80-year old Army vet shoots, kills home invader

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80-year old Army vet shoots, kills home invader

'He saved our lives,' says wife of the shooting of a gunman who intruded into the couple's bedroom on West Side

www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-met-burglar-shot-20100526,0,2636272.story
chicagotribune.com

By Duaa Eldeib and Liam Ford, Tribune reporters
10:16 PM CDT, May 26, 2010
As an 80-year-old Army veteran, his wife and great-grandson slept in their Humboldt Park home just before dawn Wednesday, a would-be burglar busted a basement window, crawled over discarded bikes and paint buckets, and made his way up winding stairs to an enclosed porch.

The intruder ? who police said wore stockings over his hands to keep from leaving prints ? wiggled the brass doorknob of the locked door that led to the first-floor apartment, but it didn't open, the family said. He then turned to the oversized glass window of the 80-year-old's bedroom, pulled out his gun and shot, police and family said.

But just as the man got off a second round, the homeowner, who had a handgun of his own, fired a single shot, killing the intruder, a police source said.

"He missed, (but) my daddy didn't," said the 80-year-old's son, Butch Gant, who lives upstairs in the two-flat in the 600 block of North Sawyer Avenue.

The shooting comes as the U.S. Supreme Court is expected to rule by the end of June on Chicago's decades-old ban on possessing handguns. During oral arguments in March, the court's majority appeared almost certain to strike down the city ordinance and rule that residents have a right to a handgun at home.

Chicago police have long aggressively been trying to remove guns from the public, saying they are the principal weapons used in murders and employed by gangs to enforce turf through violence.

Handguns account for only one-third of all firearms owned in the United States but more than two-thirds of all firearm-related deaths each year, according to the Illinois Council Against Handgun Violence. A gun in a home is four times more likely to be involved in an unintentional shooting, the council said.

But many in Chicago echoed the feelings of the victim's family that if he hadn't been armed, the frightening encounter could have ended in their deaths.

"He saved our lives," said the man's wife, 83, who had been asleep with her husband when the noise of shattered glass startled the family from its sleep about 5:20 a.m.

Police let the Korean War veteran, who walks with the aid of a cane, go without filing immediate charges because he appeared to act in self-defense, according to police sources.

The homeowner bought his handgun after being robbed just six months ago, having vowed not to be a victim again, his family said.

In an interview at the home, the wife said her first thoughts were of her 12-year-old great-grandson asleep in the next room. She rushed to wake him up and led him to the front living room, away from the gunfire.

"The only thing I could think is 'God, please save my husband, myself and my grandbaby,'" she said.

The wife's hands continued to tremble hours after the shooting.

"I was scared to death," she said. "You're in your bed asleep, and somebody shoots a gun in your home. I'm still shook up."

Neighbors and family heralded the actions of the homeowner.

"He just protected his family," Gant, 57, said. "That's the most important thing to do, protect your family."

The intruder was later identified by his family as Anthony Nelson, 29, who was on parole since December following a three-year prison sentence for a drug conviction, according to county and state records.

He was pronounced dead at the scene, his blood splattered just feet away from the couple's bedroom window.

Nelson had a 13-page rap sheet that includes a number of drug and weapons convictions dating to 1998, according to police and court records. He lived less than a milefrom the home he broke into. Neighbors recognized him from his mug shot as a man they had seen at the corner liquor store who went by the name "Big Ant."

"I just don't want to believe it's true," said his mother, Lenora Nelson, who said her son earned his GED while in custodyand had just signed up for an online carpentry program. "He could fix almost anything," she said. Nelson was supposed to begin a job next week for a company that cleans out homes before they're remodeled, she said.

The last time she saw her son was Tuesday night, when they had his favorite meal ? steak burritos ? for dinner, she said. When he left around 9 p.m., he didn't tell her where he was going, she said.

Since being freed on parole, Nelson began working withan organization that helps former inmates find jobs once they're released from prison, his mother said.

Police declined to identify the 80-year-old shooter, saying he was a victim of a crime and it was against department policy to name him.

The homeowner met his wife while working as a presser at a dry cleaners. His wife, a retired nurse, also worked as a monitor on a bus for disabled children. Next month they will celebrate their 60th anniversary. The couple have lived in the same house for more than 40 years, but the wife is thinking about moving.

"How much can you take?" she said.

In the West Side neighborhood where the home invasion occurred, longtime homeowners have created a relatively stable community on their street ? an oasis from shootings. Neighbors said their stretch of North Sawyer Avenue had been a good place for families to raise their children a generation ago, but as the aging population dies, new residents move in and a heightened sense of danger grows.

Some residents choose different forms of protection. Audrey Williams, 75, said she keeps five dogs on her property to guard her home, but "this is the first time that we've had an incident like this, on this street, and I've lived here for 43 years," she said.

"They did the right thing. If anyone tried to come in on me, I'd do the same thing," said Williams, who has described the family as "sweet people who don't bother anyone."

One neighbor used to help the couple carry in groceries because they both walk with canes.

"Everyone around here looks around for each other and watches each other's homes," said Jose Perez, who has lived in the area about five years.

Throughout the day Wednesday, a family friend worked to board up the two broken windows. The son said the shooting demonstrates why Chicago's handgun must be repealed.

"How are we going to protect our homes without guns?" the son said. "That gun law should be abolished. You don't need guns on the street, but you need them in the home for protection."
 

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Death of a Chicago burglar

Death of a Chicago burglar

Death of a Chicago burglar

The old saying is that God made some men big and some men small, but Sam Colt made all men equal. That axiom was confirmed early this morning when an 80-year-old homeowner in East Garfield Park shot and killed an armed ex-con trying to invade his house. The elderly man and his 83-year-old wife, who had been burglarized before, wouldn't have fared very well trying to defend themselves with their bare hands. Having a handgun ready may have saved their lives.


The homeowner's son voiced a sentiment that Mayor Daley ought to address: "How are we going to protect our homes without guns? That gun law should be abolished. You don't need guns on the street, but you need them in the home for protection."

"That gun law," of course, is the city's longstanding ban on handguns, which the Supreme Court is now reviewing. It doesn't seem to keep firearms away from criminals, like this burglar. Chicago has more than one murder per day, most of them carried out with guns. If anyone is affected, it's citizens who respect the law and fear going to jail. But that leaves those peaceable folks less able to defend their homes.

It might be nice to live in a society without guns and gun violence. But that's not an option. So the question is: Would you rather live in a city where a violent criminal can break into a house with no fear of encountering a resident with a pistol? Or a city where the criminal has to worry that any homeowner may have deadly force at hand? I'll bet the neighbors of the 80-year-old man would prefer the latter.
 

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Daley's latest anti-gun rant

In spite of the 2008 decision striking down Washington, D.C.'s handgun ban, Mayor Richard Daley continues to hold out hope that the Supreme Court will uphold Chicago's similar ordinance. "Maybe they'll see the light of day," he said of the justices. "Maybe one of them will have an incident and they'll change their mind overnight, going to and from work."
Sure. And maybe they'll hear him talking nonsense and decide that the First Amendment shouldn't cover free speech after all.

Then again, an incident involving guns might not yield the result Daley wants. One of the justices might get mugged and conclude that law-abiding citizens should have the means to protect themselves.



<!-- .entry-body -->http://madjacksports.com/forum/If the city loses, as it probably will, Daley obviously will do everything possible to discourage the exercise of Second Amendment rights. His latest excuse is that allowing handguns in homes would present a dire threat to public safety personnel -- say, cops or firefighters responding to an emergency. "You're really placing the first responders in a much more difficult" position, he said.

