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Activism See other Activism Articles Title: LWAN: SSN Victory in Pennsylvania SSN Victory in Pennsylvania March, 29, 2006 Longtime LWAN subscriber Michael Stollenwerk has won a significant court victory in Pennsylvania recently related to PA's SSN requirement for the purchase of a handgun and the application of a concealed carry permit. The federal court ruled in his favor, agreeing that PA's requirements for an SSN failed to comply with the Federal Privacy Act of 1974, which limits the ability of state and local governments to require Social Security Numbers for various purposes. Michael stresses that this was not a gun issue but a privacy issue. Michael is separately asking for groups to sign on to a letter urging members of Congress to support for the Sportsmen's Privacy Protection Act (SPPA). Please see: http://www.packing.org/community/general/listview/11819 Congratulations to Michael on his excellent victory. The below news report is from: http://www.philly.com/mld/philly/news/13977647.htm ---- Judge rejects Pa. gun-buying terms Requiring prospective owners to provide their Social Security numbers violates the U.S. Privacy Act, the judge ruled. http://www.paed.uscourts.gov/documents/opinions/06D0225P.pdf By John Shiffman Inquirer Staff Writer Pennsylvania's requirement that buyers provide a Social Security number to purchase a gun or obtain a concealed-weapons permit was struck down yesterday by a federal judge. The state law violated the federal Privacy Act, U.S. District Judge Juan R. Sanchez ruled. "This issue has been largely overlooked in Pennsylvania and other states for a long time," said lawyer J. Dwight Yoder, who brought the case on behalf of a retired U.S. Army officer from Lancaster. "This ruling is about privacy, not guns. We weren't looking to circumvent gun laws." Lawyers for the Pennsylvania State Police are reviewing the decision and considering an appeal, spokesman Jack Lewis said. By requiring applicants to provide Social Security numbers, Lewis said, his agency "simply has followed the requirements of the state's Uniform Firearms Act." The wider impact of yesterday's ruling - whether, for example, other Pennsylvania Social Security requirements would be deemed invalid - was uncertain. One reason is that there are two large exceptions to the Privacy Act's protection of Social Security numbers. The act does not apply to state and local government programs specifically exempted by federal law, such as driver's license applications, or to programs from before 1974, such as voter registration. Sanchez's ruling noted that the right of privacy as to Social Security numbers exists under a federal law, not as a right the U.S. Supreme Court had interpreted as protected by the Constitution. Still, Robert Ellis Smith, publisher of the Privacy Journal in Providence, R.I., said yesterday's ruling was "significant because it comes at a time when most government agencies are requiring more and more information from people." "The decision is part of a trend in the last 10 years as courts realize the importance of keeping Social Security numbers confidential because of identity theft," Smith said. Smith, who is also a lawyer and journalist, was a paid expert for Michael Stollenwerk, the retired Army officer who brought the case in federal court in Philadelphia. Stollenwerk said yesterday he hoped the ruling would inspire others to challenge government demands for Social Security numbers. He also said he hoped it would encourage local and state officials to review application requirements. "A lot of state governments have blown off this law," said Stollenwerk, now a law student at Georgetown University. "I think someone had to stand up to the government and say, 'I'm going to challenge this.' " Stollenwerk, 42, has pressed the matter on gun permits in other states, he said. In California, without going to court, he said, he was able to convince state authorities that their gun-purchase law violated the Privacy Act. In Virginia, he said, he was victorious in state court. Stollenwerk began his Pennsylvania effort in June 2003, when he was still an Army lieutenant colonel based in the Washington suburbs. On June 30, 2003, Stollenwerk tried to buy a Taurus revolver from US Prospectors Sporting Goods in Columbia, Lancaster County. When the dealer asked for his Social Security number, Stollenwerk declined to provide it. The dealer called state police to try to complete the sale, but the state police refused to run Stollenwerk's name through its database, the Pennsylvania Instant Check System, without a Social Security number. A few days later, Stollenwerk tried to apply for a concealed-gun permit from the Lancaster County sheriff. He supplied his passport, driver's license, voter-registration card, bank statements, and utility bills as identification. When he refused to disclose his Social Security number, Sheriff Terry A. Bergman denied him a license to carry a firearm.
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#1. To: Neil McIver (#0)
"precident", nothing like it (hope I spelt it right)
The mind once expanded by a new idea never returns to its' original size
Good for Stollenwerk. It's a shame he had to go to such lengthy and expensive efforts to stand on principle.
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