Posts Tagged ‘Petition for Return of Property’

Wisconsin’s New Concealed Weapon Law – Firearms Training

Thursday, October 27th, 2011

As of November 1st, 2011, Wisconsin’s concealed carry law, section 941.23, is changing. Currently, anyone who is armed with a concealed dangerous weapon, except a police officer, is guilty of a Class A misdemeanor. As of November 1st, 2011, people who hold a license can carry concealed weapons. In addition, people may lawfully carry a concealed weapon in their own homes, their own business, or on their own land. To be eligible for a license, the applicant must be over 21 years old, not have criminal convictions nor conditions of bail that prohibit them from possessing a weapon, be a Wisconsin resident, and have proof of firearms training. Once a license is granted, the licensee must carry the license and photo identification at all times. The license is valid for 5 years from the date it was issued. This is all contained in Wisconsin Statute section 941.23.

Our office has extensive experience with clients who have gun-related legal problems. Most recently, Attorney Craig Mastantuono was asked by the NRA Institute for Legislative Action to speak as a guest at the NRA’s 2011 “Firearms Law & The Second Amendment Symposium” on October 15th, 2011 in San Diego, California. Attorney Mastantuono addressed the symposium attendees and was a panel member regarding police/citizen encounters and investigative stops in situations where a firearm may be present. His remarks also included reference to this office’s prior representation of a pizza delivery driver who successfully defended himself with a firearm against armed robbers, only to be subject to criminal prosecution for CCW and seizure of his weapon. Mastantuono Law Office successfully got the criminal charge dismissed and obtained a court order for return of his firearms.

At Mastantuono Law Office, we have received many inquiries from those who wish to avail themselves of the license privilege effective November 1st, and would like to also have a relationship with an attorney in case difficulties arise.  We have also learned that some training courses are advising attendees to have an attorney’s contact information with them for the same reason. Our attorneys are available 24 hours a day in case of an emergency. Our office voice mail provides an emergency number for use after hours if the situation requires immediate attention.

IN THE NEWS: Mastantuono Law Office continues to receive inquiries from those affected by the current “gap” between privileged and unlawful behavior.

Wednesday, April 20th, 2011

Tow Operator Won’t Be Charged: He was arrested after robbery suspects shot
By Gitte Laasby, Journal Sentinel
April 19, 2011

A tow truck driver who shot two men suspected of robbing him will not face charges for carrying a concealed weapon, the Milwaukee County district attorney’s office announced Tuesday.

“We look at the fact that this was a citizen placed in great danger by the conduct of others and he was forced to make a choice to use self-defense,” said Kent Lovern, a spokesman for the district attorney’s office. “Those facts really predominated our decision-making.”

The 28-year-old tow truck driver was called to the 9300 block of W. Silver Spring Drive on the city’s northwest side to tow a car around 12:30 p.m. Friday when two men robbed him at knife point, police said. After handing over money, the driver struggled with the assailants, who cut him with a knife. The driver then took out a gun and shot both of the men, 18 and 22. The shooting victims suffered non-life-threatening injuries, police said.

Lovern said the district attorney expects to issue charges against the robbery suspects Wednesday.

But the driver will not be charged with a misdemeanor because he acted “lawfully in self-defense,” Lovern said. That’s although Wisconsin, Illinois and the District of Columbia are the only places in the nation where it’s illegal to carry a concealed weapon, according to the National Rifle Association.

“It’s certainly a violation of the law. You end up balancing the conduct of the victim, mere possession of the weapon, with the reason why the weapon was ultimately used,” Lovern said. “The statute itself does not contain language that would contain a right of self-defense. But in a case like this, you have to look at the totality of facts and make an equitable consideration of, what is someone allowed to do in order to prevent use of force against them?”

To attorneys and activists, the case raises a problem of inconsistency in state law when it comes to gun rights.

About five years ago, Milwaukee criminal defense lawyer Craig Mastantuono was faced with a similar situation when he represented pizza deliverer Andres Vegas, who shot two would-be robbers in a seven-month period. Mastantuono successfully had Vegas’ confiscated guns returned to him. But the Wisconsin Supreme Court wouldn’t review the state’s age-old general ban on concealed weapons, which Mastantuono said is unconstitutional because it conflicts with Wisconsin’s 1998 constitutional amendment affirming the right to bear arms for self-defense and security.