Where does the mayor get the idea that no one has ever had to cope with this alleged problem before? In nearly every other city in America, citizens are allowed to keep handguns and other firearms in their homes. And yet somehow first responders manage to do their jobs.

The bigger danger in Chicago, of course, is illegal guns owned by criminals, which already exist in profusion. Just because the city has a ban on handguns doesn't mean a police officer can assume he won't find himself on the wrong end of one.

Daley acts as though the justices have no knowledge of the world. But he's the one who sounds disconnected from real life.

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Circumventing the Second Amendment

Circumventing the Second Amendment

Circumventing the Second Amendment

In 2008, the Supreme Court struck down a Washington, D.C. ordinance banning possession of handguns. It was a huge victory for advocates of gun rights -- but not, so far, for Washingtonians who would like to acquire a pistol legally. Ever since the verdict, the city government has worked hard to keep things as close as possible to the way they were before.


<!-- .entry-body -->http://madjacksports.com/forum/As today's Wall Street Journal reports, new rules require guns to be registered, limit the number of bullets they can hold, compel owners to take a written test and force frequent renewals, with failure to renew carrying a jail term. It also mandates a new device that marks each spent shell with an identifying code -- even though that technology hasn't been invented yet.

What's the point of all these rules? The point is that the new policy "makes it difficult" to get a gun, congressional delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton says. The District is trying to nullify the effect of the Supreme Court's ruling, and Chicago may do the same if its gun ban is overturned, as it probably will be.

But they are not likely to succeed. The court said some restrictions are permissible, such as a ban on carrying concealed guns and barring sales to felons. But new regulations will have to be defensible as means to protect vital governmental interests without unduly burdening gun rights. Registration and safety training are plausible requirements. But anything that seems designed more to deter people from getting guns than at assuring their safe use will be invalidated.

Not that this fact will stop the gun control zealots in Washington from doing their worst. They may not be able to get their way, but they can postpone the day when the Second Amendment actually means what it says in their jurisdiction.

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At least 21 wounded in separate shootings, 1 dead

At least 21 people were wounded in separate shootings around the city, including a man who died this morning after he was shot in the head, [URL="http://www.chicagobreakingnews.com/neighborhoods.html?region=1435491"]Chicago[/URL] police said.

One of the shootings happened about 3 p.m. in the 6200 block of South Cottage Grove in the Woodlawn neighborhood. A 56-year-old man was standing on the corner when a passing car fired in his direction, said Police News Affairs Officer Laura Kubiak. He fell to the ground in pain and discovered he was shot in his calf, Kubiak said. He was taken to an area hospital and listed in good condition.
About 8:10 p.m. in the 2900 block of North Milwaukee Avenue in the Logan Square neighborhood, a 47-year-old man was shot in his arm. Police said the shooting might have been a drive-by. The victim was taken to Norwegian-American Hospital and is now listed in good condition.
In another shooting, which happened roughly 20 minutes earlier in the Ashburn neighborhood, a man, 19, was wounded in the leg in the 3900 block of West 79th Street outside Bogan Computer Technical High School. He was taken to Advocate Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn and is now listed in critical condition.
A little earlier, about 7:30 p.m., a 17-year-old boy was standing on the sidewalk on the 7400 block of South Evans Avenue when he heard shots and felt pain. He was hospitalized with a gunshot wound to the upper right side.
Two people were shot at about 6:45 p.m. in the 8400 block of South Muskegon Avenue, but both told conflicting stories, said Kubiak.
An 18-year-old gang- affiliated man suffered a graze wound but refused treatment. He said he was walking in the 8400 block of South Escanaba Avenue when a suspect walked up and shot him, police said. The other victim, 19, told a different story. He said he was driving when someone pulled up and began shouting gang slogans and shot into his car, police said. He drove himself to Advocate Trinity Hospital where he was treated and released.
Police could not locate either victims for interviews after the shootings, Kubiak said.
Earlier Saturday at about 11 a.m., a 25-year-old man was shot on the 5300 block of South Laflin Street. He was wounded in the arm and hospitalized.Police said the Laflin shooting appeared to be gang-related, but witnesses were giving conflicting accounts of the event.
Nearby that shooting, a 19-year-old man was shot in the head at about 12:28 a.m. today in the 5100 block of South Laflin Street, police said. He was pronounced dead at 1:10 a.m., said Police News Affairs Officer Hector Alfaro.
About two minutes later, a 28-year-old man was shot in the Roseland neighborhood in the 10500 block of South Corliss Avenue, police said. He was taken to Roseland Community Hospital with a gunshot wound to his right calf and was described as in "stable" condition.
At the same time on the Southeast Side, three more people were shot as the sat on a porch in the 9200 block of South Blackstone Avenue, said police News Affairs Officer Laura Kubiak. One victim, a 25-year-old man was taken in critical condition to Advocate Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn. An 18-year-old man was taken in "stable" condition to Advocate Trinity Hospital. Another victim, 27, was treated and released from Trinity with a graze wound to his arm, police said.
About 15 minutes later, a 16-year-old boy was shot in the 1500 block of East 67th Street. He was taken in critical condition to Northwestern Memorial Hospital with a gunshot wound to his arm.
On the West Side at about 12:15 a.m., two people were shot in the 3900 block of West Gladys Avenue, police said. A 24-year-old man was taken to Mt. Sinai Hospital in stable condition with a graze wound to his head. A 19-year-old woman also was taken to the same hospital. She was listed in stable condition with a gunshot wound to her neck.
About 2 a.m. in the 10800 block of South Racine Avenue, two people were shot while they sat in a parked vehicle, police said.
One victim, a 43-year-old man, was shot in the chest and taken to Advocate Christ Medical Center where he is now listed in critical condition. The other victim, 22, was shot in the shoulder and is listed in stable condition at Roseland Community Hospital. Police said the 22-year-old is gang affiliated.
Both men were shot by a passenger of a gold-colored 4-door car, police said.
Four people were shot at about 3:15 a.m. in the 9100 block of South Marshfield Avenue, said Police News Affairs Officer Ron Gaines. The four vctims were taken to area hospitals, he said. There was no immediate information available about their ages or conditions.
No one is in custody for any of the shootings. Calumet Area, Harrison Area and Wentworth Area detectives are investigating.
-- Deanese Williams-Harris
 

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How to Distract a Press Corps

How to Distract a Press Corps

How to Distract a Press Corps

Mayor Daley's incendiary comments did just what they were probably meant to: bury the lead


By Mick Dumke <!-- end StoryHeader -->
Politics archives ?

<!-- end ArchiveLink --><SCRIPT language=javascript type=text/javascript> // <![CDATA[ Event.observe(window, "load", toolsSetup); // ]]> </SCRIPT>I had a couple of interesting exchanges about gun control last week. One was a reasonable debate with a guy from the National Rifle Association who thinks Chicago (and everywhere else) would be better off if concealed weapons were legal. The other was with Mayor Daley, who didn't like a question I'd asked him and suggested maybe he could make his point better by sodomizing and shooting me.




By now you've undoubtedly heard something about the mayor's strange "joke." It's gotten around?a friend wrote me over the weekend to say that "halfway around the world in South Korea where I live, I still caught you in the news (or I should say caught your ass in the news)."

