Wanted man: Police job offers pour in for NJ man pardoned by Gov. Christie
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His dreams of becoming a police officer were dashed when an arrest two years ago for carrying a legally-owned firearm made him a convicted felon, but now that he's been pardoned, Steffon Josey-Davis is fielding job offers from around the country.
Just one week after New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie pardoned him of all criminal charges, the 24-year-old told FoxNews.com he's received encouraging emails and even job offers from police departments as far away as Colorado. Many became aware of Josey-Davis' plight after several stories by FoxNews.com described how an honest mistake with a legally owned gun nearly made him ineligible to wear a badge. After having his record wiped clean,the North Brunswick man finds himself a wanted man - by police departments.
"I just feel he deserves a chance."
"They saw that I was innocent and they saw my dedication to become something," Josey-Davis said of the offers. "I feel so blessed."
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When Josey-Davis was pulled over by police along a New Jersey road in September 2013, the young security guard never imagined his legally owned gun would be confiscated.
Josey-Davis' nightmare began on the morning of Sept. 20, 2013, when he was preparing to leave his North Brunswick, N.J., home for a job as an armed security guard with Loomis Armored, a company responsible for transporting money to banks.
While unloading his 9mm Smith & Wesson handgun inside his car, his 6-year-old sister wandered into the family's garage, startling Josey-Davis. He quickly tucked the firearm inside the glove compartment and out of the child's view, according to his account.
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Hours later, while driving at night with his girlfriend in Highland Park, he was pulled over. Josey-Davis says he was going below the speed limit.
Because he did not yet have a permit to carry the gun -- which was stored, still loaded, in the glove compartment -- he was arrested.
"They handcuffed me and charged me with unlawful possession of a firearm -- a second-degree felony," he said.
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As a result, Josey-Davis had a criminal record and was unable to secure a job -- and his dreams of becoming a police officer were crushed. Josey-Davis sought a pardon from New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie after mounting a robust social media campaign, including a Change.org petition that has attracted more than 85,000 signatures to date.
He also hired Evan Nappen, a prominent gun rights attorney, to appeal his conviction.
"This is a case of a law-abiding citizen being turned into a criminal by New Jersey gun laws," Nappen told FoxNews.com in an interview last March.
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After a careful review of the case, Christie announced last week he pardoned Josey-Davis of all criminal charges.
Over the next few days, Josey-Davis said he received messages from police departments touched by his story -- some offering him a job as a police officer.
One e-mail came the Aurora Police Department in Colorado, he said, and another from Chief Michael Mier of the Copley Police in Copley, Ohio.
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"My message to him was very simple -- should you decide to relocate out of New Jersey and come to Ohio, feel free to apply for a position here," Mier told FoxNews.com.
"I would be more than happy to give him the opportunity to go through the application process," said Mier. "He handled himself very well. He's a nice young man and I just felt bad for him."
"I just feel he deserves a chance," he said.