“You can’t have a general ban saying under no circumstance can anyone carry in concealed fashion, and then have a constitutional right to carry arms for security and defense. It creates confusion for people and it gives prosecutors all the power. So it’s real murky waters,” especially for people who work dangerous jobs and want to carry guns for protection, he said.

“They put themselves at risk and carry an arm for purposes of security. The only reason this guy isn’t prosecuted is because he was being robbed. If he’d just been pulled over (by police) he would have been prosecuted.”

Mastantuono argues that complicates the decision as to who gets charged with a crime and who doesn’t and leaves citizens confused about what is and is not allowed.

The state Legislature passed concealed-carry bills in 2003 and 2006, but Gov. Jim Doyle vetoed them, said Nik Clark, president of the pro-concealed-carry group Wisconsin Carry Inc.

He said solving the issue would require repealing the concealed carry ban and the vehicle-carry statute. Clark said his group is working with tea party members and Republican legislators to get another concealed carry law passed.

Other states either authorize a permit to carry concealed weapons, or have enacted carry-concealed statutes with explicit exceptions for specific locations or circumstances, Mastantuono said.

“This issue is going to keep arising,” he said. “I don’t know that changing the law and allowing for concealed carry will deter robbery attempts, but it will clarify the law for those who put themselves in risky employment situations.”

CASE RESULTS: Mastantuono Law Office prevents charges for client exercising right to open carry firearm.

Wednesday, July 21st, 2010

No Charges Against Woman Who Brought Gun to Church:
Open-Carry Activist Won’t Be Cited For Carrying Loaded Firearm in Vehicle

July 20, 2010
By Bruce Vielmetti, Journal Sentinel

Waukesha County prosecutors have decided not to cite a woman who wore a gun into a Brookfield church and had the loaded weapon inside her car when police stopped her a short time later.

Krysta Sutterfield, 41, of Milwaukee was arrested July 4 after she wore the gun to services at the Unitarian Universalist Church West in Brookfield that morning. She never took the gun from its holster or acted in any menacing way, but afterward some church staff called Brookfield police for clarification about Sutterfield’s right to openly carry a firearm.

Several squad cars quickly responded, but by then Sutterfield was leaving in her car. Police pulled her over and found that she had the gun, still loaded, inside a zippered case on the passenger seat. Wisconsin law requires all guns to be unloaded and encased during transport in a vehicle. Police handcuffed Sutterfield, processed her at the station, released her and referred the matter to prosecutors, suggesting that she be ticketed for having the loaded gun in her car.

In a letter to police released to the public Tuesday, Waukesha County District Attorney Brad Schimel explained that while Sutterfield did violate the letter of the firearm transport law, he was not going to issue the ticket, for several reasons.

For one, he said, Sutterfield had no bad intent. She had worn the gun to church services peacefully and was never asked to remove it or leave. She told investigators that a salesperson where she had purchased the 9mm handgun had explained to her that it only needed to be in a case when she was driving.

Further, Schimel wrote, the statute in question, which is a non-criminal infraction that carries a maximum forfeiture of $100, was passed before the Wisconsin Constitution was amended to clearly specify residents’ rights to keep guns for various purposes. He said he did not think the facts of Sutterfield’s case made it the right one to prosecute in an effort to set the limits of gun restrictions.

The Wisconsin Supreme Court has held that the state’s ban on concealed weapons did not apply to a shop owner in Milwaukee who had a gun to protect his business, which had been robbed at gunpoint many times. But it also upheld the concealed-carry conviction of a passenger who had two loaded guns in a car.

Schimel noted that the latter case, however, did not address whether the constitutional amendment might protect someone carrying a loaded gun in his or her own car for protection.

“Given all the circumstances in this case, I do not believe this is the case to test the outer reaches of the application of the CCW statute in light of the constitutional amendment,” Schimel wrote.

Lastly, Schimel noted, Sutterfield might well be able to challenge the legality of her stop by police because she had done nothing illegal at the church and police had no separate reason to suspect that she was transporting the gun while loaded in violation of the state statute. If the stop was not legal, the evidence of the loaded gun would not be admissible.

But Schimel did not fault Brookfield police for their aggressive reaction to the situation, given the limited information they had at the time, especially in light of the history of the 2005 shooting that killed eight people at a church service at a Brookfield hotel.

