Concealed Carry Facts:
Since 1995 over 57,000 concealed carry permits have been
issued to Utah residents.
Over the eight year period, some 900 permits have been
revoked for various reasons, including alcohol, subject to a protective order
filed in a routine divorce case, and some more serious crimes. This is about
1.6% of people who passed a background check and then later committed stupid
or illegal acts. Probably some of them would have carried a gun illegally even
if they did not have a permit.
In that same time, you have seen many stories about Utah
teachers convicted of serious crimes, Utah lawyers engaged in criminal acts,
Utah religious leaders charged with crimes, Utah youth group leaders accused
of molesting children and even Utah police officers convicted for criminal offenses.
Every group of people includes a tiny percentage of people who will violate
the law, and should be punished for their actions.
Tell us again why we should fear Concealed Carry Permit holders or need to place additional areas off limits to them!
Why Women Should Be Armed in Utah
Utah
ranks among worst in forcible rape -
(Second only to Alaska) An estimated one in five adult women in Utah has
been forcibly raped at least once during her lifetime, putting the state well
above the national average, according to the results of a federal study.
Salt Lake Tribune story has the details.
In most cases, the mere knowledge that a victim has a firearm is enough
to scare a criminal away.
A diamond may be forever, but a 9mm may be a life saver.
Topics covered include-
The sites below have UNOFFICIAL information on concealed carry laws of all states
Click
here for information from the National Rifle Association (NRA-ILA Research
Office)
Click here for
information from "Packing.org"
Have you heard about "Vermont
Carry"?
Many people advocate adoption of "Vermont Carry"
procedures. The following discussion is used by permission from the
Gun
Owners of America (www.gunowners.org)
Why Adopt a Vermont-style CCW Law? (January 1999)
Several states are considering adopting "Vermont-style" concealed carry legislation. Most of the Carry Concealed Weapon (CCW) laws in the country require citizens to first get permits. But in a couple of states, like Vermont, citizens can carry a firearm without getting permission . . . without paying a fee . . . or without going through any kind of government- imposed waiting period. There are many benefits to adopting a genuine right to carry law:
1. Carrying a firearm is a "right" not a "privilege"
The Second Amendment guarantees that "the right
of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed." This means
that law-abiding citizens should not need to beg the government for permission
to carry a firearm. That would turn the "right" to bear arms into
a mere "privilege." Likewise, one should not have to be photographed, fingerprinted,
or registered before they can exercise their Second Amendment rights.
Criminals certainly do not jump through these "hoops." The Second Amendment
is no different than any of the other protections enumerated in the Bill
of Rights. That is, honest citizens should not need a government issued
permission slip; rather, they should be able to carry as a matter of right.
2. The issuing of permits can be abused by officials
a. Refuse to issue
* New York City: Officials in New York City
routinely deny gun permits for ordinary citizens and store owners because
-- as the courts have ruled -- they have no greater need for protection
than anyone else in the city. In fact, the authorities have even refused
to issue permits when the courts have ordered them to do so. (1) (Source
Notes below)
* Gary, Indiana: Then-Mayor Richard Hatcher
let it be known in 1979 that he would not be approving any citizens' concealed
carry applications. He then said if they wanted to challenge his authority,
they were welcome to take him to court. It took citizens over 10 years
(and thousands of dollars in legal fees) to get any relief. (2)
* San Jose, CA: Joseph McNamara, a former
police chief and anti-gun spokesman, bragged in his 1984 book, Safe &
Sane, that "in San Jose, I have made it considerably tougher for residents
to get handgun permits." (3)
b. Require fingerprints -- Virginia applicants for concealed carry
permits were forced to submit to FBI fingerprint background checks without
any authorization requiring such checks. (4)
c. Revoke for politically incorrect speech -- In Oregon, officials
have been known to revoke concealed carry licenses because of one's political
views. In one case, a permit holder had his license revoked because he
was the editor of a pro-life newspaper. (5)
d. Print licensee holders' names in newspapers -- In several states,
newspapers have frequently printed the names of concealed carry permit
holders, which are almost always public information. (6)
3. Officials can "raise the hurdles" in order to get a permit
* The power to license a right is the power
to destroy a right
a. Arbitrary Delays -- While New Jersey law requires applications to
be responded to within thirty days, delays of ninety days are routine;
sometimes, applications are delayed for several years for no readily apparent
reason. (7)
b. Arbitrary Denials -- See the examples above from New York City,
Indiana and California.
c. Arbitrary Fee Increases -- In 1994, the Clinton administration pushed
for a license fee increase of almost 1,000 percent on gun dealers. According
to U.S. News & World Report, the administration was seeking the license
fee increase "in hopes of driving many of America's 258,000 licensed gun
dealers out of business." (8) This example clearly shows how easily government
officials can abuse the issuing of carry permits. Instead of using lower
fees to merely pay for the processing of permits, officials can raise the
fees to keep people from exercising their rights.