Daley had called a press conference to talk about what his administration is planning to do in the likely event that Chicago's gun ban is overturned by the United States Supreme Court next month. He spoke in vague terms about lobbying for federal legislation and finding ways to pressure gun manufacturers and "extremists" like the NRA. "It's really amazing how powerful they are," he said, standing next to a table strewn with handguns, rifles, and even a machine gun that he said had been seized by police. "They're bigger than the oil industry, bigger than the gas industry, bigger than Google, bigger than President Obama and the rest of them."

He also decried the recent spike in violence here, which has left people dead and wounded in neighborhoods as different as Lincoln Park, Gage Park, and Chatham.

That's when I asked the obvious question about whether he thinks Chicago's gun ban has been effective: it's clear people are getting and using guns in spite of it.

The mayor told me it was and then offered to show me just how effective. He grabbed a rifle, held it up, and looked right at me. He was chuckling but there was no smile.

"If I put this up your?ha!?your butt?ha ha!?you'll find out how effective this is!"

For a moment the room was very, very quiet. I took a good look at the weapon. It had a long bayonet. I wondered: Was it seized during the Civil War?

"If I put a round up your?ha ha!"
The photographers snapped away. People started cracking up.

"This gun saved many lives," Daley said. "It could save your life." I think he meant that getting the gun off the streets might have saved lives.

Within hours video and audio clips of the incident were circulating around the Web, and the account of it that I'd posted on the Reader's site was linked to by scores of news organizations and bloggers. Many of them questioned the mayor's mental balance and declared that he'd embarrassed the city. Many more cited it as an example of the idiocy behind gun-control legislation.

The next day I got an e-mail from someone with NRA News asking if I'd be willing to come on their satellite radio show and talk about the Daley presser. Why not?

The host, Cam Edwards, was eager to hear all about Daley's bizarre antics and what I was thinking as it happened. I recounted the incident as well as I could?but then added that it didn't mean I was opposed to gun control. Quite the contrary.
 

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Police officer slain as mayor embarrasses himself and city

Police officer slain as mayor embarrasses himself and city

Police officer slain as mayor embarrasses himself and city

VIDEO


In anti-handgun Chicago, criminals aren't bothered by Mayor Richard Daley's handgun ban. They haven't been bothered for years.

And so another Chicago police officer was shot to death. But it wasn't during a traffic stop or some hunt through an alley after a drug sting.

Thomas Wortham IV, 30, was a victim of a robbery, shot down outside his boyhood home in the staunchly middle-class Chatham neighborhood, his body dragged 100 feet or so by the getaway car.


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The thugs were trying to steal his motorcycle, a gift to himself upon his return from a second tour of duty in Iraq as a first lieutenant in the Army National Guard.

Wortham, a patrol officer, was helping his neighbors reclaim a troubled neighborhood park, the scene of several recent shootings.

"He was the best of us. He was a role model. He was 30 years old, a grown man, a police officer, a soldier, a man of service," said Ald. Freddrenna Lyle, 6th, who has known the Wortham family since she was a child.

"It was 'Yes, ma'am' and 'No, sir' from him. He had self-respect. He was teaching these young men how to be men," she said.

I talked to Lyle on a side street in Chatham just after she'd paid a long condolence call to the Wortham family, as neighbors stood out on their sidewalks, agonizing over the loss.

The front lawns were neat and small. Backyard gardens were places of old-fashioned flowers, peonies and phlox and tea-roses. It is a neighborhood carefully tended.

At that moment, Mayor Daley was holding a news conference, another dog-and-pony show at City Hall to demonstrate his tough stance on crime.

He called it to express his concern that the U.S. Supreme Court will overturn the city's handgun ban. There were guns on a table as props, so much eye candy for the cameras.

A reporter asked the obvious question: Given the numbers of shootings in the city, isn't the handgun ban ineffective?

The question was more than fair. In Chicago, the only people who are confident in their 2nd Amendment rights to bear arms are the criminals, the cops and the politicians.

Law-abiding citizens can't own handguns. They don't have an army of bodyguards, as does Daley. Political hacks have guns. They get out the vote for his machine.

And the retired neighbor who's never been arrested in his life? Oh, no. If he has a gun, it would be anarchy in the streets, according to Daley.

Confronted with a logical question, here's what the mayor did: He picked up a rifle from the prop table of guns, raised it and began to babble.

"It's been very effective," said Daley of the handgun ban. "If I put this up your butt, you'll find out how effective it is. Let me put a round up your, you know."

The mayor of Chicago then went on to say if the justices were attacked by thugs with guns, they'd see things his way.

"Maybe they'll see the light of day," Daley said. "Maybe one of them will have an incident, and they'll change their mind overnight, going to and from work."

Chicago politics is a rough business. But suggesting that Supreme Court justices need to suffer before becoming enlightened is despicable. It not only embarrasses the mayor, but everyone who lives or works in Chicago.

His press aides put out a statement saying the mayor used "less than ideal" language when he suggested inserting the rifle into his critics and pulling the trigger.

And there was no word of any plans to apologize to the Supreme Court.

But he meant what he said. And so the mayor reveals his nature.

Daley has been a bully his entire life, a child of muscle and privilege, and now he's terrified at the prospect that his citizens might think he's lost control of the streets.

The police despise him. Their department is terribly understaffed and overworked. Taxpayers want more cops. But there's no money for additional police because Daley wasted it all, hundreds of millions of dollars year after year after year on deals for his cronies.

While Daley spent his life pushing weaker people around, Thomas Wortham spent his life as a man of service. Now he's cold at the funeral home, waiting for burial.

His Chatham neighborhood once was considered free of violence. It is the home of Sen. Roland Burris, of former Police Supt. police Superintendent Terry Hilliard, of lawyers, judges, doctors, bus drivers and steelworkers.

Neighbors recalled Cole Park, just across the street from Wortham's boyhood home, as a place to see the best basketball players in the city. Even a young rookie named Michael Jordan played hoops in pick-up games.

Now there are iron bars over the rims to discourage young men from congregating in the park, the scene of a recent rash of shootings.

Wortham's tour of duty in Iraq ended less than two months ago. He bought himself that motorcycle and planned on helping Ald. Lyle reclaim Cole Park this weekend.

On Thursday, it was the setting for a prayer vigil for his immortal soul.

"His mother was worried that something was going to happen to him over there [in Iraq]," Lyle told me. "But he had to come home to Chicago to get shot down."

Home to Chicago, the anti-handgun city, where the thugs don't worry much about what the mayor has to say.



 

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There are far too many Mayors out there who think like Dick Daley led by BILLIONAIRE NYC Mayor Michael Bloomberg.

The 2nd Ammendment gives us the right to keep and bear arms and is as egually impoartant as the 1st, 3rd, 4th .... every single ammendment.

