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District’s gun regulations officially in place, but for how long?

By: Michael Neibauer
Examiner Staff Writer
June 8, 2009

The District’s permanent handgun regulations that took effect Friday could be obliterated by Congress or the federal courts in less time than it took to write them.

The U.S. Supreme Court struck down the city’s 30-year-old handgun ban as unconstitutional last June. The city has been operating under emergency and proposed gun rules since Jan. 16., but those rules became permanent Friday.

Despite strong opposition from gun rights advocates, the Metropolitan Police Department reported in Friday’s D.C. Register that no comments were received since January.

District leaders believe they have met the Supreme Court’s directive, that the Second Amendment guarantees D.C. residents the right to keep a handgun in the home for self-defense. But the city’s fledgling laws are being challenged on two fronts.

Dick Anthony Heller, the plaintiff in the original lawsuit, is suing again over the city’s “onerous firearm registration, expiration and re-registration requirements” and its continuing prohibition of “commonly possessed” firearms and magazines.

Registration requirements include five hours of certified training, ballistic testing, numerous fees and a maze of bureaucratic hurdles.

“What we’re trying to do with the lawsuit is invalidate them as soon as possible through the court system,” Richard Gardiner, Heller’s lawyer, said of the regulations.

U.S. District Court Judge Ricardo Urbina, however, has yet to issue a schedule for Heller’s case to proceed.

“If there are specific ways we can streamline the process I think we should, but I think the law is viable,” said at-large D.C. Councilman Phil Mendelson, chairman of the judiciary committee.

If the lawsuit doesn’t force a regulatory rewrite, Congress might.

The D.C. voting rights bill adopted by the U.S. Senate includes an amendment offered by Republican Sen. John Ensign of Nevada that repeals the city’s ban on semiautomatic weapons, repeals all registration requirements, removes criminal penalties for the possession of unregistered firearms and legalizes carrying a gun on the streets.

“I am hopeful that the Ensign amendment will not pass,” Mendelson said. “It would be a serious blow to public safety.”

House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer has vowed to move the voting rights act forward, perhaps forcing the District to sacrifice its gun laws in return for a fully empowered member of the House of Representatives. A Hoyer spokeswoman said Friday the legislation “remains an important priority.”


Among the registration requirements:

» Taking five hours of certified firearms training, including one hour at a range
» Passing a firearms test
» Providing proof of good vision
» Undergoing background checks (not instant)
» Getting fingerprinted



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Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 250 words.

James Macklin

Jun 8, 2009

It is pretty obvious, the residents of DC are of a mostly dangerous and criminal case simply because they live on the wrong side of an imaginary boundary.
Without any facts, the gun control imposed upon DC are more strict than applied to slaves in the Old South.
When people flee DC, to places where gun control is not as oppressive, crime rates go down.
Maybe it is water contamination?

 

Guy Falkes

Jun 8, 2009

As the District has no public gun range, designating a place to test the applicant's firearm proficiency will have to be addressed (probably Fairfax)

 

Founding Father

Jun 9, 2009

The 2nd Amendment is in place to allow citizens to remove "rulers" from government when they no longer serve the people.

So to answer Guy Falkes regarding a public gun range in D.C., it looks like the "rulers" effectively declared city hall as the new public gun range.

 

canis

Jun 9, 2009

The 2d amendment is clear, despite over a century of authorities attempting to destroy it, the peoples right cannot be restricted.
Any regulation of that is unconstitutional.
Meanwhile historical data shows conclusively that an armed society is a safer society.

 

Kalamity Kat

Jun 9, 2009

I carry a pistol, because my rifle won't
fit into my purse!

 

Steve Swine

Jun 10, 2009

This needs to be a lesson to all gun owners. In spite of the fact that cities with less restictions on guns are safer. The only reason to push this is about control of people. The biggest scam of the last 50 years has been the hearding of minorities into Ghettos, forcing them to have no protection, and giving them no hope. Keep your guns handy people. This is the Obama model coming your way.

 

dcguns.blogspot.com

Jun 21, 2009

Guy Falkes writes: "As the District has no public gun range, designating a place to test the applicant's proficiency will have to be addressed..."

Oddly enough, the District requires no real proficiency; they only ask for proof that you've taken a certified course (4 hours class time 1 hour range time) and the "test" they administer is written and has practically nothing to do with safety. Rather, their test quizzes you on your knowledge of DC's gun laws such as what constitutes a sawed-off shotgun or what year does a firearm cease to be an "antique."

 


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