NRA settles lawsuit on gun seizures!
Firearms taken after Hurricane Katrina.
NEW ORLEANS, Louisiana - October 9,
2008 - City officials have agreed to return hundreds of firearms that police
officers confiscated in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, part of a deal to
resolve a lawsuit filed by gun lobbying groups.
The settlement agreement filed
Tuesday in federal court calls for the National Rifle Association and Second
Amendment Foundation to drop their case if the city follows a plan for
returning guns to owners who had them seized by police after the Aug. 29, 2005
hurricane.
Both sides also are asking U.S.
District Judge Carl Barbier to sign off on the pact and issue a permanent
injunction barring the city from seizing lawfully possessed firearms. Judge
Barbier didn't immediately rule on the agreement, which doesn't involve a
monetary award.
Police department spokesman Bob
Young said it has stored 552 guns that were confiscated after Katrina, through
Dec. 31, 2005. Police have said that most of the confiscated firearms had been
stolen or found in abandoned homes, but the NRA claims police disarmed some
people who were trying to flee the city.
City attorney Nolan Lambert denied
that police unlawfully seized firearms. "We were acting at all times in
conformity with the law," he said.
The agreement calls for the city to post a notice on
its Web site that explains how gun owners can claim their firearms.