Jonathan Carpenter Loses Right To Bear Arms Because He Has The Same Name As Man Who Was Accused Of Various Crimes | August 20

Oescola: Florida Man Jonathan Carpenter had his firearms confiscated simply because he had the same name as a criminal. He was stripped of his Second Amendment right…because the police failed to differentiate a law-abiding citizen with a thug.

Jonathan Carpenter received a certified letter from the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services saying his concealed handgun permit had been suspended for “acts of domestic violence or acts of repeat violations.”

Carpenter was forced to go to the Osceola County clerk’s office to have a form filled out stating he wasn’t the person law enforcement was looking for. At that point, the clerk instructed Carpenter to speak with the sheriff’s office.

The Sheriff’s office supplied Carpenter with a copy of the injunction. In the statement, the plaintiff stated that she rented a room out to a “Jonathan Edward Carpenter” and his girlfriend. She alleged that this Carpenter was a drug dealer who broke her furniture and sold her belongings without her permission. He had a gun, and she feared for her life. She was not sure if the firearm was legal or not.

Carpenter had never met the woman in question and never lived at the address listed in the restraining order. Moreover, other than being white, he looked nothing like the man the terrorized the woman.

Even though it was evident they had the wrong man, Carpenter was forced to hand over his firearms. There was no hearing or any kind of court proceeding.

Carpenter’s firearms had to remain in police custody until the plaintiff can say, in court, that he’s not the man that she filed a complaint against. He’d then have to petition the court to get his firearms back…and he would have to bear the cost.

Extreme Risk Protection Orders (ERPOs), commonly referred to as “red flag laws,” have been at the forefront of the gun control debate. The idea is simple: if a person is deemed mentally unstable, and a risk to themselves or others, he or she can be stripped of their firearms.

Typically, family members, doctors and law enforcement have the power to petition a judge to deem the gun owner mentally unfit to own a firearm, at least for the time being.

The innocent Jonathan Carpenter will get his day in court later this month.

In Other News Today

Florida Man and Florida Woman Stories | August 20

Torrey L Sloss Had His Car Blocked In By Man Repairing His Remote Control Car, Shoots At Him When He Refuses To Move

Brendan Timothy Dolan-King Was Busted By Police With MDMA Shaped Like Trump’s Face

Brittany Rodriguez Fails At Robbing Dollar Store, Gets Told By Clerk “Not Today”

James Vonderheide Inappropriately Touches Female Client During Massage, Gets Arrested