Friday, June 21, 2013

Federal nullification efforts mounting in states

 FILE - In this April 5, 2013, file photo Kansas state Reps. Steve Brunk, left, a Wichita Republican, and Arlen Siegfreid, right, an Olathe Republican, confer during a Statehouse debate in Topeka, Kan., prior to passage of the Second Amendment Protection Act.  Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback signed the bill later and became the first to sign a measure threatening felony charges against federal agents who enforce certain firearms laws on guns made and owned in his state. Photo: John Hanna

Imagine the scenario: A federal agent attempts to arrest someone for illegally selling a machine gun. Instead, the federal agent is arrested — charged in a state court with the crime of enforcing federal gun laws.

Farfetched? Not as much as you might think.

The scenario would become conceivable if legislation passed by Missouri's Republican-led Legislature is signed into law by Democratic Gov. Jay Nixon.

The Missouri legislation is perhaps the most extreme example of a states' rights movement that has been spreading across the nation. States are increasingly adopting laws that purport to nullify federal laws — setting up intentional legal conflicts, directing local police not to enforce federal laws and, in rare cases, even threatening criminal charges for federal agents who dare to do their jobs.

An Associated Press analysis found that about four-fifths of the states now have enacted local laws that directly reject or ignore federal laws on marijuana use, gun control, health insurance requirements and identification standards for driver's licenses. The recent trend began in Democratic leaning California with a 1996 medical marijuana law and has proliferated lately in Republican strongholds like Kansas, where Gov.
Sam Brownback this spring became the first to sign a measure threatening felony charges against federal agents who enforce certain firearms laws in his state.

More @ SF Gate

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