New York’s Unconstitutional Gun Law Was Written By A Notorious, Corrupt Thug
New York’s Unconstitutional Gun Law Was Written By A Notorious, Corrupt Thug BY: DAVID HARSANYI The Sullivan Act was named after Timothy D. Sullivan, one of the most corrupt politicians of his age. On the morning of January 23, 1911, an unstable Harvard graduate with the theatrical name of Fitzhugh Coyle Goldsborough walked up to the novelist David Graham Phillips on a Manhattan street and unloaded six shots from his .32-caliber pistol into him. Goldsborough, who believed the novelist had defamed his sister, reloaded his gun, placed it against his temple, and pulled the trigger. Goldsborough died instantly. The murder-suicide shocked the city. Although the crime destroyed many lives, none of them would change history quite like George Petit le Brun, the man who performed the autopsies on the bodies at the city coroner’s office. “I reasoned that the time had come to have legislation passed that would prevent the sale of pistols to irresponsible persons,” he later wrote. After two yea