Prosecutors of 6-Year-Old Shooter's Mother Claim Gun-Owning Pot Users Are 'Inherently Dangerous'
Deja Taylor is going to federal prison because of a constitutionally dubious gun law that millions of cannabis consumers are violating right now.

On Wednesday, a federal judge sentenced Deja Taylor, a 26-year-old Virginia woman whose 6-year-old son used her pistol to shoot a teacher last January, to 21 months in prison for owning a gun while using marijuana. In June, Taylor pleaded guilty to violating 18 USC 922(g)(3), which makes it a felony, punishable by up to 15 years in prison, for an "unlawful user" of a "controlled substance" to possess a firearm. She also admitted that she falsely denied drug use on the form she filled out when she bought the pistol, a felony punishable by up to 10 years in prison.
"This case is not a marijuana case," Assistant U.S. Attorney Lisa McKeel wrote in the government's sentencing memorandum. "It is a case that underscores the inherently dangerous nature [of] and [the] circumstances that arise from the caustic cocktail of mixing consistent and prolonged controlled substance use with a lethal firearm."
McKeel is partly right: Strictly speaking, this is a firearm case, not a marijuana case. Yet there would be no firearm case without federal marijuana prohibition. And while the evidence indicates that Taylor was neither a model gun owner nor a model cannabis consumer, her federal firearm offenses do not hinge on the details of her behavior. Survey data suggest that millions of Americans are gun-owning cannabis consumers, meaning they are guilty of the same felony that earned Taylor a prison sentence, even if they pose no danger to anyone. As a federal appeals court recently noted, that situation is hard to reconcile with "the right of the people to keep and bear arms."
According to the National Survey on Drug Use and Health, over 60 million Americans used illegal drugs (mainly marijuana) in 2021. Based on surveys indicating that roughly one-third of American adults own guns, we can surmise that something like 20 million people violated Section 922(g)(3) that year. Yet on average, federal prosecutors file just 120 charges under that provision each year. In other words, only a minuscule percentage of the potential defendants will ever become actual defendants.
It is no mystery why Taylor ended up being part of that tiny minority. First, her marijuana use attracted official attention as a result of the investigation that followed her son's January 6 assault on Abigail Zwerner, a teacher at Richneck Elementary School in Newport News, who underwent five surgeries to repair the damage that the bullet he fired did to her hand and lung. Second, that investigation also revealed a pattern of irresponsible conduct, which was not legally necessary to prosecute Taylor's firearm offenses but surely played a role in the decision to pursue a federal case.
According to Taylor's lawyers, she is a heavy marijuana user who needs treatment for drug addiction. Prosecutors said she smoked two blunts after the shooting and repeatedly failed drug tests prior to her sentencing. They also "cited a series of text messages between Taylor and the boy's father, which appear to show that Taylor opened fire on him with the same weapon about a month before the shooting at Richneck Elementary," The Washington Post notes. "The shooting followed a dispute over whether the father was cheating on Taylor with another woman, according to text messages included in the memo. The father was not hurt in the incident."
And then, of course, there is the matter of how Taylor's son managed to get his hands on her pistol and bring it to school in his backpack, which does not reflect well on her parenting. In August, Taylor pleaded guilty to felony child neglect in state court. As part of that plea deal, prosecutors dropped a misdemeanor charge of failure to secure her firearm. They are recommending a jail term of up to six months, although Taylor's actual sentence could be longer: up to five years in prison.
Since the state case addresses the reckless conduct that enabled the shooting, why is the federal case necessary? According to McKeel, her office is sending a message about "the inherently dangerous nature" of "mixing consistent and prolonged controlled substance use with a lethal firearm." But that message is highly misleading, since millions of Americans 1) own firearms and 2) consume cannabis but nevertheless do not handle guns while intoxicated, let alone shoot at people in a jealous rage or let their children take pistols to school.
The danger that McKeel perceives is logically indistinguishable from the danger posed by Americans who 1) own firearms and 2) drink alcohol. Yet that is not a crime, and the only reason for this arbitrary distinction is marijuana's status under federal law, which makes cannabis consumption "unlawful" in any circumstance. Virginia, by contrast, is one of the 24 states that have legalized both medical and recreational marijuana use.
If Taylor had not pleaded guilty to the firearm charges, she could have challenged them on Second Amendment grounds, as Hunter Biden's lawyers are expected to do in his federal gun case. Two months after Taylor's guilty pleas, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit ruled that Section 922(g)(3) is not "consistent with this Nation's historical tradition of firearm regulation"—the constitutional test that the Supreme Court established last year in New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen. The appeals court explicitly rejected McKeel's premise that gun-owning cannabis consumers are dangerous by definition.
"Our history and tradition may support some limits on an intoxicated person's right to carry a weapon, but it does not justify disarming a sober citizen based exclusively on his past drug usage," Judge Jerry E. Smith wrote for a unanimous 5th Circuit panel. "Nor do more generalized traditions of disarming dangerous persons support this restriction on nonviolent drug users."