<TABLE border=0 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0><TBODY><TR><TD style="PADDING-BOTTOM: 1em; FONT-WEIGHT: bold" align=middle>Pro-Gun Groups & Anti-Gun Groups</TD></TR><TR><TD class=newsHead1 align=middle>Current members of "Mayors Against Illegal Guns"</TD></TR><TR><TD></TD></TR><TR><TD class=copy><STYLE type=text/css> p.p1 { margin: 0.0px 0.0px 0.0px 0.0px; font: 16.0px default; font-weight: bold; color: #CC0000;} p.p2 {margin: 0.0px 0.0px 0.0px 0.0px; font: 12.0px default; min-height: 14.0px} p.p3 {margin: 0.0px 0.0px 0.0px 0.0px; font: 12.0px default; color: #0014ef} span.s1 {text-decoration: underline} .style1 { font-size: 18px; font-weight: bold;}.style3 {color: #CC0000} .style4 { color: #000000; font-weight: bold;}</STYLE>Some local mayors have joined "Mayors Against Illegal Guns" (MAIG) which was founded and is funded by activist anti-gun billionaire and New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg. Is your mayor one of them? Click here to find out! You may also look at the list below.
Despite its very misleading name, this national group of anti-gun mayors has lobbied Congress against national reciprocity of state Right-to-Carry permits, against much-needed reform of the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (BATFE), for regulating gun shows out of existence, and for repealing the Tiahrt Amendment that protects the privacy rights of law-abiding gun owners and limits disclosure of sensitive firearm trace data to protect law enforcement personnel and protect lawful gun manufacturers from bogus lawsuits.
Bloomberg created "Mayors Against Illegal Guns" as a front group to lobby Congress to oppose important pro-gun reforms and support new federal gun control restrictions. And some mayors have joined or been duped into joining this anti-gun Bloomberg crusade. If your mayor has joined MAIG, it is critical that he or she resign from this anti-gun group. You can do your part by contacting your mayor`s office today and urging your mayor to withdraw his or her MAIG membership. A number of mayors have already quit the anti-gun Bloomberg coalition and yours should be the next one to do so.
Please call, e-mail and write your mayor today and ask him or her to support law-abiding gun owners by publicly disassociating with Michael Bloomberg and "Mayors Against Illegal Guns." Help your mayor make the right choice between protecting your Second Amendment rights or continuing to be associated with those who actively oppose and undermine your firearms freedom.
Please click here to see if your mayor is a member of this national gun control group. You may also click on the map below to determine if your mayor is a current or former MAIG member.

If your mayor is a current MAIG member, please use the contact information provided to urge your mayor to resign from this national anti-gun group today. If a former MAIG member, contact your mayor and thank him or her for disassociating from Michael Bloomberg and his national gun control group.
The action that you take today will protect your Second Amendment rights tomorrow.
Members of "Mayors Against Illegal Guns"
as of November 17, 2009
Alabama:


Mayor Larry P. Langford
Birmingham, AL


Mayor Thomas Henderson
Center Point, AL


Mayor Carroll L. `Lew` Watson
Lincoln, AL


Mayor Samuel L. Jones
Mobile, AL


Mayor Ron Davis
Prichard, AL


Mayor Omar Neal
Tuskegee, AL




Alaska:


Mayor Carolyn Floyd
Kodiak, AK




Arkansas:


Mayor Patrick Hays
North Little Rock, AR


Mayor Carl A. Redus
Pine Bluff, AR




California:


Mayor Jane P. Kennedy
Campbell, CA


Mayor Cheryl Cox
Chula Vista, CA


Mayor Robert Wasserman
Fremont, CA


Mayor Ashley Swearengin -- Resigned from MAIG
Fresno, CA


Mayor Roosevelt F. Dorn
Inglewood, CA


Mayor Sukhee Kang
Irvine, CA


Mayor Larry Burrola
Irwindale, CA


Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa
Los Angeles, CA


Mayor Rob Schroder
Martinez, CA


Mayor Jim Ridenour -- Resigned from MAIG
Modesto, CA


Mayor Paul Eaton
Montclair, CA


Mayor Ron Dellums
Oakland, CA


Mayor Sue Severson
Orinda, CA


Mayor Jean M. Benson
Palm Desert, CA


Mayor Pamela Torliatt
Petaluma, CA


Mayor Jennifer Hosterman
Pleasanton, CA


Mayor Jonathan Harrison -- Resigned from MAIG
Redlands, CA


Mayor Gayle McLaughlin
Richmond, CA


Mayor Dennis Donohue
Salinas, CA


Mayor Patrick J. Morris
San Bernardino, CA


Mayor Jerry Sanders
San Diego, CA


Mayor Gavin Newsom
San Francisco, CA


Mayor Chuck Reed
San Jose, CA


Mayor Miguel Pulido
Santa Ana, CA


Mayor Marty Blum
Santa Barbara, CA

Mayor Cynthia Matthews
Santa Cruz, CA

Mayor Ken Genser
Santa Monica, CA


Mayor Susan Gorin
Santa Rosa, CA


Mayor Paul Miller -- Resigned from MAIG
Simi Valley, CA


Mayor Ann Johnston
Stockton, CA


Mayor Anthony (Tony) Spitaleri -- Resigned from MAIG
Sunnyvale, CA


Mayor Morris Vance
Vista, CA


Mayor Abbe Land
West Hollywood, CA


Mayor Christopher Cabaldon
West Sacramento, CA




Colorado:


Mayor John Hickenlooper
Denver, CO




Connecticut:


Mayor Bill Finch
Bridgeport, CT


Mayor April Capone-Almon
East Haven, CT


Mayor Eddie Perez
Hartford, CT


Mayor John DeStefano
New Haven, CT


Mayor Richard Moccia
Norwalk, CT


Mayor Dannel Malloy
Stamford, CT


Mike Jarjura -- Resigned from MAIG
Waterbury, Connecticut


Mayor Scott Slifka
West Hartford, CT




Delaware:

Mayor Wayne Barker
Dagsboro, DE

Mayor John Martin
Delaware City, DE

Mayor Carleton E. Carey Sr. -- Resigned from MAIG
Dover, DE

Mayor Donald Minyon
Millville, DE

Mayor John Klingmeyer
New Castle, DE


Mayor Vance A. Funk III -- Resigned from MAIG
Newark, DE


Mayor James M. Baker
Wilmington, DE

District of Columbia:


Mayor Adrian Fenty
Washington, DC




Florida:


