Politics & Government
Prosecutor Says She Was Fired For Refusing To Restore Mel Gibson's Gun Rights: Report
A DOJ attorney told The New York Times she was fired for refusing to restore gun rights to convicted abuser and Trump ally Mel Gibson.

LOS ANGELES, CA — A Justice Department lawyer was dismissed after refusing to restore gun rights to President Donald Trump's Special Ambassador to Hollywood Mel Gibson, who lost the right to possess guns due to a 2011 domestic violence conviction, the New York Times reported Monday.
Former Justice Department’s pardon attorney Elizabeth G. Oyer told the Times she was part of an alarming set of discussions about guns, domestic violence and star power that culminated in her dismissal for taking a stance to uphold a law designed to protect victims from abusers.
“This is dangerous. This isn’t political — this is a safety issue,” Oyer told the New York Times. “Giving guns back to domestic abusers is a serious matter that, in my view, is not something that I could recommend lightly, because there are real consequences that flow from people who have a history of domestic violence being in possession of firearms.”
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Patch is awaiting comment on the allegations from a United States Department of Justice spokesman.
According to the Times, Oyer was placed on a working group to restore gun rights to people convicted of crimes, and her office came up with a list of 95 carefully vetted candidates her boss then whittled down to nine people deemed low risk for recidivism. Then she was told to add Gibson's name to the list because he has a personal relationship with the president, she told the newspaper.
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Gibson's attorney had written to the Justice Department, citing his successful movies and status as Trump's special ambassador to Hollywood as reason to restore his gun rights, the Times reported.
Around the time the letter was sent, Gibson waded into politics, announcing an effort to recall Trump nemesis California Gov. Gavin Newsom at a press conference held in an Altadena neighborhood destroyed by the Eaton Fire.
Gibson contended the governor has "brought us nothing but crime, acute homelessness, horrendous inflation — I mean this industry that I work in, the film industry, this used to be the mecca of filmdom. It is no more."
Prior to this, Gibson's profile had been muted after a series of arrests and scandals including the 2011 domestic violence arrest in which he pleaded no contest to a misdemeanor charge of battering his former girlfriend. It helped him to avoid jail time, but was that conviction that made him ineligible to own a gun.
And Oyer believes it turned out to be her unlikely downfall as well.
Hours after she refused to recommend him for restored gun rights, she was dismissed and escorted from the building by security officers, the Times reported.
Click here to read the full New York Times article.
SEE ALSO: Mel Gibson Blasts Newsom In New Recall Announcement
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