http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20030810/NEWS08/108100094

One man's lonely fight to bear arms
Weapons maker embraces jail to redefine Second Amendment

By JOE MAHR
BLADE STAFF WRITER

Francis Warin had a nagging habit.

Nearly 30 years ago, he toted a submachine gun into Toledo's federal
courthouse and made a simple demand: Arrest me.

He got his wish.

Two months ago, the Ottawa County man mailed a homemade gun and
silencer to an assistant U.S. attorney. To ensure there was no
confusion, he sent the package by certified mail, complete with his
return address.

Warin again got his wish: He was arrested once more.

Now the 72-year-old gun-rights advocate is fighting to get out of the
Lucas County Jail - staging a hunger strike to try to force authorities'
hands.

The French immigrant insists his actions make sense. They're part of
his on-again, off-again quest to challenge what he perceives as
restrictions on the right to bear arms as covered by the Second
Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.

His accent still thick after 42 years in America, the balding
professional weapons designer believes the courts have stripped the
Second Amendment of its meaning, and he's willing to be the legal guinea
pig to fix it.

"Civil cases don't go anyplace," Warrin told The Blade in an interview
in jail. "So what are you left with?"

Never mind that Warin's tried before and failed. Never mind that nearly
all courts, for six decades, have limited the power of the Second
Amendment. Never mind that even some pro-gun advocates question Warin's
tactics. Never mind he could now spend more than two years in a federal
lockup.

Friends insist Warin isn't mentally ill or dangerous. They say he's
just passionate - and persistent.

Back in the 1970s, he had to practically beg to be indicted.

And the latest indictment took four years of taunting: threatening to
bring a bomb to the FBI, boasting of illegal silencers he had made, and
even taking out a newspaper ad to question why he hadn't been indicted.

Getting out of jail, however, could be even harder.

Promising to follow the law if released before trial, Warin even
enlisted the help of a family friend - the wife of Lucas County Domestic
Relations Judge Norman Zemmelman - to vouch for his character in court.

"I'm as scared of weapons as anyone," said Connie Zemmelman, a local
attorney. "But there is absolutely no question in my mind that he would
never hurt anyone."

Prosecutors successfully argued before a local magistrate that Warin -
the man who for years struggled to get arrested - is now too dangerous
to let free.

"You just don't know what a person like this is capable of doing," said
Tom Weldon, an assistant U.S. attorney Toledo. "If he's this desperate
to gain attention, what's next?"

Birth of a crusader
At a London, Ont., gun show in 1970, a gun collector offered to sell
two men a rare German machine gun. They agreed on a price, and decided
to meet in Detroit to make the sale.

But as the two men crossed the U.S. border, federal Alcohol, Tobacco
and Firearms agents surrounded their car and arrested them. The
"collector" turned out to be an undercover agent.

Warin was in that car as well. It was his two friends who were
detained. He said he escaped arrest only because he happened to be out
in the parking lot of the gun show when the undercover agent approached
his friends.

While his friends weren't prosecuted, Warin said he became enraged at
what he considered the trampling of his friends' Second Amendment
rights.

So Warin began his quest.

By day, he worked designing weapons at the Port Clinton defense
contractor ARES. By night, he researched case law and the debate
surrounding the meaning of the amendment's 27 words: "A well-regulated
Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of
the people to keep and bear arms, shall not be infringed."

To gun-control advocates, the amendment guarantees citizens the right
to guns only if they're part of an organized state militia, like a
National Guard.

But to gun-rights advocates, the amendment means anyone has the right
to a gun - whether they?re in a militia or not.

It's a debate that has more at stake than intellectual fodder.

Because the gun-control "militia" interpretation has prevailed in the
courts for more than half a century, it has been easier for lawmakers to
expand the main battlefront over gun-control - with laws that range from
weapons bans to firearm registration.

But a growing number of scholars and federal courts are adopting the
pro-gun interpretation of the second amendment. If adopted universally,
it could reshape the battlefront - with the courts likely overturning
many gun-control laws, both sides have said.

That intellectual movement has happened, however, in spite of Warin.

In 1972, the mechanical engineer filed a class-action lawsuit in U.S.
District Court in Toledo asking the federal court to revisit the
interpretation of the Second Amendment. The court refused.

In 1974, the father of two young boys decided to engage in "civil
disobedience" to call attention to his cause. He built his own "cheap"
submachine gun and refused to pay the $200 registration tax.

After no one would arrest him, an inpatient Warin hauled the homemade
machine gun to the ATF?s courthouse office. He expected ATF agents to
handcuff him immediately.

"They said, 'OK. Go home. We'll call you,'" Warin recalled.

Finally, two months later, he complained about his plight in a story in
The Blade, and Warin was soon indicted. He was fingerprinted,
photographed, and sent home to await trial.

His case would be a legal backfire.

Aided by his then-attorney, Norman Zemmelman, Warin tried to prove his
Second Amendment rights overshadowed the tax law. But he lost at both
the district and appellate court.

Prosecutors and gun-control advocates across the county, like Dennis
Henigan, cite that appellate opinion as some of the strongest judicial
language ever written to limit the reach of the Second Amendment.

"Mr. Warin succeeded in making [case] law that is directly contrary to
his point of view," said Mr. Henigan, legal director of the Brady Center
to Prevent Gun Violence in Washington.