Mayor John S. Meserve
Atlantic Beach, FL


Mayor Manny Fernandez
Atlantis, FL


Mayor Susan Gottlieb
Aventura, FL


Mayor Perry Knight
Bowling Green, FL


Mayor Jerry Taylor -- Resigned from MAIG
Boynton, FL


Mayor Debby Eisinger
Cooper City, FL


Mayor Scott J. Brook
Coral Springs, FL


Mayor Juan Carlos Bermudez
Doral, FL


Mayor Linda Riner-Mizell -- Resigned from MAIG
Dundee, FL


Mayor Joyce A. Davis
El Portal, FL

Mayor Jim Humphrey
Fort Myers, FL


Mayor Charles Sanders -- Resigned from MAIG
Greenwood, FL


Mayor Joy Cooper
Hallandale Beach, FL


Mayor Peter Bober
Hollywood, FL


Mayor Kenneth Schultz
Hypoluxo, FL


Mayor John Peyton
Jacksonville, FL


Mayor Muriel H. Whitman
Kenneth City, FL


Mayor Morgan McPherson -- Resigned from MAIG
Key West, FL


Mayor Mary Lou Hildreth
Keystone Heights, FL


Mayor Patricia Gerard
Largo, FL


Mayor Barrington Russell
Lauderdale Lakes, FL


Mayor Roseann Minnet
Lauderdale-By-The-Sea, FL


Mayor Richard J. Kaplan
Lauderhill, FL


Mayor Patricia J. Shontz -- Resigned from MAIG
Madeira Beach, FL


Mayor Gene Wright -- Resigned from MAIG
Malone, FL


Mayor Manuel Diaz
Miami, FL


Mayor Matti Herrera Bower
Miami Beach, FL


Mayor Carlos Alvarez
Miami-Dade County, FL


Mayor Bill Barnett
Naples, FL


Mayor Harriet Pruette
Neptune Beach, FL


Mayor Randall Wise -- Resigned from MAIG
Niceville, FL


Mayor Andre Pierre
North Miami, FL


Mayor Raymond Marin
North Miami Beach, FL


Mayor David B. Norris
North Palm Beach, FL


Mayor Darla Lauer
Oak Hill, FL


Mayor Joseph L. Kelley
Opa Locka, FL


Mayor Buddy Dyer
Orlando, FL


Mayor Fred Costello
Ormond Beach, FL


Mayor Carol McCormack -- Resigned from MAIG
Palm Shores, FL


Mayor Emma Shoaff
Pembroke Park, FL


Mayor Frank C. Ortis
Pembroke Pines, FL


Mayor Lamar Fisher
Pompano Beach, FL


Mayor Patricia Christensen
Port St Lucie, FL


Mayor John Marks III
Tallahassee, FL


Mayor Beth Talabisco
Tamarac, FL


Mayor Pam Iorio
Tampa, FL


Mayor Beverly Billiris -- Resigned from MAIG
Tarpon Springs, FL


Mayor Lois Frankel
West Palm Beach, FL


Mayor Gary Bruhn -- Resigned from MAIG
Windermere, FL


Mayor John F. Bush -- Resigned from MAIG
Winter Springs, FL




Georgia:


Mayor Heidi Davison
Athens-Clarke County, GA


Mayor Shirley Franklin
Atlanta, GA


Mayor Jere Wood
Roswell, GA


Mayor Otis S. Johnson
Savannah, GA


Mayor John Fretti
Valdosta, GA


Mayor Donnie Henriques
Woodstock, GA




Hawaii:


Mayor Mufi Hannemann
Honolulu, HI




Idaho:

Jared Fuhriman -- Resigned from MAIG
Idaho Falls, Idaho


Illinois:


Mayor Richard Daley
Chicago, IL


Mayor Henderson Yarbrough Sr.
Maywood, IL


Mayor Christopher Koos
Normal, IL


Mayor John A. Spring
Quincy, IL


Mayor Lawrence Morrissey
Rockford, IL




Indiana:


Mayor Richard Hickman
Angola, IN


Jim Brainard -- Resigned from MAIG
Carmel, Indiana

Mayor Fred Armstrong
Columbus, IN


Mayor Thomas C. Henry
Fort Wayne, IN


Mayor Allan Kauffman
Goshen, IN


Mayor Tom Jones
Linton, IN


Mayor Bruce Hosier -- Resigned from MAIG
Portland, IN


Mayor Stephen Luecke
South Bend, IN


Mayor Barbara Ewing -- Resigned from MAIG
Tell City, IN


Mayor Ernest B. Wiggins -- Resigned from MAIG
Warsaw, IN




Iowa:


Mayor T.M. Franklin Cownie
Des Moines, IA




Kansas:


Mayor Clausie W. Smith
Bonner Springs City, KS


Mayor Joe Reardon
Kansas City, KS


Mayor Larry G. Meeker
Lake Quivira, KS


Mayor Kenneth W. Bernard
Lansing, KS




Kentucky:


Mayor Elaine Walker
Bowling Green, KY


Mayor John Link -- Resigned from MAIG
Edgewood, KY



Mayor Jerry Abramson
Louisville, KY


Mayor Susan Barto -- Resigned from MAIG
Lyndon, KY




Louisiana:


Mayor Melvin `Kip` Holden
Baton Rouge, LA


Mayor Albert Doughty -- Resigned from MAIG
Benton, LA


Mayor Ray Nagin
New Orleans, LA


Mayor Cedric B. Glover
Shreveport, LA




Maine:


Mayor Arthur Verow
Brewer, ME

Mayor Laurent F. Gilbert Sr.
Lewiston, ME


Mayor Jill C. Duson
Portland, ME

Mayor Roland Michaud
Saco, ME



Maryland:


Mayor Ellen Moyer
Annapolis, MD


Mayor Sheila Dixon -- Resigned as Mayor
Baltimore, MD

Mayor James Ireton
Salisbury, MD



Massachusetts:


Mayor Thatcher W. Kezer III
Amesbury, MA


Mayor Tom Menino (Co-Chair)
Boston, MA


Mayor James E. Harrington
Brockton, MA


Mayor E. Denise Simmons
Cambridge, MA


Mayor Michael A. Tautznik -- Resigned from MAIG
Easthampton, MA


Mayor Robert Correia -- Resigned from MAIG
Fall River, MA


Mayor Mark Hawke -- Resigned from MAIG
Gardner, MA


Mayor Jim Fiorentini
Haverhill, MA


Mayor Michael J. Sullivan
Holyoke, MA


Mayor Michael Sullivan
Lawrence, MA


Mayor Edward C. Caulfield
Lowell, MA


Mayor Richard C. Howard
Malden, MA


Mayor Scott Lang
New Bedford, MA


Mayor John F. Moak
Newburyport, MA


Mayor Clare Higgins
Northampton, MA


Mayor Thomas G. Ambrosino
Revere, MA


Mayor Kimberley Driscoll
Salem, MA


Mayor Joseph A. Curtatone
Somerville, MA


Mayor Domenic Sarno
Springfield, MA


Mayor Susan M. Kay
Weymouth, MA




Michigan:


Mayor Bobby J. Hopewell -- Resigned from MAIG
Kalamazoo, MI


Mayor Brenda L. Lawrence
Southfield, MI




Minnesota:


Mayor Steve Lampi
Brooklyn Park, MN


Mayor Elizabeth B. Kautz
Burnsville, MN


Mayor Gary F. Van Eyll
Chaska, MN


Mayor Gary Peterson -- Resigned from MAIG
Columbia Heights, MN


Mayor Don Ness
Duluth, MN


Mayor R.T. Rybak
Minneapolis, MN


Mayor Chris Coleman
St. Paul, MN




Mississippi:


Mayor A.J. Holloway -- Resigned from MAIG
Biloxi, MS


Mayor Johnny DuPree
Hattiesburg, MS




Missouri:


Mayor Harold Dielmann -- Resigned from MAIG
Creve Coeur, MO


Mayor Mark Funkhouser
Kansas City, MO


Mayor Francis Slay
St. Louis, MO




Montana:


Mayor Ron Tussing -- Resigned from MAIG
Billings, MT




Nebraska:


Mayor Chris Beutler
Lincoln, NE


Mayor Jim Suttle
Omaha, NE


Mayor Donald Groesser
Ralston, NE




New Hampshire:


Mayor Jim Bouley -- Resigned from MAIG
Concord, NH




New Jersey:


