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This article is quite interesting, but it suffers from a number of prose issues. Both I (and another user) made several copy-edits... Not being a legal expert, however, I was hesitant to change wording in many places. (I wouldn't want to accidentally introduce an inaccuracy.) Here are some issues I found that should be addressed.
The first paragraph is one long sentence. It should be broken up into about three sentences. Would it be acceptable to start it like this? "...was an Illinois Supreme Court case which determined whether the Aggravated Unlawful Use of a Weapon (AUUF) and Unlawful Possession of a Firearm (UPF) statutes were proper, or whether they violated the right to keep and bear arms as guaranteed by the Second Amendment". Then you could specify the ruling in subsequent sentences.
For a reader who hasn't heard of AUUF, it sounds like the article is suggesting that my "use of a weapon" violates someone's rights, but of course that's not what is meant. For this reason, it would be better to refer to "the AUUF statute" when discussing whether AUUF violates someone's rights.
"In the meantime" is unclear in the lead, but I don't know enough about court terminology to know a better wording that I'm sure is accurate. "Before the Illinois Supreme Court could decide the issue"? "While the appeal was still being processed"?
Great. But I changed "During the pendency of Aguilar's appeal" to "While Aguilar's appeal was pending", since "pendency" is not a common word (and pendency links to the unrelated Suspension bridge article). I hope this is accurate. – Quadell(talk)19:06, 27 December 2013 (UTC)Reply
"See also" hatnotes should not contain terms that are linked in text, so District of Columbia v. Heller and McDonald v. Chicago shouldn't be "see also" hatnotes for the "legal background" section.
I'm not very familiar with firearm terminology. Is "Illinois prohibited the carry of a firearm" correct? It sounds very odd to me.
No, that is correct. Firearm can be substituted for pistol, handgun, or rifle. If it makes sense with one of those three words, firearm would normally be OK. GregJackPBoomer!02:15, 1 January 2014 (UTC)Reply
The final sentence of "Legal background" is more fully covered below in the "McDonald v. City of Chicago" section. It muddies the waters to include it here; I would simply end the section with "it was not clear yet that this applied to the individual states".
A footnote says "This would be a federal felony offense, but it was not charged." Would it be more accurate to say "This would have been a federal felony offense, but he was not charged"?
The text refers to shall-issue permits and may-issue permits without explaining those terms or linking to an article that does. Also, it refers to "shall issue" permits (with quotation marks and a space) in one part, but it refers to a shall-issue bill (with no quotation marks and a hyphen) in another.
Question: Normally, page ranges need to use an en-dash rather than a hypen. I know this article uses Bluebook style. Does Bluebook specify a hyphen for page ranges, as in "Aguilar, 944 N.E.2d at 825-26.", or is it mute on that point?
I'm putting this nomination on hold. If all issues are resolved in the next seven days, the article will pass; otherwise it will fail.– Quadell(talk)15:47, 26 December 2013 (UTC)Reply