After the Supreme Court refused to hear Warin's appeal, he ended up
with a felony conviction on his record. But U.S. District Court Judge
Don Young took pity on him.

"Imprisonment for Mr. Warin, however good it might make him feel, would
be ruinous to his family," Judge Young said at the time.

The judge even waived the normal probation restriction on possessing
weapons so Warin could keep his job. Warin considered it victory enough,
but decades later he would decide to test the issue again in a way that
would consume his golden years.

'Fighting a pillow'
A Lucas County corrections officer slowly wheels Warin into a visitors'
room at the county jail. Partially slumped over in his wheelchair, Warin
offers a weak smile and later admits he feels a "little bit woozy."

He's been refusing food for nearly all of his time in jail. He's down
to about 113 pounds, from 160 pounds in May before he went to jail.
Exhibiting the clinical detachment of a man of science, he's nonchalant
about the prospect of being convicted and dying behind bars: "People die
every day."

Warin almost died once before, he offers, when gangrene sent him into a
coma at age 11. Besides nearly crippling him, the disease sent him on
the path to America.

The only son of a French business executive and homemaker, Warin spent
most of his childhood in the French colony of Morocco, dreaming of
designing weapons. But in France, only military officers were allowed to
design weapons, and Warin couldn't be in the military because of his
disabled legs.

He became a welder in France and emigrated to America in 1961. By 1970,
he landed a job at the upstart company ARES, nestled in the back of the
Erie Industrial Park just west of Port Clinton.

Former co-worker Herb Roder, now president of ARES, recalled Warin as a
"very talented" gun designer. And the 1974 court case made it clear to
co-workers that Warin had strong convictions. His career didn't suffer
from it.

By 1999, he had retired and was living on about $1,000 a month in
Social Security payments. He tried to buy a gun - a time when background
checks had been phased into law. He said he dutifully disclosed he was a
felon, but thought Judge Young?s waiver would let him buy a gun. It
didn't, and the quest resumed.

When federal authorities wouldn't give him an audience to discuss the
matter, he told a Sandusky FBI agent that he could "bring a bomb to your
place." Warin insisted the bomb would be inoperable, but agents still
raided Warin?s tri-story home in Oak Harbor that he shares with a wife
and a grown, disabled son. Agents confiscated 22 weapons, but didn't
arrest Warin.

In neat, handwritten motions he signed with only his last name, Warin
fought the seizure in civil court as a violation of his Second Amendment
rights. But the judges sided with prosecutors, who said Judge Young's
special waiver three decades ago applied only during Warin?s three-year
probation period. Afterward, he was a regular felon with no right to
guns.

Deciding again to get arrested, Warin learned of a Kansas man convicted
a decade ago for making a homemade silencer. So he made the same kind of
silencers and dropped them off to Oak Harbor police officers in 2001.

Nothing happened.

Six months later, a frustrated Warin ran a legal notice in a Port
Clinton newspaper describing what he had done. He complained that
"indictment should have been the consequence."

Nothing happened.

Warin grew impatient again.

"To tell you the truth, I was at the end of my rope," he recalled. "I
was pushing the envelope, and still it was like fighting a pillow. I
finally decided to go through the envelope."

The final battle
The package arrived in the U.S. Attorney's office in Toledo about 12:30
p.m. on a Monday. An employee signed for it, but immediately became
suspicious of what could be inside.

A security officer X-rayed it, and it was eventually opened. Inside was
a small, homemade gun capable of firing 22-caliber bullets. Attached was
a cardboard silencer. A one-page letter was enclosed asking for
"prosecution and return of property." It was signed "sincerely, Warin."

Prosecutors would follow at least one of his wishes.

Two days later, on May 21, agents arrested Warin on weapons charges and
confiscated more than 46,000 rounds of ammunition, six hand grenades,
six firearms, four handguns, and diagrams of firearms and silencers,
according to court records.

And prosecutors went one step further than their predecessors three
decades ago: They put him in jail and fought to keep him there.

"He's increasingly desperate to gain attention, and his behavior is
desperate over the years," Mr. Weldon said. "In these times, with the
heightened security alerts, why should we assume he's not a danger? We
have to assume he is."

Friends disagree.

"Francis is a good person. He?s a compassionate person," Mr. Roder
said. "He is not a crackpot. He has very strong convictions - whether
you agree with him or not."

Warin's family declined to be interviewed for this story. Warin said
his wife, who works in an Oak Harbor nursing home, hasn't been surprised
by his actions: "She has been with me for 42 years."

He dreams of a full-fledged hearing on his case before the U.S. Supreme
Court. The pro-gun interpretation has been adopted by a growing number
of scholars and even Attorney General John Aschroft - making it more
likely the high court could eventually step in.

But Warin's prosecution likely won't be that test case.

Ms. Zemmelman gives it a "zero" chance. So does noted gun-rights
advocate Stephen Halbrook, a Virginia attorney who has fought in many
high-profile gun cases.

He scoffs at Warin's tactics.

"I don't know of any responsible Second Amendment advocates who would
suggest that anybody get arrested," he said.

Before being wheeled back to his cell, Warin said he has no regrets.
His explanation comes with a simple shrug.

"I had to do what I had to do," he said.


***********************************************************************
Professor Joseph Olson     Hamline University School of Law
tel.   (651) 523-2142          St. Paul, Minnesota  55104-1284
fax.  (651) 523-2236          <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

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