stevie_d_64 wrote:This is where I had the rub with my brothers handler...
She told me that I could not have one in my posession at all when I was in proximity to my brother...Regardless if it was holstered, under my control, spare magazine in my back pocket, the whole smack...CHL and all...
She's absolutely incorrect, and has no case law to back her up.
I counted to ten and let it go...
Wise choice.
She also told me that if he visited me at my home (even if she just heard about it), that she would find him in violation, and me complicite in allowing him to be around guns, even if they were locked up ammo and all in my gunsafe...
She said she'd just let the court sort it out...And if I raised a question (or in her words "stink" about it) she'd lower the boom...
You've obviously encountered a power-tripping peon, who wants to enforce the law as she wishes it to be, not as it actually is. IIRC from previous threads, she's a USPO, right? A long conversation with her supervisor is in order, followed by short but thoroughly documented correspondence with her supervisor's chain of command. (Note: USPOs work for the court system, not the DoJ.)
The upside: you and your brother would win in the long run. The downside: the minute she says he's violated, he goes to jail. (The
double entendre of her "violating" him is deliberate, and appropriate.) We all understand about beating the rap, if not the ride; but for a convicted felon on supervised release, the "ride" is a helluva lot longer, and much harder to get off.
Kevin