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Second, that investigation also revealed a pattern of irresponsible conduct, which was not legally necessary to prosecute Taylor's firearm offenses but surely played a role in the decision to pursue a federal case.
Starting with felony child neglect, and only getting better from there.
What a fucked up situation. And she is going to screw every cannabis smoking gun owner.
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It looks like Hunter Biden is going to strike a blow for freedom when he gets his case to the Supreme Court.
He will get this law tossed as under the Bruen standard, there is no history and tradition of removing guns from people who were intoxicated in the past.
Actually, she might be a reason to delete that statute. I would use it in a brief with the NRA backing. They would be a massive hammer to break the politicians' stalling of federal prohabition.
dubious gun law that millions of cannabis consumers are violating right now.
And this rather reminds me of Hunter Biden.
If Taylor had not pleaded guilty to the firearm charges, she could have challenged them on Second Amendment grounds, as Hunter Biden's lawyers are expected to do in his federal gun case.
And it apparently reminded Sullum of Hunter Biden.
At the bottom of my page with Recommended Podcasts:
Hunter Biden Gets Caught In America's Double War On Drugs
There Hunter was, minding his own business when... ALL OF A SUDDEN!
The old man must be proud that laws he help write and promote will land his kid in the slammer.
Interesting the NRA has not stepped up to cry "He was wronged" These laws need to be removed!
PSA: Remember kids, work hard in school and you too may growup to have a powerful father who can circumvent the justice system for you. Otherwise you're fucked.
"Otherwise you’re fucked."
You MAY be able to get out of a tight spot by buying some Hunter Biden art, though!
https://www.vox.com/2021/8/3/22601671/hunter-biden-art-sales-walter-shaub “Why Obama’s former ethics czar is highly critical of Hunter Biden’s lucrative art sales … There have been many bad-faith “scandals” linked to the president’s son. Walter Shaub thinks this one should be taken seriously.
I wonder if the Trumpaloos will now show up to say that Vox is liberally biased, and can't be trusted? This here “Vox” article MUST mean that Hunter Biden is a GREAT artist, and there are NO opportunities for corruption, here!
https://www.allsides.com/news-source/vox-news-media-bias
“VOX” rated as far-left as is allowed… The needle is pegged!
Ok, sarc.
Did you buy the Trump NFT? Which as I can see, stands for No Fucking Thing.
She allowed her child unsupervised access to the firearm. Her child then shot a teacher with that firearm. WTF does Mary Jane have to do with it?
Nothing! Except that the witches must be BURNED!!!!
Well, this particular trial was about the gun law she violated by owning one while being a consumer of weed. So... presumably that.
Yes…but the issue is the child took a gun to school snd shot a teacher. Checking a box on a form is why she is being prosecuted but that in of itself caused no harm.
If only there were some sort of political movement that opposed the form entirely... actually, fuck that noise, we need to make this about ticking off boxes like the homos did with applying for tax breaks in the middle of the Occupy protests.
Homo Sapiens has been ticking and pricking off the boxes of good-looking babes (even vaguely good-looking babes, when ye wear yer beer googles) ever since Homo Sapiens has becum Homo Sapiens!!! It is how the species propagates itself!!! Get a GRIP on reality-schmeality, Casually Mad Wonder Child!!!
I agree with you, but that is why she is being prosecuted for this particular crime. The article even mentions her trial and sentence for the other one.
I don't think it's right, but it is what it is. There are approximately 70 linear feet of bookcase worth of laws I disagree with. That doesn't mean that I might not get tossed in the slam for breaking them.
That is the problem.
Prosecute her for the ACTUAL crime. Letting her 6 year old have access to the gun. Considering her being responsible for a minor, she is responsible for the horrific effects of that minor's actions facilitated by her irresponsibility, but that's all that is at issue here.
There's an entire chapter in Atlas Shrugged with one of Rand's stilted character speeches about "We want you to be guilty" addressing this, for the "libertarians" here, but the fact is that prosecuting people for a shitload of irrelevant crimes is not justice. It's just proof that there are too many goddamned laws, so many that no American can possibly know and abide all of them. We don't want politicians to literally always have something to charge us with that we are, technically, guilty of. That's the road to totalitarianism.
Justice is prosecuting someone for the specific offense, only the specific offense, and proving that that offense was committed beyond a reasonable doubt.
"her son's January 6 assault"
AHHHHHH!!!! CALL THE FBI! LOCK HIM UP!
Strictly speaking, this is a firearm case, not a marijuana case. How about, Frankly speaking, anyone who smokes menthol cigarettes and fails to prevent their six year old from taking their gun to school.....should face some hard time...
Yeah, probably. But it should be under state laws addressing criminal negligence, not federal gun laws.