“The officer needed to freeze the situation to find out more information while preventing the suspect from leaving and while ensuring the safety of himself and other citizens,” Schimel wrote. “It is my opinion that the steps he took would be considered reasonable under all of the circumstances.”

Sutterfield’s attorney, Rebecca Coffee, said her client, who has no criminal history, was relieved.

“I appreciate that Mr. Schimel has given some very reasoned and thoughtful explanation of what he did, and I agree with him,” Coffee said.

She said she will next work on getting Sutterfield’s gun, which was seized at the time of her arrest, returned to her.

Officials at the church, 13001 W. North Ave., have since posted signs at the entrances stating guns are prohibited. The congregation’s president said earlier that Sutterfield is welcome to return, just not with her gun.

Wisconsin Conceals the Right to Carry

Monday, March 8th, 2010

Last month, there was a rally in Waukesha County supporting gun rights in Wisconsin; the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel covered the event in an article here. Many of the article’s comments about the rally related to the problems created by Wisconsin’s uniquely restrictive statewide gun laws. Wisconsin is the only State with a complete ban on carrying a concealed weapon; other states either authorize a permit system to carry concealed, or have enacted carry-concealed statutes that contain explicit exceptions for specific locations or circumstances. This outright ban exists despite the fact that Wisconsin’s State Constitution guarantees citizens the right to keep and bear arms for security, defense, hunting, recreation, or any other lawful purpose.

Mastantuono Law Office has extensive experience representing individuals in criminal cases dealing with gun laws, and with petitions for property return to get our clients’ firearms back from the government. These efforts have led to noteworthy success for our clients. For example, Mastantuono Law Office represented a Milwaukee pizza delivery driver who made national headlines for being the unfortunate victim of several robbery attempts while he was working. After using a firearm to defend himself and ward off his attackers, the Milwaukee District Attorney’s Office charged our client with carrying a concealed weapon (CCW), a criminal misdemeanor offense. The State charged our client despite concluding that he acted in lawful self-defense when he discharged his weapon, instead basing a CCW charge on his decision to carry a weapon just prior to being attacked. That’s right – the State decided that he acted in lawful self-defense while using a firearm to defend himself, but that he shouldn’t have had the firearm with him in the first place. Mastantuono Law Office moved to dismiss the CCW charge, asserting that our client acted within his Wisconsin Constitutional privilege to go armed for the purposes of self-defense and security. Link to Journal Sentinel article here. Milwaukee County Circuit Court Judge Daniel Noonan agreed, throwing out the case. Milwaukee Journal Sentinel article: Driver’s Gun Charge Tossed.

Despite having its case thrown out, the State retained possession of our client’s weapon, forcing a contested motion for property return. Milwaukee County Circuit Court Judge Jeffery Kremers denied our client’s request to have his firearm returned, and even denied his request for a hearing on the matter. Link to Journal Sentinel article here. We appealed. The Wisconsin Court of Appeals overturned Judge Kremers, ordering that a hearing be held on the matter. Upon hearing our claim of Constitutional privilege in defense of the property forfeiture, Milwaukee County Circuit Court Judge Kevin Martens agreed that our client had exercised his Constitutional right to bear a firearm, and ordered his property returned.

Throughout these proceedings, the courts focused only on the issue of whether the CCW law was unconstitutional as applied to our client – and ruled that it was. Unsatisfied with this result, Mastantuono Law Office challenged the constitutionality of the CCW statute on its face as applied to all Wisconsin residents in a Petition for Review to the Wisconsin Supreme Court. We moved to have the CCW statute struck down. A link to our Petition is here. The Wisconsin Supreme Court declined to hear our challenge, leaving in limbo clear guidelines for determining when Wisconsin residents can lawfully assert their Constitutional privilege to lawfully carry a firearm. This leaves the authority to make that determination in the hands of the executive branch of government, as exercised by individual prosecutors. Since prosecutors and local policy can vary from county to county, and even within the same county, Wisconsin residents are left in the dark about whether carrying a firearm is lawful or unlawful, until an individualized, after-the-fact determination. The result is the government having all of the power to make these determinations on a case-by-case basis: a dangerous situation for those asserting their Constitutional right to bear arms.

