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Wednesday, January 27, 2010

*Via NRA E-mail: Teen Hunter’s Gun-Related Expulsion Overturned.



Teen Hunter's Gun-Related Expulsion Overturned
 
Friday, January 22, 2010
 

In a case that received national attention, the Glenn County, Calif., Board of Education on January 22 overturned the expulsion of 17-year-old duck hunter Gary Tudesko, who was expelled from his central California high school after police dogs sniffed out unloaded shotguns in his truck.  The California Legal Action Project (a joint effort by NRA-ILA and the California Rifle and Pistol Association Foundation) provided legal assistance.

The truck was legally parked off-campus, on a public street, and the guns were in the truck because Tudesko had gone hunting that morning before school.  All those factors just show the school's lack of common sense in enforcing its "zero tolerance" policy; according to guidelines from the California Department of Education, administrators don't have to recommend expulsion unless a violation is committed at school or at a school activity.  Even that agency's website notes widespread criticism of "zero tolerance" policies.

On the legal side, the school made many errors, such as confusing its authority to expel students under California's Education Code with the district attorney's authority to enforce the state's "Gun Free School Zones" law.  Both the district attorney and the local police have said Tudesko would face no criminal charges.

Leading California civil rights lawyer Chuck Michel—a longtime advocate for Golden State gun owners—represented Tudesko.  For more information on the Tudesko case, go to Michel's website atwww.calgunlaws.com; for information on the NRA/CRPA Legal Action Project, go to http://www.crpa.org/.

 

Copyright 2010, National Rifle Association of America, Institute for Legislative Action.
This may be reproduced. It may not be reproduced for commercial purposes.
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--
Aaron D. Yeargan
aaron.yeargan@gmail.com
"No man, for any considerable period, can wear one face to himself, and another to the multitude, without finally getting bewildered as to which may be true."
-Nathaniel Hawthorne

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