'Hell no': Denver mayor responds to federal demand the city follow U.S. Constitution on gunsWND 5/5/2026
The city of Denver, action central for the agenda established by the state of Colorado to ignore the First Amendment, now is treating the Second Amendment the same way.
As something to be followed if there's nothing else the city, or state, wants to do.
But in this case there is, and Denver's mayor, Mike Johnston, has responded to a Department of Justice call for town officials to stay within the law with a resounding, "Hell no."
The situation is that the DOJ is suing the city over its enforcement of a so-called ban on "assault weapons."
Johnston's reaction, "We're here today to let them know that our answer is 'Hell no.'"
The derogatory term "assault weapons" is vague to the point other laws citing that term have been struck down.
Exactly what differentiates a weapon from an assault weapon is far from clear. The question arises over the difference between a fist and an "assault fist," or a baseball bat, and an "assault baseball bat."
The city's ordinance, around since 1989, makes it a crime to carry, store, keep, manufacture, or sell these weapons.
It claims a semiautomatic pistol or rifle with a capacity for more than 15 rounds is an assault weapon.
"If I go buy an AR-15 and then put a magazine in it that can hold more than 15 rounds, then it definitely would be banned," said Huey Laugesen, of the Colorado State Shooting Association.
But his organization's argument is that Denver's infringement of the Second Amendment remains unconstitutional.
More:
https://www.wnd.com/2026/05/hell-no-denver-mayor-responds-federal-demand-city/