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PhyPhillosophy t1_jbr2hal wrote

Just because a Pit bull attacks another dog in the street, don't assume it's aggressive. It was probably just trying to nanny the other dog.

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shnoogle111 t1_jbr3ldt wrote

Nor should she. She was defending her small dog from an almost certain death. If anything, be mad at the owner of the pit bull who wasn’t responsible enough to control her dog. Shame it came to this.

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RealLiveKindness t1_jbr8u9j wrote

The dog owner is responsible. I am forced to carry bear spray & a hunting knife when walking in the park because people don’t control their animals.

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RealLiveKindness t1_jbr8v7d wrote

The dog owner is responsible. I am forced to carry bear spray & a hunting knife when walking in the park because people don’t control their animals.

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Bolmac t1_jbrnyx0 wrote

Pennsylvania law is very clear:

"any person may kill any dog which he sees in the act of pursuing or wounding or killing any domestic animal, including household pets, or pursuing, wounding or attacking human beings, whether or not such a dog bears a required license tag. There is no liability on such persons in damages or otherwise for such killing."

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Shad0wSmurf t1_jbs48kw wrote

(36 C.F.R. §§ 2.4(e) & (h), 18 U.S.C. § 922(q)) allow for individuals carrying concealed in accordance with the laws of the state in which the federal park or GFSZ is located to carry concealed in them*; however, an individual carrying under LEOSA is carrying under FEDERAL LAW and not in accordance with the laws of the state they are in. What this means is that you are NOT exempted from carrying a concealed firearm in these areas UNLESS you are on official duty or possess a valid and qualifying state issued concealed carry permit.

Link NRA

−31

YuleBeFineIPromise t1_jbs6pks wrote

Pleasantly surprised but even if she was charged never would have been convicted.

6

Shad0wSmurf t1_jbs8kay wrote

I'll enjoy every single one.

1000+ feet from every school is a school zone. Sounds like all of Philly 😉

Illegal unless on duty even driving past a school "JUST" claiming Leosa

−7

WikiSummarizerBot t1_jbsee1c wrote

Federal Bureau of Investigation

>The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) is the domestic intelligence and security service of the United States and its principal federal law enforcement agency. Operating under the jurisdiction of the United States Department of Justice, the FBI is also a member of the U.S. Intelligence Community and reports to both the Attorney General and the Director of National Intelligence. A leading U.S. counterterrorism, counterintelligence, and criminal investigative organization, the FBI has jurisdiction over violations of more than 200 categories of federal crimes.

^([ )^(F.A.Q)^( | )^(Opt Out)^( | )^(Opt Out Of Subreddit)^( | )^(GitHub)^( ] Downvote to remove | v1.5)

2

WCAIS_PA_Individual t1_jbseu9r wrote

Congress said it's Investigative.

If a possible violation of federal law under the jurisdiction of the FBI has occurred, the Bureau will conduct an investigation. The information and evidence gathered in the course of that investigation are then presented to the appropriate U.S. Attorney or Department of Justice official, who will determine whether or not prosecution or further action is warranted.

Where is the FBI’s authority written down?

The FBI has a range of legal authorities that enable it to investigate federal crimes and threats to national security, as well as to gather intelligence and assist other law enforcement agencies

Learn to read.

1

CltAltAcctDel t1_jbsex23 wrote

r/confidentlywrong

PA has the Uniform Firearm Act which establishes firearm laws for the entire state to include Philadelpia. Philadelphia is not gun free zone neither in law or in practice.

https://www.legis.state.pa.us/cfdocs/legis/LI/consCheck.cfm?txtType=HTM&ttl=18&div=0&chpt=61&mobile_choice=suppress

6106 (2)(b)5 allows federal agents to carry concealed anywhere in the state.

Also, LEOSA doesn’t require officers to be on duty. Among other things, it allows retired law enforcement officers who by definition can’t be on duty to carry concealed anywhere in the US.

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Amazing_Rutabaga4049 t1_jbsfuok wrote

Oh dear lord “The Department of Justice (DOJ) is responsible for most law enforcement duties at the federal level.[5] It includes the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives (ATF), the United States Marshals Service, the Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP), and others.[6]” taken from https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Law_enforcement_in_the_United_States#Types_of_police

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WCAIS_PA_Individual t1_jbsgaai wrote

That last sentence is the only thing you have said that makes sense.

Whole departments aren't Leos, only people with arresting powers.