4. Vermont has a genuine right to carry law (i.e., requires no permits)
and yet boasts the lowest crime rate in the nation (9)
a. Nationwide, concealed carry laws have worked to drop crime rates.
Indeed, a comprehensive national study in 1996 determined that violent
crime fell after states made it legal to carry concealed firearms. (10)
b. The results of the study showed:
* States which
passed concealed carry laws reduced their murder rate by 8.5%, rapes by
5%, aggravated assaults by 7% and robbery by 3%; and
* If those states
not having concealed carry laws had adopted such laws in 1992, then approximately
1,570 murders, 4,177 rapes, 60,000 aggravated assaults and 12,000 robberies
would have been avoided yearly. (11)
5. Waiting periods of any kind threaten honest people's safety. (12)
Note: Criminals usually don't bother to
go through the waiting period since they don't apply for permits.
a. New York. In 1983, Igor Hutorsky was murdered by two burglars who
broke into his Brooklyn furniture store. The tragedy is that some time
before the murder his business partner had applied for permission to keep
a handgun at the store. Even four months after the murder, the former partner
had still not heard from the police about the status of his gun permit.
(13)
b. Colorado. Talk show host (Alan Berg) was gunned down in 1984 after
being denied a concealed carry permit. (14)
c. Wisconsin. In 1991, Bonnie Elmasri inquired about getting a gun
to protect herself from a husband who had repeatedly threatened to kill
her. She was told there was a 48 hour waiting period to buy a handgun.
But unfortunately, Bonnie was never able to pick up a gun. She and her
two sons were killed the next day by an abusive husband of whom the police
were well aware. (15)
d. Los Angeles. USA Today reported that many of the people rushing
to gun stores during the 1992 riots were "lifelong gun-control advocates,
running to buy an item they thought they'd never need." Ironically, they
were outraged to discover they had to wait 15 days to buy a gun for self-defense.
(16)
e. Virginia. In 1993, Marine Cpl. Rayna Ross bought a gun (in a non-waiting
period state) and used it two days later to kill an attacker who was armed
with a bayonet. (17) Had a 5-day waiting period been in effect, Ms. Ross
would have been defenseless against the man who was stalking her.
6. CCW licenses register gun owners -- and licensing can lead to
confiscation of firearms
a. Step One: Registration -- In the mid-1960s officials in New York
City began registering long guns. They promised they would never use such
lists to take away firearms from honest citizens. But in 1991, the city
banned (and soon began confiscating) many of those very guns. (18)
b. Step Two: Confiscation -- In 1992, a New York city paper reported
that, "Police raided the home of a Staten Island man who refused to comply
with the city's tough ban on assault weapons, and seized an arsenal of
firearms. . . . Spot checks are planned [for other homes]." (19)
c. Foreign Countries -- Gun registration has led to confiscation in
several countries, including Greece, Ireland, Jamaica and Bermuda. (20)
And in an exhaustive study on this subject, Jews for the Preservation of
Firearms Ownership has researched and translated several gun control laws
from foreign countries. Their publication, Lethal Laws: "Gun Control" is
the Key to Genocide, documents how gun control (and confiscation) has preceded
the slaughter and genocide of millions of people in Turkey, the Soviet
Union, Germany, China, Cambodia and others. (21)
7 . Officials cannot license or register a constitutional right
The Supreme Court held in Lamont v. Postmaster
General (1965) that the First Amendment prevents the government from registering
purchasers of magazines and newspapers -- even if such material is "communist
political propaganda." (22)
8. Citizens, even when untrained, show amazing accuracy and self-restraint
with firearms
Citizens shoot and kill at least twice as
many criminals as police do every year (1,527 to 606). (23)
And readers of Newsweek learned in 1993 that
"only 2 percent of civilian shootings involved an innocent person mistakenly
identified as a criminal. The 'error rate' for the police, however, was
11 percent, more than five times as high." (24)