Mayor Kevin G. Sanders
Asbury Park, NJ


Mayor Ronald Jones
Beachwood, NJ


Mayor Jason J. Varano
Berkeley Township, NJ


Mayor Sophie Heymann
Borough of Closter, NJ


Mayor James A. Gallos
Borough of Milford, NJ


Mayor Pasquale Menna
Borough of Red Bank, NJ


Mayor Emilia M. Siciliano
Borough of Shrewsbury, NJ


Mayor Betty Simmons
Borough of Victory Gardens, NJ


Mayor Gwendolyn Faison
Camden, NJ


Mayor Carol Foster
Corbin City, NJ


Mayor James Carroll
Demarest, NJ


Mayor Joseph R. Smith
East Newark, NJ


Mayor Robert L. Bowser
East Orange, NJ


Mayor Jun Choi
Edison, NJ


Mayor J. Christian Bollwage
Elizabeth, NJ


Mayor Steven Weinstein
Fair Lawn, NJ


Mayor John Bencivengo
Hamilton, NJ


Mayor Meryl Frank
Highland Park, NJ

Mayor Paul Anzano
Hopewell, NJ

Mayor Wayne Smith
Irvington, NJ


Mayor Jerramiah Healy
Jersey City, NJ


Mayor Frank W. Minor
Logan Township, NJ


Mayor Nicholas Russo
Longport, NJ


Mayor Michael Fressola
Manchester Township, NJ


Mayor Frank M. North
Merchantville, NJ

Mayor Jerry Fried
Montclair, NJ


Mayor Donald Cresitello
Morristown, NJ


Mayor Cory Booker
Newark, NJ


Joseph Ricciardo -- Resigned from MAIG
Newtown, New Jersey


Mayor Peter C. Massa
North Arlington, NJ


Mayor Francis M. Womack III
North Brunswick, NJ


Mayor Randy George
North Haledon, NJ


Harry Moore -- Resigned from MAIG
Oldmans Township, New Jersey


Mayor Eldridge Hawkins Jr.
Orange, NJ


Mayor Michael Luther
Parsipanny-Troy Hills, NJ


Mayor Jose Torres
Paterson, NJ


Mayor Harry L. Wyant
Phillipsburg, NJ


Mayor Gary Giberson
Port Republic, NJ


Mayor Earl Gage
Salem, NJ


Mayor Douglas Palmer
Trenton, NJ


Mayor Robert Romano
Vineland, NJ


Mayor Shing-Fu Hsueh
West Windsor, NJ


Mayor John E. McCormac
Woodbridge, NJ




New Mexico:


Mayor Orlando Ortega Jr. -- Resigned from MAIG
Portales, NM

Kevin Jackson -- Resigned from MAIG
Rancho Rio, New Mexico


Mayor David Coss
Santa Fe, NM




New York:


Mayor Gerald Jennings
Albany, NY


Mayor Ann M. Thane
Amsterdam, NY

Mayor James Gaughan
Altamont, NY

Mayor Jeff Roderick
Arkport, NY

Mayor Steve Gold
Beacon, NY

Mayor Donna Sherrer
Bellerose, NY

Mayor Eugene Christopher
Broadalbin, NY

Mayor Matthew T. Ryan
Binghamton, NY


Mayor M. Connie Castaneda
Brockport, NY <?XML:NAMESPACE PREFIX = O /><O:p></O:p>
<O:p></O:p>
Mayor Byron Brown
Buffalo, NY


Mayor Leigh Fuller
Canandaigua, NY

Mayor Jerome Kobre
Chestnut Ridge, NY

Mayor John McDonald
Cohoes, NY

Mayor Robert Goering
Clinton, NY <O:p></O:p>
<O:p></O:p>
Mayor Barbara Alberti
Depew, NY

Mayor Paul Rickenbach
East Hampton, NY

Mayor Daniel Liedka
East Syracuse, NY

Mayor Jeffrey Kaplan
Ellenville, NY

Mayor Charles Weiss
Flower Hill, NY <O:p></O:p>
<O:p></O:p>
Mayor Mark Olson
Fayetteville, NY

Mayor John Diamond
Glens Falls, NY

Mayor Dorothy Vorce
Gouverner, NY

Mayor Barbara Moore
Greenwood Lake, NY

Mayor Martin Natoli
Hagaman, NY

Mayor Emery Cummings Jr.
Hammondsport, NY

Mayor Michael Kohut
Haverstraw, NY

Mayor Wayne J. Hall Sr.
Hempstead, NY
<O:p></O:p><O:p></O:p>
Mayor Bernard Jackson
Hillburn, NY <O:p></O:p>

Mayor Michael McDermott
Homer, NY

Mayor Shannon Hogan
Hornell, NY

Mayor Rick Scalera
Hudson, NY


Mayor Carolyn Peterson
Ithaca, NY

Mayor Samuel Teresi
Jamestown, NY

Mayor Robert Blais
Lake George, NY

Mayor Anthony Caprino
Lakewood, NY

Mayor Robert Peters
Little Falls, NY

Mayor Elizabeth Feld
Larchmont, NY
<O:p></O:p>
Mayor Corrine Kleisle
Lyons, NY

Mayor Carl Luft
Lima, NY <O:p></O:p>

Mayor Barbara Clark
Madison, NY

Mayor Patricia McDonald
Malverne, NY

Mayor Anthony Sylvester
Mechanicville, NY

Mayor Marlinda Duncanson
Middletown, NY

Mayor John Karl
Monroe, NY

Mayor Jeffrey Oppenheim
Montebello, NY


Mayor Clinton Young
Mount Vernon, NY


Mayor Noam Bramson
New Rochelle, NY


Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg (Co-Chair)
New York, NY


Mayor Robert M. Maciol
New York Mills, NY


Mayor Nicholas Valentine
Newburgh, NY


Mayor Lawrence Soos
North Tonawanda, NY

Mayor Joseph Maiurano
Norwich, NY

Mayor Mary Foster
Peekskill, NY <O:p></O:p>
<O:p></O:p>
Mayor Christopher Sanders
Piermont, NY

Mayor Robert Weitzner
Port Washington, NY

Mayor John Tkazyik
Poughkeepsie, NY <O:p></O:p>

Mayor George Motz
Quogue, NY


Mayor John Bruno
Ravena, NY

Mayor Kevin Neary
Richmondville, NY

Mayor Daniel J. Dwyer
Rensselaer, NY

Mayor Susan Ben-Moshe
Roslyn Estates, NY

Mayor Robert Duffy
Rochester, NY


Mayor Carolyn Weiss
Scarsdale, NY

Mayor Brian U. Stratton
Schenectady, NY


Mayor Diane Smith
Seneca Falls, NY

Mayor John Patterson
Sherman, NY

Mayor Carl Wright
Sloatsburg, NY <O:p></O:p>

Mayor Karen Strickland
South Dayton, NY

Mayor Patricia DuBow
South Nyack, NY

Mayor John Keegan
Suffern, NY


Mayor Matthew Driscoll
Syracuse, NY

Mayor John Fitzpatrick
Tuckahoe, NY


Mayor David R. Roefaro
Utica, NY
<O:p></O:p>
Mayor Edward Snow -- Resigned from MAIG
Walton, NY


Mayor Michael Manning
Watervliet, NY


<O:p></O:p><O:p></O:p>Mayor John Ramundo
West Haverstraw, NY

Mayor David Carr
Westfield, NY

Mayor Ludwig Odierna
Williston Park, NY

Mayor Philip Amicone
Yonkers, NY




North Carolina:


Mayor Terry Bellamy
Asheville, NC


Ronnie K. Wall -- Resigned from MAIG
Burlington, North Carolina


Mayor Kevin Foy
Chapel Hill, NC


Mayor John R. Bost
Clemmons, NC


Mayor Bill Bell
Durham, NC


Mayor Yvonne Johnson
Greensboro, NC


Mayor Patricia C. Dunn
Greenville, NC


Mayor Charles Meeker
Raleigh, NC




North Dakota:


Mayor Dennis Walaker
Fargo, ND




Ohio:


