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"If she wants to get to the people causing all the problems she ought to put a tax on street gangs," he said. "All this is going to do is drive business out of Cook County, into other counties, Indiana and Wisconsin." One suburban gun shop owner agreed, saying that his customers, many of whom are hunters and police officers, will simply go elsewhere. "Who's going to come to Tinley Park to buy ammunition," said Fred Lutger, the owner of Freddie Bear Sport in that suburban Chicago community. And, said Lutger of that money going toward treating gunshot victims, "Why should be paying for gang bangers shooting each other? You're taxing law-abiding citizens for what criminals are doing." Gun rights advocates spent years challenging in court Chicago's handgun ban, which was ultimately overturned in 2010 by the U.S. Supreme Court. Lutger said a lawsuit was certain. Pearson said he and others started talking about a legal challenge as soon as they heard Preckwinkle was considering the tax. Even Preckwinkle seemed resigned to a legal challenge in her comments to the newspaper board. "You can't make decisions based on the basis of whether or not somebody's going to sue you, or then you'll never do anything," she said.
[Associated
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