I'm a civilian, I provide an information to magistrate and commence a citizen's arrest.

Am I always a LEO?

Is arresting power vested in the information provided to the judge after the investigation. Or is the arresting power arrested until a judge signs off or investigation is complete?

1

Amazing_Rutabaga4049 t1_jbsguob wrote

You answered it yourself a citizen’s arrest. You are acting as a citizen and not law enforcement officer. A police officer off duty cab make a citizen’s arrest but they will typically make an arrest under their law enforcement title because they can and it currently provides legal protections a citizens arrest cant.

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Shad0wSmurf t1_jbshkbk wrote

It's like I kill a dog with my Ford fiesta and because I'm a Ford employee, they don't check if I can drive. If they had a permit, no issues, but the fact you asked is a bigger discussion that it took this long for someone to ask that simple question which would squash all other dissenting opinions

−2

Illustrious-Elk-8525 t1_jbshxdv wrote

Fair enough. I don’t really support LEOSA or law enforcement in general but I believe legally many law enforcement officers are able to self activate into being “on duty”. Not sure if it applies to an FBI agent defending her dog tbh though.

5

CltAltAcctDel t1_jbsmn6n wrote

The federal agent wasn’t carrying pursuant to LEOSA. She was carrying under 6106. The federal gun free school zone allows states to license individual to carry in those areas. PA law allows people to carry in those areas pursuant the Uniform Firearms Act. Firearm possession on school property is covered under section 912 of the PA crimes code. There is no distance buffer in 912.

Your claim that Philly is a gun free zone is dead wrong. As is your claim that she is covered only on duty. Section 6106 has her covered.

12

ficknerich t1_jbsq4t5 wrote

Just because I think the article might be confusing, when it says that she shot "the other dog", they're not referring to the one of two dogs passing by that didn't attack. She shot the attacking dog, which was a pitbull.

> Roh said surveillance video indicated that Maguire had been sitting on a bench when the pit bull rushed forward and pulled the dog off her lap, causing Maguire to intervene and try to separate the animals before drawing her weapon and shooting the pit bull in its hindquarters at close range.

From The Inquirer.

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defusted t1_jbst6kc wrote

Everything you just said is wrong.

First, if it was a service dog it never would have left the owners side. But that doesn't matter because the agent isn't going to say "pardon me, is your dog that's currently mauling my dog a service animal?"

Second, having a gun in Philadelphia is perfectly legal for anyone, all you need is a conceal and carry permit. I'm not sure what other dogs on leash has anything to do with that.

Third, I don't know if you know this, but when a pitbull attacks it's almost impossible to make it stop.

What you should be asking is why was the owner of the pitbull ignoring it's violent behavior. Neighbors of the dog said this wasn't the first attack.

13

Farleymcg t1_jbstkqv wrote

Good. Fucking people need to control their animals.

Dog people are weird.

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CltAltAcctDel t1_jbsuyqa wrote

6106 exempts her from permit requirements. I pointed you to the section.

Duly authorized federal employees are exempt from permits. Duly authorized doesn’t require her to be on duty. Merely being authorized to carry by her agency is sufficient. Have badge; can carry

7

classy-mother-pupper t1_jbsvcdu wrote

I carry bear spray and a taser every time I take my dog for a walk. She’s been attacked twice by off leash dogs with zero recall. Last one nearly killed her and cost the owner quite a bit of money. That dog lost its life cuz of a crap owner that couldn’t control their dog.

8

DisciplineShot2872 t1_jbswrjh wrote

Be aware that Philadelphia has some crazy laws about knives. It's mostly illegal to carry one within city limits. I spent most of my life with a Swiss Army Knife in my pocket, but that's a crime here, and I'm not relying on Krasner's discretion to avoid trouble.

From the city's Municipal Code:

§ 10-820. Cutting Weapons in Public Places. 269

   (1)   Definition.

      Cutting Weapon. Any knife or other cutting instrument which can be used as a weapon that has a cutting edge similar to that of a knife. No tool or instrument commonly or ordinarily used in a trade, profession or calling shall be considered a cutting weapon while actually being used in the active exercise of that trade, profession or calling.

   (2)   Prohibited Conduct. No person shall use or possess any cutting weapon upon the public streets or upon any public property at any time.

