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IL Gun Prohibition


BigJim

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With all the new ways this state is dreaming up to take away people's gun rights it got me wondering. Let's say this state enacts the bill to prohibit people who take opioids for more than 90 days from owning a gun. How would this law affect someone once they moved out of Illinois? Would having been prohibited in Illinois for a Illinois state law get you prohibited in your new home state especially if the reason you got prohibited is not an issue in your new state?

 

Would loosing your Illinois cards over the opioid law cost you your Utah, Florida or Arizona permits while you are an Illinois resident?

 

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I believe pharmacies are required to report all scripts they fill for controled substances.

 

I know my wife is a nurse and she has to account for every pill or drop of meds she handles. Some years ago a nurse on another shift was caught stealing opioids and the DEA walked her out in cuffs. They take that stuff very seriously.

 

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I believe pharmacies are required to report all scripts they fill for controled substances. I know my wife is a nurse and she has to account for every pill or drop of meds she handles. Some years ago a nurse on another shift was caught stealing opioids and the DEA walked her out in cuffs. They take that stuff very seriously. Sent from my SM-G955U using Tapatalk

That's on a Federal level. Medical records are still private unless requested. How would IL get records?

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With all the new ways this state is dreaming up to take away people's gun rights it got me wondering. Let's say this state enacts the bill to prohibit people who take opioids for more than 90 days from owning a gun. How would this law affect someone once they moved out of Illinois? Would having been prohibited in Illinois for a Illinois state law get you prohibited in your new home state especially if the reason you got prohibited is not an issue in your new state? Would loosing your Illinois cards over the opioid law cost you your Utah, Florida or Arizona permits while you are an Illinois resident? Sent from my SM-G955U using Tapatalk

with all due respect,do we need to give them ideas because they read our posts every day.

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With all the new ways this state is dreaming up to take away people's gun rights it got me wondering. Let's say this state enacts the bill to prohibit people who take opioids for more than 90 days from owning a gun. How would this law affect someone once they moved out of Illinois? Would having been prohibited in Illinois for a Illinois state law get you prohibited in your new home state especially if the reason you got prohibited is not an issue in your new state? Would loosing your Illinois cards over the opioid law cost you your Utah, Florida or Arizona permits while you are an Illinois resident? Sent from my SM-G955U using Tapatalk

 

 

with all due respect,do we need to give them ideas because they read our posts every day.

As someone with a second home in another state I want to know.

 

Sent from my SM-G955U using Tapatalk

 

 

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I believe pharmacies are required to report all scripts they fill for controled substances. I know my wife is a nurse and she has to account for every pill or drop of meds she handles. Some years ago a nurse on another shift was caught stealing opioids and the DEA walked her out in cuffs. They take that stuff very seriously. Sent from my SM-G955U using Tapatalk

 

That's on a Federal level. Medical records are still private unless requested. How would IL get records?

The same way Illinois gets records for FOID and CCL. They know what they're doing and have everything planned.

 

Good question OP, the aim of Bloomberg's minions with their avalanche of laws is to disarm as many people as possible for life with any little excuse they can find.

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With all the new ways this state is dreaming up to take away people's gun rights it got me wondering. Let's say this state enacts the bill to prohibit people who take opioids for more than 90 days from owning a gun. How would this law affect someone once they moved out of Illinois? Would having been prohibited in Illinois for a Illinois state law get you prohibited in your new home state especially if the reason you got prohibited is not an issue in your new state? Would loosing your Illinois cards over the opioid law cost you your Utah, Florida or Arizona permits while you are an Illinois resident? Sent from my SM-G955U using Tapatalk

 

What you describe is a administrative, not a criminal action.

As long as you were not convicted of a crime in Illinois, it would not have any effect in your purchasing a gun in your new state of residence. If there is a proposed law, as suggested in your statement, there is no crime in compliance. I am assuming legal drug use. If there was a record of conviction for illegal opioid use, then that would be a different matter. Then I think federal and most state laws would prohibit buying a gun.

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