- The Foundry: Conservative Policy News Blog from The Heritage Foundation - http://blog.heritage.org -
If, as the Attorneys Say…
Posted By Rich Tucker On January 14, 2008 @ 11:16 am In Rule of Law | No Comments
… difficult cases make bad law, get ready for some more awful law(s) in the lawyer-saturated District of Columbia.
The case in question is a grisly one. Last week a woman was found living with the corpses of [1] her four dead daughters. The wheels of justice turn slowly, but will eventually determine whether Banita Jacks was guilty of the crime and, if so, what her punishment ought to be.
It would be tempting to dismiss this case as one of those awful things that happen from time to time. But there’s a larger lesson here, too. This case provides an indictment of the liberal welfare state.
The District of Columbia is perhaps the most liberal municipality in the nation. People there depend on “the government” to keep them “safe.”
Last year, for example, Mayor Adrian Fenty defended D.C.’s restrictive handgun laws (which are under review at the Supreme Court) by claiming [2], “The residents of this city have relied on these handgun laws for 30 years to help keep them safe, and I will continue to work to keep these laws in place for their protection.”
Some 180 people [3] were murdered in D.C. last year, out of a population of just more than 580,000 [4]. Scholars have ways of explaining the high murder rate, but one thing’s for certain: The restrictive gun laws haven’t protected people.
Article printed from The Foundry: Conservative Policy News Blog from The Heritage Foundation: http://blog.heritage.org
URL to article: http://blog.heritage.org/2008/01/14/if-as-the-attorneys-say/
URLs in this post:
[1] living with the corpses of: http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2008/01/11/national/main3699125.shtml?source=mostpop_story
[2] claiming: http://newsroom.dc.gov/show.aspx/agency/occ/section/2/release/11778/year/2007/month/9
[3] 180 people: http://www.examiner.com/a-1121791~D_C__homicide_rate_second_lowest_in_more_than_two_decades.html
[4] 580,000: http://quickfacts.census.gov/qfd/states/11000.html
[5] Washington Post/a>, the government also failed in the Jacks murder case. “Five government agencies had contact with Banita Jacksin the months leading up to the deaths of her four daughters,” the paper reports. None of them were able to protect the girls, and in fact, at least one was completely unconcerned with anyone’s welfare.: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/01/11/AR2008011101761_pf.html
Click here to print.
Copyright © 2011 The Heritage Foundation. All rights reserved.