Anyone smoking menthol needs to have more than their 2nd amendment rights taken away.
Menthol cigarettes are MUCH more dangerous than marijuana.
I bet you are way more scared of the people who smoke menthol cigarettes.
Narrator’s voice:
On that particular day, Show and Tell ended with a bang.
“Rising up to number one, with a bullet “.
I feel like a number, right now... A numb-er or numbest number, even! Let's light us up a number! The Zig-Zag Man will help us to...
Pass it around!
(Let's make like hippies, and SPLIT this joint!)
Right now all across America good ol' boys are chugging booze, smoking cigarettes and shooting-up stuff out in the backwoods. That's part of the American dream but God forbid they smoke a bowl while their gun is safely stored.
Believe it or not I will bet you most of those good old boys agree with taking away 2nd amendment rights from illegal drug users. Heck, most of them think killing illegal drug users is a good idea and don't trust legal drug users either.
I wish I could read minds.
How do you do it?
I would take that bet.
That's why they used to have one big entity called alcohol, tobacco, and firearms.
The Federales love to have that ace in the hole. Originally made for the drug war, it's now become a catch-all that makes for an easy fall-back when other penalties might not be harsh enough.
Is there a firearm? Check! Is there weed? Check! Oh yeah, baby! We got 'em now!
That's the straight dope for Federal LE. So easy and so sweet. Mmmm. Can't gives up dem drug war traps.
I am a Dem and I think marijuana should be legal.
And we should restrict gun availability to people who are actually dangerous, like people convicted of violent crimes. Not potheads.
Ass a Demon-Crap, charliehall, ye are a WITCH, and must be BURNED!!! No less than the BIBLE tells us so!!! (And the Republican Church is merely aspiring to obey the Will of God, dammit!!!)
God COMMANDS us to kill EVERYONE!
Our that them thar VALUES of society outta come from that them thar HOLY BIBLE, and if ya read it right, it actually says that God wants us to KILL EVERYBODY!!! Follow me through now: No one is righteous, NONE (Romans 3:10). Therefore, ALL must have done at least one thing bad, since they’d be righteous, had they never done anything bad. Well, maybe they haven’t actually DONE evil, maybe they THOUGHT something bad (Matt. 5:28, thoughts can be sins). In any case, they must’ve broken SOME commandment, in thinking or acting, or else they'd be righteous. James 2:10 tells us that if we've broken ANY commandment, we broke them ALL. Now we can’t weasel out of this by saying that the New Testament has replaced the Old Testament, because Christ said that he’s come to fulfill the old law, not to destroy it (Matt. 5:17). So we MUST conclude that all are guilty of everything. And the Old Testament lists many capital offenses! There’s working on Sunday. There’s also making sacrifices to, or worshipping, the wrong God (Exodus 22:20, Deut. 17:2-5), or even showing contempt for the Lord’s priests or judges (Deut. 17:12). All are guilty of everything, including the capital offenses. OK, so now we’re finally there... God’s Word COMMANDS us such that we’ve got to kill EVERYBODY!!!
(I am still looking for that special exception clause for me & my friends & family… I am sure that I will find it soon!)
So easy and so sweet.
It's easy to avoid: just don't take/keep/deal drugs.
It’s easy to avoid the Sacred Wrath of a Totalitarian Government Almighty: Just OBEY-OBEY-OBEY, CITIZEN!!!!
(OBEY when explained unto you, citizen, that all GOOD things are MANDATED, and all BAD things are prohibited! NONE of which may be decided, which is which, by the ignorant peons!)
Yes, yes, yes. Such an elegant solution. Now how do we go about implementing it?
I've implemented that for my entire life.
You can do so as well. If you choose not to, well, there are consequences.
I’ve implemented that for my entire life.
You're kidding! I took you for a laid back, live and let live, hippie type stoner always looking to expand your mind.
Yet there would be no firearm case without federal marijuana prohibition.
That’s weird, every copy of the 4473 form I filled out had *way* more questions than just the illgeal substances one. Saying there would be no firearms case without marijuana prohibition kinda makes it sound like you’d be OK with 4473 forms if it weren’t for the marijuana prohibition part.
Isn't there a case about the misdemeanor domestic violence one too? As I recall most of the other questions are citizenship.
Not a defense of the form or mandatory background checks.
Oh, she shouldn't be in prison because of her marijuana use, she should be in prison because she allowed her six year old to shoot someone.
Parents ought to be criminally responsible for the crimes committed by their minor children.
Sippenhaft:
'a German term for the idea that a family or clan shares the responsibility for a crime or act committed by one of its members, justifying collective punishment. In Nazi Germany, the term was revived to justify the punishment of kin (relatives, spouse) for the offense of a family member.'
The libertarian's libertarian is a fan of collective punishment. Too funny!
I can't read this. Our government is so full of shit that it seriously offends me to hear what they are doing. Voting is useless.