Mayor Dan Pillow
Addyston, OH


Mayor Donald Plusquellic
Akron, OH


Mayor Merle Gorden
Beachwood, OH


Mayor Daniel Pocek
Bedford, OH


Mayor Fletcher Berger
Bedford Heights, OH


Mayor John Licastro
Bratenahl, OH


Mayor Samuel Alai
Broadview Heights, OH


Mayor Dale Strasser -- Resigned from MAIG
Brunswick, OH


Mayor Mark Mallory
Cincinnati, OH


Mayor Frank Jackson
Cleveland, OH


Mayor Edward Kelley
Cleveland Heights, OH


Mayor Michael Coleman
Columbus, OH


Mayor Jack Bacci -- Resigned from MAIG
Cuyahoga Heights, OH


Mayor Rhine McLin
Dayton, OH


Mayor Marilee Chinnici-Zuercher
Dublin, OH


Mayor Bill Cervenik
Euclid, OH


Mayor Theodore Shannon
Fairfax, OH


Mayor Thomas J. Longo
Garfield Heights, OH


Mayor Joseph C. Hubbard
Glendale, OH


Mayor Alan Zaffiro
Golf Manor, OH


Mayor Deborah Neale
Lakeline, OH


Mayor Michael Kolomichuk
Lakemore, OH


Mayor Jo Ann Toczek
Linndale, OH


Mayor Donald Kuchta
Macedonia, OH


Mayor Gregory Costabile
Mayfield Heights, OH


Mayor Bruce Rinker
Mayfield Village, OH


Mayor Robert Shiner -- Resigned from MAIG
Mentor, OH


Mayor Gary Starr
Middleburg Heights, OH


Mayor Susan Renda
Moreland Hills, OH


Mayor Thomas E. O`Grady
North Olmsted, OH


Mayor Kathy Mulcahy
Orange Village, OH


Mayor Martin Zanotti
Parma Heights, OH


Mayor Bruce Akers
Pepper Pike, OH


Mayor Daniel Ursu
Richmond Heights, OH


Mayor William Robertson -- Resigned from MAIG
Rittman, OH


Mayor Earl M. Leiken
Shaker Heights, OH


Mayor John Smith
Silverton, OH


Mayor Kevin Patton
Solon, OH


Mayor Georgine Welo
South Euclid, OH


Mayor Matthew Brett
South Russell, OH


Mayor Darreyl D. Davis
Trotwood, OH


Mayor Katherine Procop -- Resigned from MAIG
Twinsburg, OH


Mayor Beryl Rothschild
University Heights, OH


Mayor Jean Anderson -- Resigned from MAIG
Vermilion, OH


Marlene B. Anielski -- Resigned from MAIG
Walton Hills, Ohio

Mayor Michael J. O`Brien
Warren, OH


Mayor Barry Porter
Wyoming, OH


Mayor Jay Williams
Youngstown, OH



Oklahoma:


Mayor Kathy Taylor -- Resigned from MAIG
Tulsa, OK




Oregon:


Mayor Denny Doyle -- Resigned from MAIG
Beaverton, OR


Mayor Kitty Piercy
Eugene, OR




Pennsylvania:


