SACRAMENTO, Calif. — California became the fifth state to prohibit openly carrying handguns in public after Gov. Jerry Brown announced Monday that he had signed the ban into law amid heavy opposition from gun enthusiasts.
AB144 by state Assemblyman Anthony Portantino, D-Pasadena, makes it a misdemeanor to carry an exposed and unloaded gun in public or in vehicles, with violators facing up to a year in prison or a potential fine of $1,000 when the law takes effect on Jan 1. The bill exempts hunting and shooting events and does not apply to those who are given permits to carry a concealed weapon by law enforcement authorities.
Portantino said the bill is an opportunity to prevent tragedy before it happens.
"It's not if somebody is going be shot, it's when somebody is going to be shot," he said. "We have the opportunity to avoid that, and that's why this is so critical."
He said law enforcement officials have been concerned about the proliferation of guns in public and the tense situations that arise when someone sees another person carrying a firearm in public. He said the encounters can escalate quickly because others don't know whether the gun is loaded or unloaded.
One of the first rules of firearms safety is to always assume a weapon is loaded.
"Main Street California is not the Old West, and you don't need a gun to buy a cheeseburger," Portantino said.
Top California law enforcement groups, including the California Police Chiefs Association and the Los Angeles Sheriff's Department, supported the legislation.
"By prohibiting the open carry of guns, we can now take our families to the park or out to eat without the worry of getting shot by some untrained, unscreened, self-appointed vigilante," Dallas Stout, president of the California chapters of the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence, said in a statement.
Gun owners protested the legislation in April when they began carrying unloaded handguns in public places and restaurants as a political statement in Pasadena.
The Brady Campaign, which sponsored the legislation, said California joins Florida, Illinois, Oklahoma and Texas as the only states to ban the open carry of handguns. It said 33 states, including Pennsylvania, Michigan, Louisiana and Colorado, do no prohibit open carry. Twelve states, including South Carolina, Tennessee, Minnesota and Massachusetts require permits for open carry.
David Maggard Jr., president of the California Police Chiefs Association, said the group viewed the open carry of unloaded handguns as a safety threat to communities and their officers. He said the bill will help assure that felons and gang members cannot openly carry an unloaded gun with impunity.
The organization represents the state's 336 municipal police chiefs.
Gun advocates and most Republican lawmakers have criticized the law, saying it targets law-abiding citizens. State Assemblyman Tim Donnelly, R-Hesperia, said Brown sent the message that he has no respect for the Constitution.
"There are risks to living in a free state, and for the governor to take away and chisel away at the Second Amendment right when he claimed to respect it, it just kind of shows his true colors," Donnelly said.
"It's really a form of tyranny," he said of the ban.
Sam Paredes, executive director of Gun Owners of California, said sheriff's departments in most major cities in California, including Los Angeles, San Francisco and San Diego, make it difficult for citizens to get concealed carry permits. The association, which has 33,000 members in California, is a pro-gun lobbying association based north of the state capitol.
"For a majority of Californians, this creates an absolute ban on the bear part of the right to keep and bear arms because they can't get a conceal carry permit," he said.
C.D. Michel, a civil rights attorney for the National Rifle Association, said the group has a lawsuit challenging the concealed carry licensing system in San Diego. He said the federal judge in the case ruled the system wasn't a violation of the Second Amendment because residents still had the option of unloaded open carry.
"This strengthens our lawsuit because that option has been eliminated," he said.
No it doesn't!
ReplyDeleteLike most rights, the right secured by the Second Amendment is not unlimited. From Blackstone through the 19th-century cases, commentators and courts routinely explained that the right was not a right to keep and carry any weapon whatsoever in any manner whatsoever and for whatever purpose. See, e.g., Sheldon, in 5 Blume 346; Rawle 123; Pomeroy 152–153; Abbott 333. Heller at 54.
Poor babies, they may have to take up tae quan do.
Yup, shall issue is around the corner....
ReplyDeletehttp://onlygunsandmoney.blogspot.com/2011/10/every-picture-tells-story.html
Yeah, and I'll be a lottery billionaire soon.
ReplyDeleteKeep dreaming.
Open carry who needs it.....
ReplyDeleteCan you show me a state that has rescinded, concealed carry?
I'll wait........
This was a law about unlicensed open carry fringie. However, it would not surprise me if at some point in the future both MN and WI tightened up very much the regulation on concealed carry.
ReplyDeleteThere has always been very limited concealed carry for people in the private security sector like bank guards, etc., and always will because it is a legitimate need.
Those who are carrying just because they want to or are chronically paranoid......not so much.
If you doubt the feelings of the public in that regard, I suggest you take a look at the member of the MN state legislature who got in hot water last fall for his conduct with a concealed carry firearm...
Fringy, concealed carry has been rammed down peoples' throats. It won't take too long for the backlash to occur.
ReplyDeleteAs I keep pointing out, the Supreme COurt has made it quite clear that:
Like most rights, the right secured by the Second Amendment is not unlimited. From Blackstone through the 19th-century cases, commentators and courts routinely explained that the right was not a right to keep and carry any weapon whatsoever in any manner whatsoever and for whatever purpose. See, e.g., Sheldon, in 5 Blume 346; Rawle 123; Pomeroy 152–153; Abbott 333. Heller at 54.
I think the most telling thing for predicting the future of the gun rights movement is the piss-poor showing they've made during Obama's first term.
ReplyDeleteIf the president gets a little tougher, or if he replaces another Supreme or if the country get a bit more fed up, gun rights will fade back into the obscurity they deserve.