law enforcement, Bushmaster and DPMS AR-15s are primary "weapons of choice" of gun traffickers). And the gun industry cares little about who buys their guns--just as long as someone,anyone, does.

And while the NRA and gunmakers more often than not are allowed to make up their own facts when it comes to their industry, now and then they have to play by other people's rules--like those of the Securities and Exchange Commission. And that's when we get a glimpse of the truth.

Follow Josh Sugarmann on Twitter: www.twitter.com/VPCinfo


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Open Carry: California Pizza Kitchen

CPK does not allow guests other than uniformed officers to display firearms in our restaurants. CPK is a family oriented restaurant and the comfort and well being of our guests is a top priority. We are concerned that the open display of firearms would be particularly disturbing to children and their parents.
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Wednesday, May 5, 2010

Press Release April 30. 2010 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Press Release
April 30. 2010
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Phone: (805) 684-8434
Contact: Toni Wellen

“NEW DECADE NEW CHALLENGES”
Santa Barbara Coalition Against Gun Violence
15TH ANNIVERSARY GALA CELEBRATION

Featured Speaker
JOSH HORWITZ
Exec. Director, Coalition To Stop Gun Violence

Sunday, May 16, 2010 11:30 A.M.
Hotel Mar Monte, Santa Barbara

The Coalition Against Gun Violence (CAGV) is honored to present Josh Horwitz, co-author of “Guns, Democracy, and the Insurrectionist Idea,” as its featured speaker at the organization's 15th Annual Celebration on Sunday, May 17, 2010, at 11:30 a.m. in the Cabrillo Room of the Hotel Mar Monte in Santa Barbara. The charge for the event, including lunch, is $60–members, $75 non-members. For reservations and additional information, please call 564-6803.

Josh Horwitz, a two-decades-long advocate working on gun violence prevention issues, is Executive Director of two nonprofits, Coalition to Stop Gun Violence and Educational Fund to Stop Gun Violence. He developed “Hands Without Guns,” a youth anti-violence project and has testified on a variety of firearm-related issues before the U.S. House of Representatives. He was a panelist at the Mayors Against Illegal Guns Summit in 2006.

Mr. Horwitz challenges the proposition that more guns equal more freedom and exposes insurrectionism as a true threat to freedom in the United States today. He believes that reasonable gun regulation is essential to the survival of democracy and liberty. He states that our elected officials must be united in denouncing the use of political violence as a grave threat to the rule of law.

Following tradition, the “Bell Ceremony” held to honor those who have lost loved ones to gun violence, will end the event. We will honor the memory of those killed at the post office massacre in 2006 in Goleta. People in the community who have lost a family member or friend to gun violence are invited to attend and participate in the “Bell Ceremony.”

The Coalition Against Gun Violence, a project of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation, is a non-profit coalition comprised of 40 member organizations, united against gun violence and committed to creating a safer community for Santa Barbara County residents through its educational programs and advocacy for effective local, state and national policies and legislation.

For information contact Toni Wellen at 684-8434.

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Tuesday, May 4, 2010

PRESS RELEASE: “NEW DECADE NEW CHALLENGES”

Press Release
April 30. 2010
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Phone: (805) 684-8434
Contact: Toni Wellen

“NEW DECADE NEW CHALLENGES”
Santa Barbara Coalition Against Gun Violence
15TH ANNIVERSARY GALA CELEBRATION

Featured Speaker
JOSH HORWITZ
Exec. Director, Coalition To Stop Gun Violence

Sunday, May 16, 2010 11:30 A.M.
Hotel Mar Monte, Santa Barbara

The Coalition Against Gun Violence (CAGV) is honored to present Josh Horwitz, co-author of “Guns, Democracy, and the Insurrectionist Idea,” as its featured speaker at the organization's 15th Annual Celebration on Sunday, May 17, 2010, at 11:30 a.m. in the Cabrillo Room of the Hotel Mar Monte in Santa Barbara. The charge for the event, including lunch, is $60–members, $75 non-members. For reservations and additional information, please call 564-6803.

Josh Horwitz, a two-decades-long advocate working on gun violence prevention issues, is Executive Director of two nonprofits, Coalition to Stop Gun Violence and Educational Fund to Stop Gun Violence. He developed “Hands Without Guns,” a youth anti-violence project and has testified on a variety of firearm-related issues before the U.S. House of Representatives. He was a panelist at the Mayors Against Illegal Guns Summit in 2006.

Mr. Horwitz challenges the proposition that more guns equal more freedom and exposes insurrectionism as a true threat to freedom in the United States today. He believes that reasonable gun regulation is essential to the survival of democracy and liberty. He states that our elected officials must be united in denouncing the use of political violence as a grave threat to the rule of law.

Following tradition, the “Bell Ceremony” held to honor those who have lost loved ones to gun violence, will end the event. We will honor the memory of those killed at the post office massacre in 2006 in Goleta. People in the community who have lost a family member or friend to gun violence are invited to attend and participate in the “Bell Ceremony.”

The Coalition Against Gun Violence, a project of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation, is a non-profit coalition comprised of 40 member organizations, united against gun violence and committed to creating a safer community for Santa Barbara County residents through its educational programs and advocacy for effective local, state and national policies and legislation.

For information contact Toni Wellen at 684-8434.

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