U of Notre Dame - History, Literature, Politics, Duke University - Law (hon.), U of Florida - Tax Law
About:
Article cited in major opinion in Heller by the US Supreme Court. Full Professor in my 39th year of academia. 25th year of lobbying on behalf of Minnesota's 2 million responsible gun owners. In...
Bragging Rights:
Thunder Ranch, LFI-1, LFI-2, LFI-3, Gunsite 250, CHAPMAN ACADEMY - advanced, DTI, Front Sight, Survived 3 High Schools plus an AF Survival School.
Joseph Olson
Work:
D&O Water Services - Water Treatment Plant Operator (2005)
Education:
College of Central Florida - Computer Science Hardware Track
"We are afraid of any steps that ease the slippery slope to registration," explained Joseph Olson, law professor emeritus at Hamline University and chairman of GOCRA. "Your bill puts the entire transaction into the inventory. With modern technology, they're one click away."
Date: Apr 27, 2016
Category: U.S.
Source: Google
Background check bill riles both sides of gun debate
Joseph Olson, chairman of the Minnesota Gun Owners Civil Rights Alliance, said it would instead create a slippery slope toward a registry of gun owners by expanding which gun sales and transfers go through a federally licensed dealer. Those dealers are required to keep records of who made a transa
Date: Apr 26, 2016
Category: U.S.
Source: Google
Target asks customers not to bring guns to its stores
Target is trying to have it both ways, Joseph Olson, the groups founder, said in the statement. They want to stop Bloombergs social-media attacks, but they dont want to alienate millions of Target customers who legally carry, so they call it a request, one that carries no enforcement.
Date: Jul 02, 2014
Category: Business
Source: Google
Connecticut shooting spurs local efforts on gun control
Hamline Law School professor Joseph Olson takes a different view. A board member of the National Rifle Association, Olson calls himself a spokesman for Minnesotas 2 million responsible gun owners. He dismisses the arguments of groups like Protect Minnesota.
Union attorney Leon Dayan told the three-judge panel that Republican legislators essentially stuck pro-Democrat unions with tougher provisions. But the attorney representing Wisconsin, Joseph Olson, countered there's no proof of such political payback.