NYC Says a Gun Under the Bed is a Felony

By Jeff Knox

Raymond Felton
Raymond Felton Arrested
FirearmsCoalition.org
FirearmsCoalition.org

Buckeye, AZ –-(Ammoland.com)- Another professional athlete is in hot water over a gun.

New York Knicks starting Point Guard, Raymond Felton Was arrested on February 25 2014 on two felony gun charges.

Unlike the NFL’s Plaxico Burress, who was illegally carrying a gun in a New York City nightclub and accidentally shot himself in the leg, or fellow NBA player Gilbert Arenas who had several guns in his locker at the Verizon Center in downtown Washington, DC, and involved them in a “practical joke” threat against another player, Felton’s crime involved having a single, loaded handgun in a bag under the bed in his apartment.

The only thing that made the gun illegal was the fact that the apartment is in New York City.

Felton was originally reported to be facing a minimum of 3 and a half – and a maximum of 7 – years for just the primary charge of criminal possession of a firearm. Later reports indicate that prosecutors went with 2 downgraded felony charges that carry one-year minimum sentences, and a misdemeanor. Both minimum sentences can be substituted with community service and probation at the judge’s discretion. There are a slew of other state and city charges that could have been stacked on if prosecutors had wanted to, including the crime of having too many rounds in a magazine under New York’s new SAFE Act.

There could be more to this story; there are claims that Felton had previously used the gun to threaten his wife during arguments, but those claims are unsubstantiated. She was the one who gave the gun to police though. Mrs. Felton had her attorney take the gun to a local police precinct while her soon-to-be ex-husband was playing a game against the Dallas Mavericks at Madison Square Garden. She had filed for divorce a week prior and claimed that she was scared to have the gun in the house.

If Felton threatened his wife with a gun, there is no excuse for that, and he deserves to face consequences for it, but that is not the charge. Under the current charge, Felton’s only crime was to have a loaded pistol in his own home without special permission from the government – something that should never be a crime, and only is in a handful of places in the US. Contrary to what the politicians and the media would have us believe, the “gun culture” is part of the dominant culture in this country.

It is an integral part of the American culture, which values God, hard work, self-reliance, morality, hospitality, history, family, and individual liberty.

Unfortunately for Felton, he stumbled into one of those places in America where the culture has been eroded by a vocal minority that has been working for decades to undermine the dominant American culture. In this new “improved” culture there is no right or wrong, except in the eyes of the law – which no longer has anything at all to do with justice.

In North Carolina, where Felton is from, owning a gun is relatively simple, and just about everyone who can afford one has one. There’s also still a bit of that Mayberry attitude down there where police and prosecutors are a little more concerned with peace and justice than law and order. For Felton, like so many of us, having a gun in the house could be as normal as having furniture. He might have known that he wasn’t supposed to have one in New York City, but what’s the harm? It’s nobody’s business what he has under his bed – right? But New York City isn’t Mayberry, and Raymond Felton isn’t Opie Taylor.

As a gifted athlete and NBA star, Felton is probably used to getting special treatment. And even though it doesn’t seem like it, he’s getting special treatment in this case. Were you or I to get caught with a gun in New York City, we would probably be facing 10 years, not just 1, and there’s no way we would have walked out the same day on just $25,000 bail. But even with the special star treatment from NYC, Felton is looking at a serious situation. If he doesn’t play this right, it could mean not only jail time and a loss of his rights forever, it could easily mean the end of his career and a loss of millions of dollars.

I wonder if his future ex-wife thought about that loss of income aspect before she made the decision to give the gun to the police?

It would be nice to see Felton fight this on Second Amendment grounds, but he’ll probably cop a plea to some lesser charge and do some community service. He might not even get stuck with a felony. Meanwhile, rather than institute a program to help ensure that their players are safe, responsible gun owners, the leadership of the NBA will undoubtedly make some stupid suggestions about banning players from owning firearms, and give Felton a slap on the wrist. And New York will keep right on persecuting people for exercising their fundamental right to arms – even in their own homes – because that’s the way the big apple bounces.

About:
The Firearms Coalition is a loose-knit coalition of individual Second Amendment activists, clubs and civil rights organizations. Founded by Neal Knox in 1984, the organization provides support to grassroots activists in the form of education, analysis of current issues, and with a historical perspective of the gun rights movement. The Firearms Coalition is a project of Neal Knox Associates, Manassas, VA. Visit: www.FirearmsCoalition.org

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Mals

NYC gun law is to prevent the poor from having guns. I lived there for 30 miserable years. The licensing fee is the equivalent of $175 per year for the rest of the licensees’ life.

Gary

Lets wait until the guy has his day in court .

Bob Shell

When you live in a sewer and NYC is one expect bad things to happen. Good luck with your new commie mayor

Jamie

She was trying to set him up. Sounds like something my ex wife tried to do one time but she failed miserably.

Carl Stevenson

His estranged wife and her lawyer took the gun to the cops and said he kept it under the bed? Sounds like they’re setting him up. Who’s to say the wife didn’t keep the gun, or she and her lawyer bought it and lied to get him in trouble, etc., etc. How do we know that ANYTHING wife and her lawyer say is true? Why weren’t wife and lawyer charged? Seems to me that THEY were the ones in possession of the gun, that they can’t prove squat against hubby, and the ONLY thing the cops can prove is that… Read more »

MJ

Never forget professional sports are in bed with government so don’t expect pro sports to do anything like supporting 2A rights among the players that upset that relationship.

oldgringo

Boycott NYC!

Dr. Strangelove

Glad the article mentioned he’ll probably get off easy due to his status. Average folks like you and I would be royally screwed. One of the worst things about these laws is the double standard.

Janek

S.A.F.E. Act and beyond, the goal is to make the inanimate object, the gun, the Felony.