Mayor John McBeth -- Resigned from MAIG
Akron, PA


Mayor Anthony Battalini
Aliquippa, PA


Mayor Ed Pawlowski
Allentown, PA


Mayor Charles T. "Bud" Wahl
Ambler, PA

Mayor Gretchen Dosch
Applewold, PA


Mayor Bernard Killian
Aspinwall, PA

Mayor Philip Ferrizzi
Bally, PA

Mayor Stanley Goldman
Bellefonte, PA

Mayor Kenneth Opipery
Ben Avon, PA

Mayor Gail Stoudt
Bernville, PA

Mayor Joseph Saxton
Bristol, PA

Mayor David Wonderling
Brookville, PA


Mayor Alexander Bennett
Baldwin, PA


Mayor Cloyd W. Wagner
Beavertown, PA


Mayor David E. Orr -- Resigned from MAIG
Beech Creek, PA


Mayor John Callahan
Bethlehem, PA


Mayor Robert Myers
Birdsboro, PA


Mayor Keith G. Billig -- Resigned from MAIG
Bowmanstown, PA


Mayor Marianne V. Deery
Boyertown, PA


Mayor Jeffrey A. Cowan -- Resigned from MAIG
Brackenridge, PA


Mayor Kenneth Lockhart
Brentwood, PA


Mayor Margaret Stock
Butler, PA

Mayor John Henicheck
Callery, PA

Mayor Domenic Virgona
Clairton, PA

Mayor John Hartman
Cleona, PA

Mayor Claire Remington
Coaldale, PA

Mayor Judy Reed
Connellsville, PA

Mayor John Haberland
Coraopolis, PA


Mayor Justin M. Taylor
Carbondale, PA


Mayor Kirk R. Wilson
Carlisle, PA


Mayor Donald Baumgarten
Castle Shannon, PA


Mayor Barbara Schlegel
Catasauqua, PA


Mayor Ronald Lockwood
Cherry Valley, PA


Mayor Wendell N. Butler
Chester, PA


Mayor Brian P. Fox
Christiana, PA


Mayor Paul McKenna
Churchill, PA


Mayor Jonathan J. Mack
Coopersburg, PA


Mayor Helen Thomas
Darby, PA


Mayor Mary Ann Fichthorn
Denver, PA

Mayor Michael Cooper
Deer Lake, PA


Mayor Thomas Lloyd
Dormont, PA


Mayor Heather Ann Bruno
Downingtown, PA


Mayor Libby White
Doylestown, PA


Mayor Betty M. Hays
Eagles Mere, PA


Mayor Keith E. Hoffman -- Resigned from MAIG
East Berlin, PA


Mayor Salvatore J. Panto Jr.
Easton, PA

Mayor Wayne T. Murphy
Edgeworth Borough, PA


Mayor Robert H. Brain
Elizabethtown, PA


Mayor Joseph J. Cisco
Ellwood City, PA

Mayor Richard Carr
Emlenton, PA

Mayor George Rossi
Emsworth, PA

Mayor Gary Foster
Evans City, PA


Mayor Winfield Iobst -- Resigned from MAIG
Emmaus, PA


Mayor Joseph Sinnott
Erie, PA

Mayor Olive McKeithan
Farrell, PA


Mayor Harry W. McLaughlin
Fox Chapel, PA


Mayor Robert E. Heller
Franklin, PA


Mayor Fred C. Moyer Jr.
Freeburg, PA


Mayor Gerald C. Yob
Freemansburg, PA


Mayor William E. Troxell -- Resigned from MAIG
Gettysburg, PA


Mayor Karl Eisaman
Greensburg, PA

Mayor Vincent Abbato
Green Tree, PA


Mayor Cathryn H. Rape -- Resigned from MAIG
Harmony, PA


Mayor Stephen R. Reed
Harrisburg, PA


Mayor Norm Hawkes
Hatboro, PA

Mayor John Hoerner
Highspire, PA


Mayor Joseph R. Dodson
Hollidaysburg, PA


Mayor Betty Esper
Homestead, PA


Mayor Nicholas Yanosich
Industry, PA

Mayor Charles Ritter
Ivyland, PA

Mayor Bruce Smallacombe
Jermyn, PA

Mayor Donald Bosh
Knoxville, PA

Mayor Robert Slaby
Kulpmont, PA


Mayor Sandra Green
Kutztown, PA


Mayor Rick Gray
Lancaster, PA


Mayor Jayne C. Young
Lansdowne, PA


Mayor Robert P. Carpenter
Laporte, PA


Mayor Fred Feltenberger
Laureldale, PA


Mayor Trish Ward
Lebanon, PA


Mayor John L. Mark
Liverpool, PA

Mayor Joseph Legnasky
Lake City, PA

Mayor Christopher Blaydon
Langhorne, PA

Mayor Pete Poninsky
Leetsdale, PA

Mayor John Gides
Lilly, PA

Mayor Nick Vay
Lincoln, PA

Mayor Randy Schlegel
Lyons, PA


Mayor Gerard McGlone
Malvern, PA


Mayor Russell LaRew
Marianna, PA


Mayor Oliver Overlander
Marietta, PA


Mayor Richard Friedberg
Meadville, PA


Mayor Angela Adkins
Midland, PA


Mayor Karen Bartosh -- Resigned from MAIG
Midway, PA


Mayor Richard Trostle
Mohnton, PA


Mayor John P. Antoline
Monaca, PA


Mayor Jeffrey L. Repasky
Mount Oliver, PA


Mayor Josh Nowotarski -- Resigned from MAIG
Mount Penn, PA


Mayor James F. Kinder
Mount Wolf, PA

Mayor David Sturgess
Manor, PA

Mayor Anthony Petaccia
Monessen, PA

Mayor John Dorin
Montoursville, PA

Mayor Raymond Bodnar
Munhall, PA

Mayor Thomas Lush
Myerstown, PA


Mayor Joyce K. Somers
Murrysville, PA


Mayor Betty Cain
New Alexandria, PA


Mayor Frank Link
New Kensington, PA

Mayor Frances Tkach
New Philadelphia, PA

Mayor Gennaro Cantalupo
Northern Cambria, PA


Mayor Raymond L. McDonough
North Braddock, PA


Mayor Leonard L. Santimyer -- Resigned from MAIG
North Irwin, PA


Mayor Thomas Reenock
Northampton, PA


Mayor Michele Petrini Avvisato
Old Forge, PA


Mayor Geoffrey L. Henry
Oxford, PA


Mayor Ardele R. Gordon
Parkside, PA

Mayor William McCall
Parker, PA

Mayor Richard Pegg
Patterson Heights, PA


Mayor Michael Nutter
Philadelphia, PA


Mayor Morris S. Williams
Pine Grove, PA


Mayor Luke Ravenstahl
Pittsburgh, PA


Mayor John D. Reiley
Pottsville, PA


Mayor Tom McMahon
Reading, PA

Mayor Frank Schnee
Robesonia, PA


Mayor Walter Niedermeyer -- Resigned from MAIG
Slatington, PA

Mayor Anthony Hajjar
Seward, PA

Mayor Joseph McGranaghan
Shamokin Dam, PA

Mayor Robert Lucas Jr.
Sharon, PA

Mayor Bruce Hockersmith
Shippensburg, PA

Mayor Robert Prah
Smithton, PA

Mayor Boyd Paul
Snow Shoe, PA

Mayor William Meyer
Somerset, PA

Mayor John Reynolds
Souderton, PA

Mayor Warren Lubenow
St. Lawrence, PA

Mayor Sherman Metzgar
Stockertown, PA


Mayor James Kennedy
South Coatesville, PA


Mayor Charles Baugham
Stroudsburg, PA


Mayor Paul R. McArdle -- Resigned from MAIG
Summit Hill, PA


Mayor Luke Duignam
Tatamy, PA


Mayor Jay Stover
Telford, PA


Mayor Pamela Murphy
Thompsontown, PA

Mayor Charles Harper
Three Springs, PA

Mayor William Allar
Tremont, PA

Mayor Dale Deiter -- Resigned from MAIG
Tower City, PA


Mayor Regina T. Beck
Trainer, PA


Mayor Adam Forgie
Turtle Creek, PA

Mayor Catherine Resch
Tunnelhill, PA


Mayor Jane Haskins -- Resigned from MAIG
Ulysses, PA


Mayor Emerson Fazekas
Versailles, PA

Mayor Jeffrey Steffler
Wampum, PA

Mayor Ester Cotner
Washingtonville, PA

Mayor Ralph Harrington
West Elizabeth, PA

Mayor William Goldsworthy
West Pittston, PA

Mayor John Henry
West View, PA

Mayor Thomas Stanton
Wheatland, PA

Mayor David Perusso
Wilson, PA

Mayor Tina Hagenbuch
Weissport, PA


Mayor John Andzelik
West Mifflin, PA


Mayor Shane Keller -- Resigned from MAIG
West Reading, PA


Mayor Thomas M. Leighton
Wilkes-Barre, PA


Mayor John Thompson
Wilkinsburg, PA


Mary B. Wolf -- Resigned from MAIG
Williamsport, Pennsylvania


Mayor Mitchell D. Mogilski
Wind Gap, PA


Mayor Larry Markel
Windsor, PA


Mayor Jacqueline B. Mosley
Yeadon, PA

Mayor John Sanford
Yoe, PA

Mayor Alford Shull
York Springs, PA

Mayor Joan Derco
Youngwood, PA


Mayor John S. Brenner
York, PA




Rhode Island:


Mayor David Cicilline
Providence, RI




South Carolina:


Mayor Joseph Riley
Charleston, SC


Mayor Robert D. Coble
Columbia, SC


Mayor Joseph T. McElveen Jr.
Sumter, SC




South Dakota:

Dave Munson -- Resigned from MAIG
Sioux Falls, South Dakota


Tennessee:
Bill Haslam -- Resigned from MAIG
Knoxville, Tennessee


Mayor Tom Beehan
Oak Ridge, TN


Mayor A C Wharton
Memphis, TN




Texas:


Bill White -- Resigned from MAIG
Houston, Texas


Mayor Richard Ward
Hurst, TX



Vermont:


Mayor Bob Kiss
Burlington, VT


Mayor Christopher C. Louras
Rutland, VT




Virginia:


Mayor William Euille
Alexandria, VA

Mayor Dave Norris
Charlottesville, VA

Mayor James Councill
Franklin, VA


Mayor Brenda Pelham
Hopewell, VA

Mayor Joe Frank
Newport News, VA


Mayor Paul D. Fraim
Norfolk, VA


Mayor Annie M. Mickens
Petersburg, VA


Mayor James W. Holley III
Portsmouth, VA

Mayor Iris Tharp
Quantico, VA


Mayor Dwight C. Jones
Richmond, VA

Mayor William Sessoms Jr.
Virginia Beach, VA




Washington:


Mayor Peter B. Lewis
Auburn, WA


Mayor Greg Nickels
Seattle, WA


Mayor Bill Baarsma
Tacoma, WA


Mayor David Edler
Yakima, WA




Wisconsin:


Mayor Edward Monroe
Ashland, WI


Mayor Tom Kennedy -- Resigned from MAIG
Beaver Dam, WI


Mayor Jeff R. Speaker -- Resigned from MAIG
Brookfield, WI


Mayor Thomas M. Taylor -- Resigned from MAIG
Franklin, WI


Mayor James Schmitt -- Resigned from MAIG
Green Bay, WI


Mayor Dave Cieslewicz
Madison, WI


Mayor Tom Barrett
Milwaukee, WI


Mayor Thomas Ratzlaff
Park Falls, WI


Mayor Richard Johns
Rhinelander, WI


Mayor Al Richards
Saint Francis, WI


Mayor Andrew Halverson -- Resigned from MAIG
Stevens Point, WI


Mayor Dave Ross -- Resigned from MAIG
Superior, WI


Mayor Ronald J. Kruegerm -- Resigned from MAIG
Watertown, WI


Mayor Larry Nelson
Waukesha, WI


Mayor Kristine M. Deiss
West Bend, WI

</TD></TR><TR><TD></TD></TR><TR><TD class=copy>Posted: 4/16/2010 12:00:00 AM</TD></TR><TR><TD></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
 
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