Gun rights group sues D.C. over concealed carry laws

A gun rights advocacy group filed a lawsuit Tuesday challenging Washington, D.C.s newly enacted concealed carry laws on behalf of three men who were denied permits to carry firearms by the Metropolitan Police Department.

In the lawsuit filed in federal court, the Second Amendment Foundation said the laws requirement that gun owners demonstrate a good reason to carry a concealed weapon is unconstitutional.

The city has set the bar so high that it relegates a fundamental civil right to the status of a heavily-regulated government privilege, said Alan Gottlieb, executive vice president of the Bellevue, Washington-based foundation. Law-abiding citizens who clear background checks and are allowed to have handguns in their homes are being unnecessarily burdened with the additional requirement of proving some special need.

SEE ALSO: D.C. Council gives final approval to concealed-carry gun regulations

D.C. lawmakers drafted concealed carry laws last year to comply with a ruling by U.S. District Judge Frederick J. Scullin Jr. that overturned the Districts long-standing ban on the carrying of firearms in public. The legislation created a process by which D.C. residents and nonresidents could apply for concealed carry permits by showing proof that they needed to carry a weapon for self-defense.

Police Chief Cathy L. Lanier previously provided a few examples of circumstances that would qualify under the law, including individuals who have a documented history of being domestic violence victims or people who regularly carry large amounts of money or valuables for work. For those who do receive a permit, there are still strict licensing regulations that require firearms training and limit the locations where a handgun can be carried.

Tuesdays lawsuit doubles efforts by gun owners to challenge regulations requiring them to prove they are under a specific threat in order to obtain a concealed carry permit.

Attorney Alan Gura, who is representing the Second Amendment Foundation in the latest lawsuit, previously asked Judge Scullin to hold the city in contempt for failure to adopt a constitutional licensing scheme as the judge required in the Palmer v. District case. Judge Scullin has yet to issue a ruling on that request.

In the meantime, the District has appealed the Palmer case.

The lawsuit filed Tuesday states that three men Brian Wrenn and Joshua Akery, of the District, and Tyler Whidby, a Florida resident who also maintains a residence in Virginia were all denied concealed carry permits by Chief Lanier. All three men applied for permits but were unable to demonstrate a special need for self-protection distinguishable from the general community or provide evidence showing they have been subject to specific threats or previous attacks, according to the lawsuit.

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Gun rights group sues D.C. over concealed carry laws

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Blockchain based document proof system Factom, at the Bitcoin Singapore Meetup in Hackerspace – Video


Blockchain based document proof system Factom, at the Bitcoin Singapore Meetup in Hackerspace
Blockchain based document proof system Factom, at the Bitcoin Singapore Meetup in Hackerspace Paul Snow Peter Kirby explaining Factom, an open source proje...

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Blockchain based document proof system Factom, at the Bitcoin Singapore Meetup in Hackerspace - Video

Hacking your money: Cloning credit cards, stealing bitcoin and spoofing Verified by Visa – Video


Hacking your money: Cloning credit cards, stealing bitcoin and spoofing Verified by Visa
IBTimes UK technology editor David Gilbert looks at how easy it is for cyber-criminals to clone our credit cards and steal our money online. When in crowded places we are regularly warned...

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Hacking your money: Cloning credit cards, stealing bitcoin and spoofing Verified by Visa - Video

Webjet Exclusives trials Bitcoin payments

Webjet today began trialling Bitcoin payments for its 'Webjet Exclusives' arm, which offers deals the travel agency has directly negotiated with suppliers. Webjet is the first online travel agency in Australia to embrace the digital currency.

The travel agency said it wanted to offer customers a wide range of choice and flexibility when making payments as for their holidays and travel plans. Customer feedback also drove the decision to take up Bitcoin said CEO of Webjet Exclusives Paul Ryan.

"Traditional credit cards are likely to be the main method of payment for online travel for some time but we expect to see significant growth in digital currency usage," Ryan told CIO Australia.

Its an innovative addition to the existing payment options available on site. In this particular case we are excited to extend this payment option to the community of Bitcoin users that have relatively limited choice in terms of online retailers in the Australian market," he said in a statement.

The website already accepts PayPal, Visa, Mastercard, AMEX, PayPal and BPAY payment options.

If the trial goes well, Webjet will roll out Bitcoin payments to its flight, accommodation and travel insurance packages and deals. Ryan said he will trial it for an "indefinite period".

The travel agency signed with BitPOS, an Australian Bitcoin merchant services provider.

This article was updated 2.40pm Australia, Sydney time for the purpose of adding information.

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Webjet Exclusives trials Bitcoin payments

Trinity students to create bitcoin credit-check database

Bitcoin: students at Trinity College Dublin believe a bitcoin credit-check database could solve its transparency problem. Photograph: Karen Bleier/AFP/Getty Images

The students are hoping to develop such a database, in which potential business partners could scope each other out, reducing the risk of fraud while allowing people to maintain sufficient anonymity.

The virtual currency, which can be used to pay for goods and services, is attractive because it is not regulated by governments or banks.

However, the TCD team believe a certain degree of regulation might be a good thing, if only to reduce the risk of fraudulent business practices or money laundering taking place behind bitcoins closed doors.

We wanted to develop systems that would give a regulator a degree of visibility on the flows of bitcoin in the same way that central banks have this visibility over normal currencies, TCD professor of computer science Donal OMahony said.

He said bitcoin basically acts like cash, for the internet.

Just as an ounce of gold or a gram of salt has value across all countries, so too does the electronic bitcoin. The coins are created using computer algorithms that are complex it takes an ever-increasing amount of computer power to create each new one, and there is an overall cap set that no more than 21 million coins can ever be created.

Mr OMahony said people who want privacy migrate to using cash, but this can be inconvenient in many ways particularly in a world in which many transactions take place at a rapid pace and on a global scale at the mere click of a mouse button.

The research-led Trinity team of staff and students looked under the bitcoin bonnet and found bitcoins system is much like that used by Swiss numbered bank accounts. The difference is that every time someone makes a transfer from one numbered bitcoin account to another, it gets written into a giant ledger that is open for the world to see.

Using this giant ledger, called the Bitcoin Blockchain, the students were able to trawl through every bitcoin transaction to date to look for patterns.

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Trinity students to create bitcoin credit-check database