Since the Supreme Court denied our Petition, gun rights issues in Wisconsin clearly remain in the forefront, as evidenced by the rally in Waukesha County, as well as a recent United States Supreme Court oral argument on the Constitutionality of state and local gun control laws, discussed in an article here.

For those seeking a more detailed legal analysis, a portion of our Supreme Court Petition supporting review follows:

STATEMENT OF CRITERIA SUPPORTING REVIEW AND SATISFYING EXCEPTIONS TO MOOTNESS

This appeal presents substantial questions regarding the reach and effect of Art. I, § 25 of the Wisconsin Constitution (enacted in 1998), the impact of the “fundamental right” created by that provision on Wis. Stat. § 941.23, and the process established by this Court in Hamdan, by which the trial courts are to determine on a case-by-case basis whether an individual has exercised his or her “fundamental right” or committed a crime. This appeal asks the Court to revisit Hamdan, Cole, and their limited progeny, with the benefit of over five and a half-years of judicial experience in applying the Hamdan framework in individual cases.

The Hamdan decision concludes with the following advice to the legislative branch and the recognition that there would exist “a continuing dilemma until the legislature acts to clarify the law”:

We urge the legislature to thoughtfully examine Wis. Stat. § 941.23 in the wake of the amendment and to consider the possibility of a licensing or permit system for persons who have a good reason to carry a concealed weapon. We happily concede that the legislature is better able than this court to determine public policy on firearms and other weapons.

. . .

In the meantime, we must give effect to the constitutional right embodied in Article I, Section 25.

Hamdan at ¶¶ 85, 86. The legislature has yet to address the “dilemma” perceived by the Court.

Petitioner respectfully contends that his case demonstrates that the Hamdan framework has not proven amendable to knowable, consistent, non-arbitrary, and objectively reviewable administration. In making it impossible for one to know whether carrying a concealed firearm for legitimate self-defense and security purposes is the exercise of a fundamental right or a crime until after the conclusion of substantial, typically criminal, litigation, the framework has fallen short of the Court’s goal of giving meaningful effect to Art. I, § 25. It has also compromised basic principles of due process and fair notice. Hamdan does not provide meaningful guidance for the trial courts and bar, leaving them to struggle anew in each case.

Specifically noting that in this very case, different judges came to different conclusions on largely identical sets of facts, Judge Martens expressed the ongoing dilemma facing the bench, the bar, and would-be defendants:

[I] do wonder whether ultimately it’s fair to individuals who have a genuine interest in security to essentially subject them to prosecution and then have a court after the fact be the Monday morning quarterback with the attorney’s help and decide, well, in your case it’s okay but in someone else’s case maybe the cashier next to you, it’s not, so I have real concerns about that.

R.19 (Pet. App. 153-154).

Over five and a half years since Hamdan’s call for legislative action to resolve this “continuing dilemma,” Judge Martens concludes this passage by reiterating that “legislative guidance would be extremely helpful and valuable.” Id.

Petitioner suggests that Hamdan has likely had the unintended consequence of inhibiting needed legislative guidance by diluting both the urgency of the need for such guidance and the legislative branch’s ultimate responsibility for providing it.

This case exemplifies that experience over the intervening years has shown that Hamdan has failed to effectively serve its purpose. It has had unintended consequences, is burdensome to the bench and bar, to defendants, and to those who desire to exercise a fundamental constitutional right without fear and uncertainty.

For these reasons, Petitioner suggests that this case meets the criteria for review and should not be deemed moot.

In addition to work described above, Mastantuono Law Office has handled numerous other cases dealing with the right to bear arms. Our Office currently represents a Minneapolis firefighter who shot and killed a man who broke into our client’s home in rural Burnett County, Wisconsin. Despite our client’s strong claim of self-defense, the State charged him with Second-degree Intentional homicide, alleging that he had a real, but unreasonable belief that he was in grave danger when he fired his gun. All charges were ultimately dismissed after our Office successfully argued that the State violated our client’s Constitutional Due Process rights when it lost key evidence supporting our client’s innocence. Link to Minneapolis Star Tribune article here, and Intercounty Leader article here.

Mastantuono Law Office’s practice is Statewide, focusing on representation of individuals and organizations accused of crime, and who are the target of government investigations. We are available for all inquiries at (414) 276-8662, or by contacting us through our website: www.MilwaukeeCriminalLawyers.com.

Rebecca Coffee,

Craig Mastantuono.