      (a)   Exception: This restriction shall not apply to the use and possession of cutting tools by emergency personnel of the Philadelphia Fire Department, whether on or off duty. 270

   (3)   Penalty. The penalty for violation of this Section shall be a fine of not less than three hundred dollars ($300) and imprisonment of not less than ninety days.

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Shad0wSmurf t1_jbsxirk wrote

Okay, no, I follow you. If federal employees are exempted from permits then why is there distinction in LEOSA - which you said didn't apply -

  • (36 C.F.R. §§ 2.4(e) & (h), 18 U.S.C. § 922(q)) allow for individuals carrying concealed in accordance with the laws of the state in which the federal park or GFSZ is located to carry concealed in them*; however, an individual carrying under LEOSA is carrying under FEDERAL LAW and not in accordance with the laws of the state they are in.

  • What this means is that you are NOT exempted from carrying a concealed firearm in these areas UNLESS you are on official duty or possess a valid and qualifying state issued concealed carry permit.

Because if they DON'T have a license, LEOSA which is the authorization to carry by the Federal Government, for federal employees, then they would need a permit to carry in those zones in the states that require Concealed Carry being off duty is not in the employees authorized capacity?

EDIT: PA CSA 18. 912(c) - I'm assuming you're referring to " * or other lawful duty"

if they don't have a pa permit and are not in the scope of their duties, do they have to observe federal law or state. Meaning do they need to carry under federal law with LEOSA because they don't have a permit in the state and are subject to the laws of the state they are in, and are NOT exempted from GFZ with LEOSA?

−1

CltAltAcctDel t1_jbt6p3v wrote

LEOSA exists mainly for state and local police to carry off-duty or retired in all states but that has limitations. It’s fairly new and federal agents were carrying all over the place prior to it being enacted.

She was carrying under 6106. LEOSA doesn’t enter into because she’s legally carrying under PA law. She’s carrying legally by being a duly authorized federal agent. She is a duly authorized federal agent 24/7/365 until she separates employment

PA does not have a buffer on school zones. That was the purpose of referencing 912. Federal gun free zone law says the buffer is 1000ft but people can carry within that border if states allow it. PA only excludes the actual property of the school from carrying. It does that through 6106 and 912 because 6206 authorizes people to carry and 912 has no buffer.

2

SneakyBlix t1_jbtay3l wrote

I like dogs enough but it’s the dog culture people I can’t stand anymore.

They project Disney animal emotions on their dogs and expect everyone else to do the same.

“He’s a person just like us!” The fuck outta here, it’s a goddamn dog you clown shoe.

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JJStray t1_jbtfhak wrote

When I read the title I was ready to be outraged.

Of course no charges!! I’m glad she was carrying.

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GSDBUZZ t1_jbtz3r7 wrote

I know. I wish newspapers would act more responsibly when writing their article titles. Many times I have discovered that a title totally misrepresents what actually happened. And I know that a lot of people (me included sometimes) only read the title.

2

GSDBUZZ t1_jbu0cup wrote

Pit-bull advocates always stress that they are complete sweethearts and I have met many pit-bulls that are sweet. I think the problem is that every dog breed has a subset of animals that bite. Even if the subset for pit-bulls is the exact same percentage as the subset for Yorkshire Terriers the damage inflicted by one pit-bull bite is likely much more than one bite from a Yorkie. Pit-bull owners do the breed no favor by ignoring the fact that some pit-bulls do bite. And before you jump on me for this observation I just want to say that I was the owner of a German Shepherd for 11 years. While my GSD showed no signs of aggression I was always mindful that others could be afraid of him.

−2

MrszFresh1436 t1_jbubrtr wrote

Please refrain from blaming owners or advocates of the breed, that is a very unfair statement to make. Why punish the dog for the deeds done by humans? These dogs end up aggressive & unsocialized sent to shelters & euthanized more so than any other breed… and yes because of poor owners- humans…. They are subjected to Dog fighting, Baiting, Backyard breeding, Abuse, Statvation & Torture…… etc. THOSE ARE THE MONSTERS WHO NEED LEGAL CHARGES & PUNISHMENT BUT OUR LAWMAKERS HAVE NO LAWS IN PLACE TO PROSECUTE THEM…. Like we SHOULD. 💔😭

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V_Cobra21 t1_jbum5f6 wrote

I thought it was just the atf that killed dogs

1

AtBat3 t1_jbvhd56 wrote

Pitbulls should be banned

0

BR815 t1_jbxvzdr wrote

Charges should have never even been a consideration.

1